NewsBite

Plans for $21.6 Palm Beach artificial reef revealed as swell hits Gold Coast

A WORLD first $21.6 million artificial reef planned to stop Palm Beach from falling into the ocean includes juicy details for surfers, according to council documents.

Erosion on the Gold Coast this week. Picture: Jerad Williams
Erosion on the Gold Coast this week. Picture: Jerad Williams

A WORLD first $21.6 million artificial reef planned to stop Palm Beach from falling into the ocean includes juicy details for surfers, according to council documents.

The city council has called for expressions of interest from companies to build a reef that would reduce erosion on the Gold Coast’s most vulnerable stretch of coastline while producing quality surfing waves.

The council brief states the rocky reef should be “optimised for surfing amenity” and produce a “favourable crest orientation” for the south-easterly swells that hit the Gold Coast.

Erosion at Burleigh. Picture: Jerad Williams
Erosion at Burleigh. Picture: Jerad Williams

The 200m wide and 600m long reef would be built off the section of coastline between 11th Ave and 19th Ave at Palm Beach, where significant scarping occurred in recent storm seasons.

The documents also reveal the council wants the project to begin in September this year before being completed by November next year.

“Further significant erosion of Palm Beach will result in damage to public infrastructure, property, and City of Gold Coast’s image, reputation and tourism,” the council brief says.

Mayor Tom Tate said the project was primarily about protecting people and property.

“It is part of our multimillion-dollar beach protection program along the entire coastline,” Cr Tate said.

Swimmers brave the dangerous swell. Picture: Jerad Williams
Swimmers brave the dangerous swell. Picture: Jerad Williams

But due to the council’s surf management plan, the brief said the project would “appropriately consider surfing amenity as part of the final project solution” and “maintain or enhance in beach and surfing amenity”.

Scarping was visible at beaches along the Gold Coast this week and strong swell smashed the coastline for the sixth day in a row yesterday.

Cr Tate said beaches had held up well to the pounding following a $13.9 million beach nourishment project last year, which used a dredge for several months.

“Thank God we did it,” he said.

A warning sign at a Gold Coast beach. Picture: Jerad Williams
A warning sign at a Gold Coast beach. Picture: Jerad Williams

Chief lifeguard Warren Young said he would make the call whether to open beaches this morning after wild conditions closed beaches across the city yesterday following a hazardous surf warning from the Bureau of Meteorology.

Coastalwatch forecast rough conditions would continue today.

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/lifestyle/beaches-and-fishing/plans-for-216-palm-beach-artificial-reef-revealed-swell-hits-gold-coast/news-story/0a11e4a68c4437a1e410844186a25e50