Nature Based Solutions Bus Tour
07-May-2026
About this event
Stormwater Queensland and the Queensland Water Directorate would like to invite you to the Nature-Based
Solutions Bus Tour on Thursday 7 May 2026.
The tour will include the two most iconic offsets-related nature-based solutions projects completed in Queensland in
2026 including:
- The Cannery Creek Project - Urban Utilities has invested approximately $72 million to upgrade
the sewer at Cannery Creek in Brisbane’s north-east (in the suburbs of Northgate and Banyo). The project
includes the installation of two new sediment basins, fish screens, a wet weather pump station, screening
chamber, over two kilometres of new underground pipelines, riparian restoration, a constructed wetland and two
bioretention basins. The project is now operational and is managing wet weather overflows and reducing sediments
and nutrients from both wet weather overflows and stormwater as part of a water quality offset. This part of the
tour will include visiting all the aforementioned infrastructure. Further information on this project can be
found here.
- The Shoreline Mangrove Offset Project (SMOP) – As part of the Shoreline community development,
Stockland is constructing the Southern Redland Bay Wastewater Treatment Plant and offsetting nutrient loads from
this plant via a recently completed 9.8-hectare mangrove wetland. Delivered by Stockland in partnership with
Redland City Council, the large-scale restoration transforms previously degraded and weed-infested land into a
thriving mangrove forest and wetland ecosystem, creating vital habitat for fish, prawns and wading birds.
The system works with natural tidal flows supporting water quality, biodiversity, and long-term shoreline
resilience. This part of the tour will focus on the mangrove wetland rather than the treatment plant. Further
information on this project can be found here.
The projects share common goals of enhancing community and ecological values beyond standard regulatory requirements
and adapting to pressures such as population growth and a changing climate while being grounded in strong community
engagement.
Presentations will include discussions about community engagement, design, approvals, construction, operation,
establishment, maintenance and monitoring.
These projects have direct relevance to stormwater and wastewater practitioners alike with directly transferrable
approaches adopted by these projects to both water streams. They exemplify the practical application of Total Water
Cycle Management principles and while they may be a first of their kind nationally, the lessons to be shared can be
applied broadly to many different types of projects.
Seats are very limited and expected to fill quickly.
Register Now