
Heritage Place Advice
We specialise in built and architectural heritage, including heritage overlays, local and state heritage.
Our expert heritage team services residential, commercial and public buildings, streetscapes, precincts, and landscapes.
You'll receive the quality advice and heritage reports to maximise your next heritage project.
Our Place Services
Heritage Impact Assessments / Statements
Conservation / Heritage Management Plans
Design, Adaptive Reuse and Retrofit
Documentation and Archival Recording
Strategic and Masterplanning
State Heritage Permits and Exclusions
Heritage Overlay and Local Heritage
Local Government Referrals

Yes, you can develop, renovate, or modernise your heritage-listed property, but there are specific guidelines and regulations you must follow to preserve its heritage significance. At Heritage Workshop, we specialise in advising on such projects. Whether your property is under a heritage overlay, local heritage, or state heritage listing, our team of experts can guide you through the entire process. Contact us to discuss your project's specifics and how we can assist in bringing your vision to life, while respecting the heritage status of your property.
Achieving heritage planning approval, whether in a heritage overlay, or for a local or state heritage designation, involves a thorough and detailed process. At Heritage Workshop, we guide you through each step with our expert conservation advice and tailored planning services.
You may need to:
1. Consultation with Heritage Advisors: Engage with professional heritage consultants, like those at Heritage Workshop, who have expertise in heritage conservation and can offer strategic advice.
2. Understand the Specific Heritage Regulations: Each local council and heritage body has specific regulations and guidelines. Familiarise yourself with the local or state heritage requirements relevant to your project.
3. Heritage Impact Assessment: Conduct a comprehensive assessment of how your proposed development or alteration will impact the heritage value of the site. This often involves detailed documentation, specialist research, and a statement of significance.
4. Prepare Detailed Plans and Documentation: This includes architectural drawings, site plans, and any other relevant information that showcases your project’s compliance with heritage and planning principles. An architect or draughtsperson can prepare plans, drawings and elevations.
5. Submission of Application: Submit a thorough application to the relevant heritage body and/or local council . This includes all required documentation, impact assessments, and proof of compliance with heritage guidelines.
A heritage overlay in Victoria is a planning tool used to protect buildings of historical, architectural, or cultural significance. It is a provision in the local planning scheme that sets out specific guidelines for the development, conservation, and use of places identified as having important heritage value. When a property is subject to a heritage overlay, any alterations, demolitions, or new constructions may require a permit to ensure the changes are sympathetic to the heritage significance of the site.
A Heritage Impact Assessment (HIA), also known as a Heritage Impact Statement (HIS), is a vital document that evaluates the potential effects of a proposed development on heritage places and landscapes.
At Heritage Workshop, the HIS plays a crucial role in our planning and policy services. This assessment helps identify any adverse impacts a project might have on heritage places and evaluates measures to mitigate these effects.
Our best-practice and rigorous heritage impact statements include an Introduction, Methodology, Listings and Controls, Description and Background, Heritage Policy, Heritage Impact Assessment, and Conclusion.
A HIA is increasingly essential for meeting planning requirements and also ensures that heritage significance is conserved and enhanced, as your heritage place evolves over time.
A Heritage or Conservation Management Plan (CMP) is a critical document for the preservation, restoration, maintenance, and enhancement of heritage place. It outlines the heritage significance of a site, structure, or area, and provides a comprehensive strategy to ensure its long-term conservation.
Our CMPs include an Introduction, Methodology, Heritage Listings and Controls, Description and Background, Heritage Planning Policy, Conservation Framework, Conservation Policy, Policy Implementation and Conclusion.
At Heritage Workshop, our CMPs balance the needs of conservation with development and usage, while ensuring compliance with relevant planning policies and regulations, bolstering your heritage place for the future.
Heritage Place Documentation prepared by Heritage Workshop will assist you with meeting your legal and planning obligations for your heritage property. It is a high-quality, properly researched, and plain english document.
Our Heritage Place Documentation comprises: Introduction, Methodology, Heritage Listings and Controls, Documentary Photographs, Documentary Statement and Conclusion.
Heritage Workshop brings our analytical rigour and quality research skills to every documentation and archival recording project.