Council Adopts Public Realm and Streetscape Style Design Guide

Published on 28 May 2026

Header web tiles (6).png

Burnie City Council has adopted a new Public Realm & Streetscape Style Design Guide for the Burnie City Centre, helping shape the future look, feel and function of public spaces across the CBD.

The guide establishes a shared vision for streets, footpaths, public spaces and city centre infrastructure, ensuring future projects contribute to a cohesive, welcoming and distinctly Burnie identity.

Drawing inspiration from Burnie’s rugged coastline, industrial heritage and strong “City of Makers” character, the guide introduces a contemporary design theme known as “The Makers Grain”. This approach blends natural textures, warm earthy tones, durable materials and creative public realm elements that reflect Burnie’s unique sense of place.

The document will help guide future upgrades and developments across the CBD, including:

  • Streetscapes and footpaths
  • Seating and public furniture
  • Planting and landscaping
  • Lighting and signage
  • Public art and bespoke design elements
  • Accessibility and pedestrian movement

The guide also supports the broader Burnie City Centre Urban Plan and aligns with Council’s long-term vision for a connected, people-focused and vibrant city centre.

Importantly, the guide has been designed to balance consistency with flexibility, allowing different precincts within the CBD to retain their own character while still contributing to a unified Burnie identity.

The guide will help ensure future public realm projects are durable, accessible, sustainable, and reflective of Burnie’s evolving story and community pride.

Background

Burnie’s story began long before the first survey lines were drawn or the first ship anchored in its deep harbour. For thousands of years, the Plairhekehillerplue people of the North Nation lived along this coastline, moving with the rhythms of the sea and the seasons. This part of pataway/Burnie’s heritage and stories of the First Nations community is largely untold but is enduring and woven into the fabric of this Country.

When Europeans arrived at the turn of the 19th century, they found pataway/Burnie to be a place both wild and promising. In 1827, the Van Diemen’s Land Company established a small settlement at mutawaynatji/Emu Bay, a remote outpost carved from dense forest and the rugged shoreline. It was a place built by hands — axes, saws, timber and grit. Ships came and went, carrying away the region’s great stands of timber and bringing in goods that sustained a growing community. Burnie’s identity as a ‘City of Makers’ began here, in the interplay between natural abundance and human ingenuity.

As the decades unfolded, Burnie grew into a thriving Port and industrial city. The harbour deepened, the railways pushed inland, and the city became a vital link between Tasmania’s resources and the world beyond. The arrival of the pulp and paper mill in the 1930s marked a new era. Its towers, steam, and shift whistles became part of the city’s soundtrack, and generations of families found their livelihoods within its walls. Burnie’s unsung heroes were the mill workers, the port crews, the railway teams, the craftspeople who kept the city moving.

Today, Burnie finds itself on the cusp of a new chapter. The heavy industries that once defined it have quietened, leaving behind both a strong legacy and opportunity for reinvention. The city’s industrial backbone is becoming a platform for creativity, innovation, and sustainable enterprise. Burnie’s future lies in embracing its layered identity: coastal and industrial, rugged and inventive, grounded yet forward looking.

The aspiration is not to reinvent Burnie’s City Centre into something unrecognisable, but to let it evolve into its next, true form. A City Centre that honours its heritage while opening itself to new possibilities. A place that supports commercial activity, as well as artisans and manufacturers who carry forward the city’s tradition of craft. A place that understands its strength lies in its people - their adaptability, their craftsmanship, their deep connection to this stretch of coast. 

 

Urban Plan Style Guide

As adopted by Council 26 May 2026, Item AO088-26

Public Realm and Streetscape Style Design Guide (Urban Plan Style Guide)(PDF, 68MB)

The Public Realm and Streetscape Style Design Guide has been developed as an Urban Style Guide for the Burnie CBD, incorporating community consultation and adopted by Council 26 May 2026.

style guide.png

 

 

Theme - The Makers Grain

The ‘Makers Grain’ expresses Burnie’s identity as a city built by hands and moved by ideas. It blends industrial grit with the creative spark of its community – celebrating fabrication, craftsmanship and innovation. This theme draws inspiration from the textures and layers that shape Burnie – its rugged coastline, timber grain, paper fibres, basalt foundation, red soils, and the marks left by nature and the community.

Style Guide - Colours, materials, and design style

Colours and material.png

 

Design Cues

  • Linear form, with overlapping and varied surface planes.
  • Modular configurations preferred.
  • Contemporary art-deco style and colour palette.
  • Textural qualities to design with patterns, motifs and woven elements intertwined.
  • Interpretive and decorative elements, as a nod to Burnie’s layers and makers heritage (past
  • and present)
  • Landscaping that emphasises texture and rhythm, utilising palette of native and ornamental
  • plants providing pops of colour
  • Feature lighting and digital elements to create a vibrant and striking CBD at night.

 

Design Inspiration - Look, feel, and function 

Makers Grain style guide.png

 

Tagged as: