ESD/SDA/WSUD

Sustainable Design Assessments including BESS, BlueFactor & WSUD
Water Sensitive Urban Design (WSUD) & Waste Management Plan

When is an SDA Required? (The “Triggers”)

While each council has slightly different triggers in their Planning Scheme (usually under Clause 15.02), the standard thresholds are:

Residential: 2 to 9 dwellings (e.g., a townhouse development or a small apartment block).

Non-Residential: New buildings or extensions between $100m^2$ and $1,000m^2$ (or $1,500m^2$ depending on the council) of Gross Floor Area (GFA).

Large Developments: If you exceed 10 dwellings or $1,000m^2+$, you usually need a more complex Sustainability Management Plan (SMP) instead.

The 10 Key Assessment Categories
An SDA evaluates your project across 10 sustainability categories. To pass, you must demonstrate “Best Practice” in each:

Indoor Environment Quality (IEQ): Daylight access, natural ventilation, and non-toxic materials.

Energy Efficiency: Solar orientation, insulation, and efficient HVAC systems.

Water Efficiency: High-WELS-rated fixtures and rainwater harvesting.

Stormwater Management: Reducing runoff using rain gardens or permeable paving (often checked via a STORM, BlueFactor or MUSIC report).

Building Management: Including a “Building Users Guide” for future occupants.

Transport: Providing bicycle parking and proximity to public transport.

Waste Management: Dedicated recycling areas and construction waste minimisation.

Urban Ecology: Landscaping, green roofs, and protecting biodiversity.

Materials: Using recycled, sustainable, or low-carbon building materials.

Innovation: Any unique “above and beyond” sustainable features.

The Tools Used: BESS
In Victoria, the SDA is almost always generated using the Built Environment Sustainability Scorecard (BESS).

The Pass Mark: You generally need an overall score of at least 50% to meet council requirements.

Mandatory Categories: You cannot “fail” the Energy, Water, or Stormwater sections and still pass overall; these have minimum benchmarks that must be hit.


Why it Matters for You
Compliance: You cannot get a Planning Permit in most Victorian municipalities (like Melbourne, Yarra, Moreland, or Geelong) without an approved SDA if you meet the triggers.
Early Design: It’s cheaper to change the window size or orientation on paper now than to realize the building is a “hot box” after it’s built.
Lower Running Costs: Buildings with a high SDA score typically have significantly lower electricity and water bills for the eventual owners/tenants.

This shift towards using WordPress block patterns marks a significant movement towards democratizing web design, providing a foundation for addressing the digital divide by making high-quality web design more accessible to first-time developers and small business owners.


  • Summary Table

    Feature Sustainable Design Assessment (SDA)
    Stage
    Planning Permit (Pre-construction)
    Typical Scale
    2–9 Dwellings / Mid-sized Commercial
    Primary Tool
    BESS (Built Environment Sustainability Scorecard)
    Requirement
    Minimum 50% score (Best Practice)
    Legislation
    Local Planning Scheme (e.g., Clause 15.01-2L)

Contact us now to get planning permit ready!

[email protected]

Magda Maligani contributed to this article.