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Wembley Hill: Where the Ground Dictates the BuildSlabs are underway at Wembley Hill. And the ground isn’t giving anything away easily.
This former school site drops more than eight metres from back to front. Below the surface: reactive clay. To the boundary: protected wetlands. Above it all: planning overlays that leave no margin for error. It’s a site where nothing can be fudged or forced. Every move has to hold.
Each slab is different. Not just in size or height—but in logic. Every one is stepped to meet the terrain, formed to control water, placed to carry weight without compromise. Here, topography isn’t a backdrop. It’s the rulebook. And the pour follows it.
There’s no standard footing. No flat repeat. Every slab is individually set out—shaped by fall, framed by edge, sequenced to hold program. It’s tight, skilled work: shifting levels, changing conditions, narrow windows between weather, services, and structure.
East End Slabs are across it.
This is where our townhouse team operates best. When sequencing isn’t theoretical, but live. When structure starts on day one. When the delivery of every future stage depends on how precisely the first one lands.
Stage 1 includes 38 townhomes for Golden Age Group, designed by Cox Architecture, with interiors by Mim Design and landscaping by Taylor Cullity Lethlean.
Wembley Hill builds on Floret in Glen Waverley—delivered earlier this year—extending a partnership grounded in trust, momentum, and a shared belief in thoughtful density across Melbourne’s eastern corridor.
Slabs now.
Frames next.
No guesswork. Just build.
