Available homes
Discover the homes currently available across Landcom communities and find the right opportunity to buy with Landcom.
Discover the homes currently available across Landcom communities and find the right opportunity to buy with Landcom.
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South West Sydney
Edmondson Park is a vibrant and growing south-west Sydney community designed to help people live, learn, work and thrive. Life centres around a lively town centre, diverse housing, open spaces and everyday services that make daily life easier and more connected.
Former Defence land has been transformed into a masterplanned community spanning Edmondson Park and Bardia, delivering up to 8,000 new homes for around 20,000 people. There are housing options for different needs, from larger lots to terraces and apartments.
The community is supported by schools, transport, parks, shops and a regional park, with cycleways and walkways creating a walkable, active lifestyle.
Landcom is partnering with industry, including Dahua Group and Frasers Property Group, to deliver homes, public spaces, transport links and community facilities that reflect local heritage and support a welcoming, connected place to live.
Bounded by Camden Valley Way, the M5 Motorway and Zouch Road. Located approximately 11km from Liverpool and 24km from Parramatta
playgrounds, playing fields and reserves, including walkways and cycleways.
Edmondson Park is a vibrant and growing south-west Sydney community designed to help people live, learn, work and thrive. Life centres around a lively town centre, diverse housing, open spaces and everyday services that make daily life easier and more connected.
Former Defence land has been transformed into a masterplanned community spanning Edmondson Park and Bardia, delivering up to 8,000 new homes for around 20,000 people. There are housing options for different needs, from larger lots to terraces and apartments.
The community is supported by schools, transport, parks, shops and a regional park, with cycleways and walkways creating a walkable, active lifestyle.
Landcom is partnering with industry, including Dahua Group and Frasers Property Group, to deliver homes, public spaces, transport links and community facilities that reflect local heritage and support a welcoming, connected place to live.
Current as at: March 2026
Landcom is making strong progress across Edmondson Park. Construction has begun on the first homes using the NSW Housing Pattern Book, with a demonstration terrace planned so the community and local builders can see the design quality. Community feedback is also shaping the new town centre park and the affordable housing proposal for Block 20a, helping refine designs to support safety, comfort and cultural connection.
Across the precinct, construction continues to advance. Mondo is nearing completion with lots expected to register by May, and Precinct 9 upgrade works are now about 90 percent complete, including new pedestrian links and essential service upgrades. Remediation and heritage conservation at the historic barracks are progressing with careful planning under way to restore the guardhouse. Planning is also advancing for new development at Jardine Drive and the former commuter car park, and a rare 4,000m² residential lot on Eyre Avenue will be offered to market soon.
Thanks to everyone who took part in our consultations to help shape the future of the town centre. With your input, we’re making sure our plans reflect real local needs, priorities and everyday experiences.
There’ll be more opportunities to get involved as Edmondson Park continues to grow.
Stay connected, see what’s coming up and learn more.
Delivery of affordable housing is subject to funding and subsidies.
When we plan communities like Edmondson Park, we look to the future while respecting the history that came before. The area has deep Indigenous connections for Darug/Dharug, Dharawal and Gundangara peoples, and is also part of the State Heritage-listed Ingleburn Military Heritage Precinct, including Bardia Barracks and Mont St Quentin Oval.
This shared history is reflected through street names, public spaces and public art, including the water tower mural, the Caesar military tracker dog sculpture and the memorial plaque.
We have also created teaching resources for local schools to help students learn about the geography, history and heritage of the place they call home, encouraging curiosity about how communities grow and change.
Stay up to date with the progress at Edmondson Park as the project continues to evolve. Explore recent milestones, planning updates, and key developments shaping the future of this growing community.
At Edmondson Park our challenge was clear - to plan and deliver a complex community, spanning 425 hectares across two local government areas in Sydney’s South West growth centre.
Our vision - to create a vibrant, sustainable community with a mix of homes, shops, community facilities and open spaces, well connected by public transport. From the outset, we were committed to celebrating the site’s heritage, protecting significant vegetation and setting aside land for Regional Parklands.
By working closely with state and federal agencies, Councils and the local community, we secured the conservation and infrastructure agreements needed to support Edmondson Park as it continues to grow, laying the groundwork for a connected, liveable community now and into the future.
Edmondson Park is a community planned around real lives - bringing together the homes, services and spaces that help people feel settled, supported and connected from the start. Shops, open spaces, schools, childcare, community facilities and public transport are all within easy reach, making it simpler to get from A to B while freeing up more time for the things that matter most.
A mix of housing types at different price points supports a diverse community, giving households of different sizes and incomes the opportunity to own their own home and put down roots. People who live here really feel part of a community - it’s a sense of connection and belonging that’s shaped by places that bring people together.
A regional park, smaller community parks, playgrounds, playing fields, sports fields and reserves offer room to move, play, connect and stay active. Public art creates a sense of place and reflects the area’s important history, while walkways and cycleways link homes, shops, services and shared spaces - making it easy to move around the neighbourhood without relying on a car.
Landcom is committed to making more sustainable communities happen. At Edmondson Park, environmental sustainability was embedded in our planning from the outset. To support this, we worked closely with the National Parks and Wildlife Service to restore and enhance the natural landscape.
This included re-vegetating large areas of the site, such as the 150-hectare Regional Park and open spaces along the creek corridors, helping protect local ecosystems and create greener places for residents to enjoy. A diverse housing mix - from large rural residential lots to smaller terraces and apartments - has been carefully masterplanned, with higher-density homes located closer to the station and within walking distance of open spaces.
This approach makes better use of land while supporting more sustainable travel choices for residents. Edmondson Park also has an innovative recycled water scheme, helping reduce water use and lower ongoing costs for residents.
Edmondson Park’s identity is shaped by its deep Indigenous heritage and strong links to Australia’s military history - stories that continue to influence how people understand and connect with the place they call home. Listed on the State Heritage Register, the Ingleburn Military Heritage Precinct includes Bardia Barracks and Mont St Quentin Oval.
The upgraded Oval, together with ongoing planning to open up the barracks for community use, helps conserve the area’s military history while weaving it into everyday community life. Indigenous and military history is reflected throughout the neighbourhood in other ways too - from street names to public artworks - helping put heritage at the centre of shared community experience. We’ve also developed an education program for local schools, providing teaching and learning materials that support students to explore the geography, history and heritage of Edmondson Park.
Whatever you need, we’re here to help.
mondo@landcom.nsw.gov.au
(02) 9391 2980
If you need an interpreter, please contact the Translating and Interpreting Service on 131 450 and ask them to call Landcom on (02) 9841 8600. The interpreter will help you with translation.
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