Slipstream Celebrates Brand New Look After $1.5M Revamp

Yeerongpilly’s iconic craft brewery Slipstream Brewing Co has undergone a $1.5-million renovation to appeal to a wider audience, particularly customers who love to dine out with their children.

When owners Deale and Elisa Stanley-Hunt first opened Slipstream in 2017, most of their customers were young people who love to unwind. But as the business grew, they noticed that the craft brewery has become a go-to venue for families.

Hence, they submitted a development application to Brisbane City Council in August 2020 to renovate the place and finally, after getting the approval and weeks of construction from January to February, Slipstream reopened on 19 February 2021 with a bigger venue and a brand new look.

The brewery’s regular food trucks were replaced by an enormous kitchen. In addition to new signage and some colourful furniture, the place also comes with new paint and awnings. Interior design studio Charlie & Rose were in charge of updating the property while retaining its signature industrial feel.

Also part of the overhaul is transforming the old front carparking area into an outdoor seating space. The indoor and outdoor dining can now accommodate up to 250 guests. 

To make the pub more family-friendly, Slipstream added a shaded farmhouse play area for children in the beer garden. When you come with your little ones, be sure to ask for the new kids’ menu which includes options like Cali cheese breads, fish bites, and cheeseburger, all served with a choice of fries or a fresh mix of cucumber, tomato and celery. 

Slipstream when it first opened in 2017 (Photo credit: Slipstream Brewing Company/Facebook)
The pub’s new outdoor seating space after a major renovation (Photo credit: Slipstream Brewing Company/Facebook)

At first, a few neighbours opposed the application because of the noise it might bring to the adjoining residential block, but the owners assured the staff would monitor the car park to ensure customers were considerate of neighbours. 

In addition to monitoring the place, the owners also built a 2.2m high acoustic fence, positioned the extensions away from the nearest neighbours and ensured light pollution was minimised.

The brewery will be offering 20 taps, including exclusive beers such as a Hazy IPA and Banoffee Pie Pastry Stout. Other than beer, they will have wine, spirits and a menu that will surely appeal to both kids and grown-ups. If you’re a regular, one of the new things you’ll notice here is the authentic Italian pizza oven and smoker in the middle of a large kitchen.

Slipstream opened in February 2021 with new trading hours of 11:00 am to 10:00 pm from Wednesday to Sunday. Bookings are highly recommended, especially on weekends. For more information, visit Slipstream Brewing’s Facebook page or follow them on Instagram @slipstreambrewing.

Plans To Refurbish Sherwood Heritage Home Met With Criticism

Plans to refurbish the heritage house at 31 Linda Street in Sherwood to make way for a family home have been given the go-ahead despite opposition from locals living nearby. One couple living close to the subject site is planning to take legal action against the renovation. 

The development application lodged by Steffan Town Planning on behalf of new owners Genevieve and William Prowse stated that they purchased the property with the intention to to create a family house. While it would undergo refurbishment and renovation, they wanted to keep its original integrity and features. 

Original window and french door inside the Sherwood heritage house (Photo credit: pdonline.brisbane.qld.gov.au)

In the plans submitted to the Council, it was stated that the Prowse family is planning to have a bathroom, ensuite and kitchen, repair walls, and reconstruct the internal layout of the home, as well as refurbish “traditional features” of the home, and demolish a recently-added carport. Also part of the plan is to add a single-storey garage and studio at the lot’s southeast corner, next to the railway line at the building’s “front.”

A report by Steffan Town Planning stated that “the proposed development is consistent with the Assessment Benchmarks of the applicable zone, neighbourhood plan and overlay codes” and “is compatible in scale with the adjoining dwelling houses and will maintain a suitable level of amenity and privacy to adjoining dwellings.”

Issues Raised

Scott Moorhead and Catherine Moorhead of 27 Linda Street appealed to the Planning and Environment Court at Brisbane against the respondent’s decision to approve the development application.

The Moorheads, whose house share a common boundary with the heritage house said that the plan will severely impact the comfort and amenity of the adjoining residence, contrary to Character residential zone code, Sherwood-Graceville District Neighbourhood Plan, and Dwelling house code.

“We implore Council to thoughtfully consider our opposition to the current proposal, including the attachment, which includes substantial support material, to come and personally view the site from Linda Street, and allow the applicants to pursue their first proposal (with garage and studio sited to the south east) or another of suitable position and scale,” the Moorheads stated in their submission.

Heritage House

According to the Brisbane City Council Heritage Register, this former farmhouse is believed to have been built some time before 1890 for George Jimmieson, who had worked land in the district 1866. The house later passed to two other local farming families, the Martindales and the Nosworthys. The house still sits on its original 1890 subdivision and survives as a good example of a late nineteenth century farmhouse.

In 1946 the house transferred to William Albert Brandes. When William Brandes passed away in 1980, the title was transferred to his wife Jean Allison Brandes. The place is understood to be owned by the Brandes family until 2018, when the current owners purchased the property.

Inspiring Corinda Boy with Cerebral Palsy Takes Up RaceRunning, Dreams About Paralympics

Max Bailey-Jensen, a resident of Corinda, is no ordinary 12-year-old. As someone with cerebral palsy, Max doesn’t let his limitations stop him from doing unexpected things, including competing in his dream sport: RaceRunning.



The young south western Brisbane local was hooked on RaceRunning when he saw the competition in Denmark, his birth country. Also known as  Frame Running, this is an athletic discipline for Paralympians. 

Back home in Australia, his family explored the possibility of their son joining the race with the help of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS). 

Even with no independent hand function, the determined 12-year-old participates in various sports activities, such as a triathlon, weekly Crossfit sessions and Judo training with the help of assistive technologies. He’s also quite adept in designing and drawing using Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator and like a lot of the kids his age, Max is a digital native, who loves the Xbox, iPad or Garage Band.  

Max’s family applied for an NDIS grant when the special RaceRunning bikes were imported to Australia and he became the first RaceRunner participant to receive the first frame. He was also the first to receive a national classification in the sport after joining the University of Queensland’s PARASTART RaceRunning program for people with high needs cerebral palsy. 

Photo Credit: Carers QLD Australia

“Max is now training up to five days a week RaceRunning, swimming, and he’s in the weights room developing his physical skills and abilities,” his mum, Samantha, said.

“The benefits we are seeing from a physical, mental and emotional level are really positive, and it’s great to see Max so empowered and fitter.

“With the support of the NDIS, we are able to send Max to training with support workers, which is helping to create independence and providing him the opportunity to make more individual choices for his life.”

Max recently secured his second plan with the NDIS, which opens more possibilities for the young athlete.

“Max’s first plan was very equipment-focused; it was incredible when he got his first power chair at 11 and to see him have independence in his mobility.

“When the NDIS approved his assisted speech technology equipment in just three weeks so he could start high school with a voice; that was another great day.”



In 2024, RaceRunning will debut at the Paris 2024 Paralympics.

“Who knows, maybe Max will be on the track running for Australia,” his mum said with optimism.

For enquiries about NDIS funding, contact a Carers Queensland’s NDIS Local Area Coordination Partner at 1300 999 636, or cq.enquiries@ndis.gov.au. 

Paradise Lakes Willawong: Construction of New Residential Site Begins February

Work on the first group of homes at Paradise Lakes Willawong, an emerging residential precinct at the former sand mine in Oxley Creek, will soon begin after a decade-long wait for the approval of the development.



Stage 1 of this project will cover 37 blocks of dwelling spaces ranging from 405 to 830 square metres in size. Of these blocks, 33 have reportedly been sold whilst Uniland Pty Ltd also applied to build a six-metre sculpture at the main entrance of Paradise Lakes Willawong on Leroy Road. 

By the middle of 2021, the display village will be ready for other interested buyers as earthworks for Stage 2 gets underway as well.

Photo Credit: Paradise Lakes Willawong

Paradise Lakes is envisioned to be “a tranquil lakeside sanctuary” surrounded by natural bushland. Just 16 kilometeres off Brisbane CBD, the site is a short drive to schools, shopping centres and lifestyle or dining precincts in suburbs like Sunnybank, Algester and Calmvale.

“This exclusive community will integrate with an existing natural habitat to provide a variety of premium homesites, some of which offer views of the adjacent lakes and bushland surrounds,” the developers said.

Photo Credit: Paradise Lakes Willawong


Uniland Pty Ltd bought and rehabilitated the 55-hectare land in 2009 and proposed to build a 280-housing site that will complement Brisbane City Council’s $100-million Oxley Creek Transformation. 

The project will also feature the following facilities:

  • a 20-kilometre recreation trail from the Brisbane River to Warril Parkland in Larapinta
  • a world-renowned birdwatching destination at Oxley Creek Common
  • a regional parkland at Archerfield Wetlands
  • progressive improvements to habitats, vegetation, waterway stability and water quality

Incidentally, Stage 1 of Warril Parkland, a nature-based adventure playground on 1059 Paradise Road, has been completed and opened for recreational use. 

Village Centre With Supermarket Proposed at Yeerongpilly Green

A plan for a village centre with a supermarket, shops and restaurants, offices, healthcare facilities including veterinary services, has been lodged with the Council for Yeerongpilly Green, the major urban renewal project in southwest Brisbane.



Dubbed the Yeerongpilly Green Village Heart (DA A005635771),  the centre will rise on a vacant lot surrounded by Queens Way, King Arthur Terrace and Fig Tree Street.

The 4,200 square metres supermarket will serve as the anchor tenant and above it are spaces for offices and other shops. Also proposed in the plan are slots for 292 car park spaces in the basement with Queens Way as the main vehicle access.

BVN, the project’s architect, has worked on the village centre’s design for the last three years. 

Photo Credit: PD Online/Brisbane City Council

“From inception, the brief has been to design a contemporary mixed-use development that responds to commercial development requirements while contributing to Brisbane’s architectural and public realm design. This is consistent with the outcomes sought by the Yeerongpilly Green Transit Oriented Neighbourhood Plan,” BVN said. 

“The proposed development involves a mix of uses that will operate at different times of the day and night. Small-scale active tenancies are proposed on the primary frontages of the development and adjacent to pedestrian spaces within the development. This will facilitate the creation of a highly activated and vibrant centre.”



In 2019,  Acting Premier and Minister for State Development, Manufacturing, Infrastructure and Planning Cameron Dick said that supermarket giant Woolworths could be a major tenant of the emerging retail hub, potentially generating 100 jobs.  

“With new parklands, new pedestrian-friendly pathways and new roads complete, Yeerongpilly Green is already putting on a show, and this highly-anticipated retail precinct with the new Woolworths will form the heart of the project and provide the shopping experience an urban renewal project of this scale merits,” Mr Dick said.

Queensland Police Academy in Oxley Welcomes 117 New Recruits

The largest intake of new police recruits in nearly a decade has started their comprehensive training program at the Queensland Police Service Academy in Oxley .



Of the 164 new recruits, 117 intakes from Brisbane will be trained at the Oxley school, where they will be taught skills to develop their capabilities to become a world-class police officer. The other 47 recruits will be trained in the Townsville academy.

The training is a six-month course that will assess the recruits on their physical and mental strength, as well as first aid proficiency. 

This year, the Queensland Police Service Academy will also conduct distance-based learning for the theory-based elements of the curriculum for the very first time.

Commissioner Katarina Carroll personally welcomed and congratulated the recruits on Monday, 4 Jan 2021, alongside Minister for Police and Corrective Services and Minister for Fire and Emergency Services, the Honourable Mark Ryan MP. 

Photo Credit: Queensland Police

“Today they will begin a world-class training regime to prepare them with the skills required to face a range of policing scenarios,” the commissioner said.“I know that their time at the Academy over the coming months will be exciting, challenging and ultimately very rewarding and I am extremely pleased to be here today to share this experience.”



“The strength of our frontline services has never been more important to the safety and security of our state and I am confident that each person here today will play an important role in keeping our community safe,” Mr Ryan said. “The training each of these recruits will embark on today will equip them with skills to ensure they are well prepared to handle future challenges with professionalism and dignity.” 

Upon completion of their training, the intakes will be inducted into the  First Year Constable program where they will further learn from the job. 

More details about the Queensland Police training program is on the official site.

Your Feedback Needed for the Graceville Riverside Parklands Precinct Plan

A major regional parkland is up for development just seven kilometres from the CBD and the plans for this massive green space, covering the Graceville Riverside Parklands Precinct, is in the advanced stages.



Residents have a chance to share their feedback and suggestions for the Graceville Riverside Parklands precinct plan’s draft, which will help transform Oxley Creek into a premiere recreational site to be enjoyed by the community.

Aside from the Graceville Riverside Parkland, this development will also cover Simpsons Playground, Nadine Street Park, Graceville Avenue Park and Bert St Clair Oval.

Photo Credit: Graceville Riverside Parklands – Precinct Plan

Once completed, these sites will boast of wonderful picnic and play areas for groups, kids and families, as well as improved parking spaces and better boating club ramps. 

This project’s objectives are aimed at: 

  • Improving visual and physical connections to the river and creek.
  • Upgrading the existing picnic and play facilities
  • Improving the parkland’s vehicle entry and parking
  • Acknowledging the possibility of flooding in the design and delivery of new Parkland infrastructure
  • Maintaining and, where possible, supporting the enhancement of the existing local Club lease facilities
  • Celebrating the mature trees located within the Parkland
  • Supporting corridor-wide improvements to water quality, bank stability and riparian habitat


“The upgraded Parklands will take advantage of the site’s easy access to water and give visitors more ways to enjoy Brisbane’s relaxed outdoor lifestyle. Existing spaces and facilities will be revitalised and reimagined so people of all ages and abilities can experience canoeing, kayaking, dragon boating and sailing. Expanded greenspaces will create the perfect setting for picnics and gatherings,” Nigel Chamier, the chairman of the Oxley Creek Transformation, said.

Photo Credit: Graceville Riverside Parklands – Precinct Plan

The short online survey will run until Sunday, 6 Dec 2020 but residents may also send an email through info@oxleycreek.com.au or via regular mail addressed to Oxley Creek Transformation, GPO Box 1434, Brisbane 4001. 

Residents’ comments and inputs will be considered in the finalisation of the precinct plan, which will be released in 2021. 

Lost Palms – Sherwood to Open This October

Lost Palms is set to open its new taproom venue on Sherwood Road, Sherwood this October.

The second venue to open after Miami, Lost Palms – Sherwood takes over the former Sweet n’ Spice site on Sherwood road. The 120-square-metre venue boasts of an industrial design with a large concrete and timber bar along with concrete slab tables and a shaded outdoor area. The new venue will also mirror the Miami site’s pastel-colours.

Lost Palms – Sherwood will offer a selection of 8 taps serving pale ales, lagers sour beers, big hazy IPAs plus limited small-batch brews. Also, three nitrogen-charged beer-based cocktails on tap will also be available. The beer will come from Miami and made by Lost Palms head brewer, Chris Smith. 

There is a sizable kitchen that will initially serve a range of burgers and snacks but would soon expand into beer and food pairings . The owners envision the new taproom as a space to engage with Brisbane locals where people can connect with the brand and beers. 



It wasn’t easy planning and building the venue due to the COVID restrictions. They had, in fact, planned to open as early as March but had to put everything on hold due to the pandemic. 

Changes to the original plans were needed to be made to accommodate capacity restrictions. The venue can hold up to 80 people at a time, but for now, it will be limited  to 30.

As to why they chose Sherwood for their expansion? The location, community vibe, and the existence of a void in craft-centric hospitality in the area the Lost Palms can fill. They are looking into turning the taproom venue into a brewpub someday and once licensing hurdles are overcome.

Lost Palms’ taproom venue at 1/671 Sherwood Rd is set to opening in late October.




The Fort in Oxley Added Into Queensland’s Heritage Register

The Fort, a 19th century house currently owned by Passionist Community Oxley, has been added to the Queensland Heritage Register. Many may have recently seen it as the venue of the State Government’s media conferences during the early months of COVID-19 restrictions.

Also known as Regina Coeli Retreat or the St Mary’s Retreat, the house is a single-storey detached house originally built in 1882 by architect Francis Drummond Greville Stanley, for sheep and cattle farmer Henry William Coxen. 

Who is Henry William Coxen?

Henry, who is from Croydon, England, came to Tasmania in his teens with his uncle and aunt, ornithologist John Gould and his wife Elizabeth Coxen. The family lived as guests at Governor Franklin’s home and then later moved to New South Wales, where Henry’s other uncle, Stephen Coxen, had a farm.

Henry was sent north of Darling Downs to join a European settlement and expand his uncle’s farming business.

In 1845, Henry returned to England and eventually married Mary Ann Shelton. The pair decided to return to Australia in 1852, where Henry established 17 grazing lands (pastoral stations), including in Oxley. 

Henry William Coxen’s land title from Queensland
Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland

By 1866, Henry divorced his first wife and then remarried Margaret Moorhead. The couple traveled back to England in 1867 but following many failed investments, Henry and Margaret, along with their four children, settled in Queensland in 1880.

For much of his life, the farmer involved himself with community building and was a board member of the Yeerongpilly Divisional Board and the chairman of the Sherwood Divisional Board.



Who is Francis Drummond Greville Stanley?

In 1882, Henry had his family house built in his nine-hectare property on Fort Road. His architect’s reputation was on the rise in Queensland. 

Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland

Stanley helped built a substantial number of buildings around Brisbane, such as the Brisbane General Post Office, Telegraph Office extension office and the Queensland National Bank’s headquarters. The architect also designed the Sidney House, Whinstaines, the Robert Hart villa and Tighnabruaich in Indooroopilly.

Tighnabruaich in Indooroopilly
Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland

What’s in The Fort?

The location of the Coxen home had a sweeping view of the Brisbane River and was at the highest point in the area. It had all the right elements important for affluent Queenslanders: spacious, hilltop view, near a gorgeous river, far from the city crowd. The house had 15 rooms, a two-hectare garden, stables, and outbuildings for laundry and the stockyard. 

In 1906, Coxen sold the property to the Irish Corkran family, after Margaret’s death. Thomas Knight Corkran was with the Western Queensland police but ran a dairy herd. He rebuilt The Fort to scale this down to six bedrooms. However, he expanded the lounges and halls and built a larger dining room and kitchen with a storeroom. 

According to his daughter, Olivia, The Fort had “two huge rooms for the men.” The Fort also had a cellar for the dairy and cream separator.

Photo Credit: Photo Credit: State Library of Queensland

Following Corkran’s death in 1937, The Fort land was subdivided to his family but by 1955, it was sold to the Provincial of the Congregation of the Passion in Australasia. Originally from Italy, the Passionists are Catholic missionaries. The group was the first Catholic outreach to work with Queensland’s Aboriginal people in the mid-1800s.

Photo Credit: Queensland Heritage Register

The order turned one of The Fort’s front rooms into a chapel and then added a new wing to the house with four bedrooms and a washroom. The first mass at this house was celebrated in November 1955 with Archbishop Duhig as one of the guests. Public Sunday masses started two years later but The Fort was mainly used for retreats, religious celebrations, and missions and markets for charity.

Photo Credit: Queensland Heritage Register

More changes to the house were done in the ’70s and the ’80s as the membership grew. It remains a Passionist Retreat today and its priests have been serving Oxley for more than 60 years. 



By 2005, the Brisbane City Council bought 10 hectares of The Fort’s land for housing. After objections from the community, the area was turned into the Fort Bushland Reserve.

Regal Twin Cinema in Graceville Changes Owners After 50 Years

Regal Twin Cinema, Graceville’s independent arthouse theatre, has a new owner after 50 years. Paul Roobottom confirmed that he sold his business to the Sourris brothers, Stephen and Peter, who own Five Star Cinemas.

Mr Roobottom informed in an email to the cinema’s patrons that the Sourris brothers are taking ownership effect Monday, 31 Aug 2020, as he enjoys his retirement. The businessmen have been working out a deal since the last Christmas holidays. 

Photo Credit: Regal Twin Boutique Arthouse Cinema/Google Maps

The Sourris have known Mr Roobottom for years since their fathers are good friends. Peter has been telling Mr Roobottom of his interest in Regal Twin Cinema, should he decide to put this up on the market one day.

“I have witnessed so many changes of direction within the motion picture industry I can think of no greater challenge or rewarding profession. It truly has been my own Cinema Paradiso I will miss you all,” Mr Roobottom wrote to the cinema’s patrons.



Regal Twin Cinema’s Brief History

The building where the Regal Twin Cinema used to be an open air cinema in the 1920s. Graceville Picture Gardens featured silent movies until the “talkies” became the norm. 

Photo Credit: State Library Queensland

A decade later, a building was erected at the open air venue. In the 1950s, the site was renamed as The Regal in honor of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II. The Regal changed owners more than a dozen times until it landed in the hands of the Roobottom family in 1970.

Under New Management

Regal Twin Cinema will not undergo major changes in operation under the new owners. The Sourris brothers, who are passionate about film, are also behind four other independent cinemas in Brisbane — Elizabeth Picture Theatre, New Farm Cinemas, Red Hill Cinemas and the Yatala Drive-In.

The brothers said that the movie experience at the Regal Twin Cinema is for mature, discerning moviegoers. 

“This is the place where you not only enjoy a movie in clean pleasant surrounds, but enjoy a truly amazing entertainment experience, just like the good old days.”