A major three-building commercial development at the corner of East and Brisbane Streets in Ipswich is moving toward a formal development application, with the East Street Central project set to deliver close to 5,000 square metres of new office space into one of Queensland’s tightest CBD office markets.
Developed by Brisbane-based Allamanni Developments, the project addresses a vacancy rate of just three to five per cent across Ipswich’s CBD, a figure the developer describes as among the lowest in the country and a clear signal that demand for quality commercial space in the city has outrun supply.
The development encompasses three existing buildings: the six-level tower at 78 Brisbane Street, a boutique two-storey building at 41 East Street, and the heritage-listed building at 45 East Street, combining a total net lettable area of 4,807 square metres across the site.
After two years of planning, the project is now edging toward lodging a formal development application.
Three Buildings, One Coherent Vision
Each of the three buildings brings something distinct to the project. The tower at 78 Brisbane Street, originally built in 1974, anchors the development with 2,900 square metres across six levels and is set for a comprehensive refurbishment. The works will include a new facade, energy-efficient air-conditioning and lighting systems, two high-speed lifts, a rooftop staff breakout terrace and newly created secure onsite parking, repositioning the building as premium commercial accommodation within the Ipswich market.

Between the tower and the heritage building, the boutique property at 41 East Street adds 825 square metres across two levels. With high ceilings, an open-plan layout and a new fitout, lift and upgraded amenities, it targets smaller tenants looking for character workspace with strong connectivity to the CBD’s retail and dining offer.
The historically significant 45 East Street carries one of Ipswich’s most layered civic stories. F.D.G. Stanley, Queensland’s Colonial Architect from 1873 to 1881, designed the 1888 building for the Ipswich and West Moreton Building Society. Founded in 1877 as the city’s first such institution, the society provided essential housing finance for the growing colony.
Stanley’s legacy lives on through this heritage-listed site, which was constructed in three stages starting in 1888. Now fully refurbished and leased, the 1,082 square metre building provides premium character workspace featuring high ceilings, natural light, and a signature lobby.
A City on the Rise: Ipswich Today
Allamanni Acquisitions Manager Irina Monnier frames the project against the backdrop of Ipswich’s broader trajectory. The city’s population is projected to exceed 456,000 by 2041, and the developer points to a $3.8 billion infrastructure investment pipeline as context for the commercial confidence underpinning the development.
The site’s position within walking distance of the hospital, courts, civic precinct and rail connections makes it particularly suited to professional services, healthcare and public sector tenants, the kinds of occupiers who need CBD presence and reliable access rather than fringe flexibility.

The comparison Monnier draws is deliberate. She describes Ipswich as sitting at a similar inflection point to where Parramatta was roughly two decades ago: a regional city with genuine economic weight, a strong population growth outlook and a commercial property market where quality supply has not kept pace with demand.
Whether that comparison ultimately proves accurate will depend on factors well beyond a single development, but the logic of the moment is clear enough. The East Street Central site sits beside Ipswich’s revitalised Nicholas Street precinct and has the kind of civic-scale adjacency that makes it legible to tenants looking for a credible CBD address rather than suburban office park convenience.

A Heritage Lane in a Growing City
For Ipswich residents, the East Street Central project carries a significance that goes beyond square metres. The restoration of the 1888 building at 45 East Street keeps a piece of the city’s financial and civic history in productive use, rather than allowing it to drift toward vacancy or redevelopment pressure.
The Ipswich and West Moreton Building Society occupied the building from 1888 until 1996, a span of over a century, and the building’s already-full tenancy suggests there is genuine appetite for character space in the CBD when it is presented well.
The project is currently available for lease and sale inquiries across the tower and boutique buildings. Leasing and contact information for East Street Central is available through Allamanni Developments at allamanni.com.au or by phone on 1300 318 756.
Published 20-April-2026










