Wednesday 15 July 2026
Beta
The Daily Central Coast

Central Coast Local News · Every Day

news

Central Coast Council weighs next moves after Gosford CBD sites sale to university

With the $25 million endorsement now on record, council and University of Newcastle officials must settle development sequencing and community access terms.

By Central Coast News Desk · Published 15 July 2026

How we reported this

Produced with AI assistance and reviewed against our editorial and accuracy standards. Spotted an error or need a correction? Contact us.

Central Coast Council weighs next moves after Gosford CBD sites sale to university
Photo by Blue Mountains Library, Local Studies / Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Central Coast Council endorsed the sale of three Gosford CBD sites, including the former Council Chambers, to the University of Newcastle for $25 million in a January 2026 meeting. The decision locks in education-related development on the parcels and shifts focus to the practical steps required to turn the sites into operational facilities.

Why the timing matters for Gosford renewal

The council has been working to stabilise its finances and restore services after a period in administration. Transferring the sites to the university creates a defined education anchor in the CBD at a time when housing affordability and commuter links to Sydney remain pressing local issues. The former Council Chambers building sits at the heart of the commercial core, giving the university a visible presence that could influence surrounding property decisions.

Council records show the sale formed part of a broader package of capital and partnership moves considered at the same meeting. Those moves included a $144.3 million contract for the Charmhaven Sewage Treatment Plant and preparations to host the 54th NSW Aboriginal Rugby League Knockout at Tuggerah. The education sites sale therefore sits inside a wider program of asset and event decisions rather than standing alone.

Key decisions still required

Next steps centre on finalising the development agreement, including the mix of teaching spaces, student facilities and any public access provisions. Council and university staff will also need to align the project with the adopted Open Coast Coastal Management Program, which includes strengthened offshore sand nourishment actions. Any construction timeline will depend on planning approvals and the cost-sharing model already used in other council partnerships, such as the one negotiated for the Koori Knockout.

Residents and local businesses can track progress through council meeting agendas once the university submits its detailed plans. The endorsed sale price of $25 million provides a fixed financial baseline against which future infrastructure contributions will be measured.

Sources

Beta · AI-assisted · human oversight

Your newsroom. Shaped by you.

The Daily Central Coast is in beta. AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Automated checks assess sourcing, accuracy and editorial risk before publication, and sensitive material is held for human review. Spotted something off, or want us covering a topic? Tell us. Your feedback is entirely optional and helps shape what we publish next.

The Daily Network · local news across AUS