Brisbane 2026: The Residential Hotspots Emerging After the Olympics Announcement

The 2032 Olympics catalyst has accelerated infrastructure spending across Greater Brisbane. Which suburbs are positioned to benefit most from the transformation?

## Brisbane's Olympic transformation: separating signal from noise The 2032 Olympics announcement has generated enormous attention for Brisbane's property market, but not every suburb benefits equally from Olympic-driven infrastructure investment. Understanding which projects create genuine, lasting livability improvements — and which are temporary construction disruptions — is essential for buyers making decisions now. ## Woolloongabba and the Cross River Rail corridor The Cross River Rail project is the single most significant transport infrastructure investment in Brisbane's history. The new underground stations at Woolloongabba, Albert Street, Roma Street, and the Exhibition will fundamentally change accessibility patterns across the inner city. Woolloongabba is positioned for the most dramatic change — the new station, combined with the Gabba precinct redevelopment for the Olympics, will transform an area that has historically been a secondary inner-city suburb into a primary residential destination. Adjacent suburbs — Kangaroo Point, East Brisbane, and Coorparoo — are likely to see spillover benefits from improved connectivity and precinct amenity. ## Northside growth: Chermside to North Lakes Brisbane's northern corridor continues to attract family buyers seeking space and value. Chermside's position as a secondary commercial centre, anchored by the Westfield shopping complex and the Prince Charles Hospital precinct, creates an employment and amenity hub that supports strong livability scores. Further north, North Lakes and Mango Hill offer master-planned living with modern amenities at entry prices 40-50% below Brisbane's median. The Redcliffe Peninsula line has improved rail connectivity, though peak-hour commute times to the CBD remain a consideration. ## Southside value: Logan and Springfield Logan has historically carried a reputation disadvantage that the data increasingly doesn't support. Suburbs like Shailer Park, Daisy Hill, and Springwood deliver genuinely strong livability scores — good schools, bushland access, reasonable transport — at median prices well below Brisbane's average. Springfield is one of Australia's largest master-planned communities and continues to expand. The Springfield Central station provides rail access to the CBD, and the community infrastructure — schools, health facilities, retail — is maturing. ## Inner-city apartments: the supply question Brisbane's inner-city apartment market has experienced significant new su

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