Yarra Secures Live Music Hubs Amid Venue Struggles

Yarra City Council

Yarra City Council has unanimously adopted an Amendment (C331yara) that creates designated Live Music Precincts in Brunswick Street, Smith Street south, Johnston Street, Collingwood Yards and around Richmond Station. Council will now request the Minister for Planning give authorisation to prepare and exhibit the Amendment to the Yarra Planning Scheme.

Yarra City Council Mayor, Stephen Jolly said the proposed changes will require new residential developments in and around those areas to include stronger noise protection, shifting some of the onus for managing sound away from venues and onto incoming residents and developers.

"Yarra's live music venues are a large part of our economic and cultural fabric," he said. "They provide opportunities for up-and-coming artists and boosting our economy."

A small municipality, a big music footprint

Despite covering just 19.5 square kilometres, Yarra has more than 130 spaces for live music, including 77 small to medium-sized venues. Together they host about 20,000 gigs a year and attract an estimated 2.5 million attendees.

Those numbers help underpin Melbourne's long-held reputation as a live music capital.

Before the COVID-19 shutdowns in March 2020, Melbourne had more live music venues per capita than London, New York and Los Angeles, according to the Music Victoria Live Music Census.

But the council report notes that several venues have not returned in the years since, and those that survived the pandemic face a new wave of pressures.

Rising rents, higher operating costs, shifts in ticket-buying behaviour and broader cost-of-living pressures have all taken a toll. Food and beverage sales are down, audiences are thinner, and many venues have reported difficulties obtaining public liability insurance, with some premiums rising by up to 800 per cent.

At the same time, operators are grappling with rising music licensing fees, stricter noise controls and growing tensions with nearby residential developments.

What the planning change will do

Amendment C331yara proposes to refine Yarra's planning policy framework and formally introduce Live Music Precincts into the planning scheme.

Under the changes, new residential developments (excluding extensions to existing homes) within 50 metres of an existing live music venue, or within one of the designated precincts, would need to incorporate noise attenuation measures in their design.

The aim is to minimise future conflict between residents and venues and make it easier for live music businesses to continue operating – or to relocate within a precinct – without facing complaints or costly retrofits.

The amendment would replace the existing Schedule to Clause 53.06 (Live Music Entertainment Venues) with a new schedule listing:

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