If you need to apply for a planning permit for the sale and consumption of liquor you must include the following in your application:
Site Analysis Plan
A Site Analysis Plan is a plan (drawing) that clearly shows the position of the building on your property and those your property shares a boundary with, and their uses.
Your Site Analysis Plan must be drawn to scale and must clearly show all of the following:
- the shape of your property and the size of it (i.e. its length and width) dimensioned as shown on your Certificate of Title
- the location of any easements (if any apply to your land these will be shown on your Certificate of Title)
- the location / footprint of your building and any other buildings or structures on your property, including the location of windows and doors, car parking areas, waste storage etc.
On your property label:
- how your internal and external areas are used (for example, seating for patrons, standing areas, toilets, storage rooms etc)
- any areas on your property used for car parking
- on each property immediately next to your property (that you share a boundary with), label:
- what the buildings are used for (for example, a dwelling or a commercial premises etc)
- the location of any windows that face your property, and what the windows are used for (for example, bedroom, kitchen etc)
- the location of any outdoor areas and how they are used (for example, a service yard with a washing line, a side pathway, a garden, an alfresco or decked area etc)
- the location of all existing buildings or walls that are built to the boundary with your property
- a northern orientation (an arrow showing which direction is north)
- photographs are also a useful way for us to understand the existing conditions of your property and give some context for the surrounding area.
Proposed Floor Plan
A Proposed Floor Plan is a drawing that clearly shows the position of the building on your property.
- for a single storey building you will have one floor plan (a ground floor plan).
- for a two-storey building or a building with a mezzanine level you will have two floor plans, and so on.
Your Proposed Floor Plan(s) must be drawn to scale and must clearly show all of the following:
- the shape of your property and the size of it (i.e. its length and width) dimensioned as shown on your Certificate of Title
- on each property immediately next to your property (that you share a boundary with), label:
- what the buildings are used for
- the location of any windows that face your property, and what the windows are used for
- the location of any outdoor areas
On your property label:
- how your internal areas will be used (for example, seating for patrons, standing areas, toilets, storage rooms etc)
- how many patrons can stand / sit) in each area
- how any outdoor areas will be used (for example, seating for patrons)
- which areas you want to sell and allow liquor to be consumed
- any noise mitigation measures (for example, acoustic screens, screen planting, soft furnishing, doors that will be shut at all times other than for an emergency, self-closing doors etc)
- any areas that will be used for car parking
- a northern orientation (an arrow showing which direction is north).
A written assessment against relevant local policy
We will make their assessment of your application against all of the relevant planning policy in the Yarra Planning Scheme, so you must submit a written assessment with your application that explains how you think your proposal meets all of the requirements of the relevant planning policy.
For a full overview of the relevant planning policy, you can go online on the Victorian Planning Portal and look at Clause 52.27 (Licensed Premises) and Clause 13.07 (Licensed Premises) in the Yarra Planning Scheme.
Your written assessment should contain as much information about your venue as possible. It may vary with each application but as a minimum it should include the following:
- the type of licence(s) you want.
- details of how your licensed venue will be designed, including the size of your venue and its layout and how each area will be used, tables and seats, the type of music and/or entertainment that you want to have (for example, live, acoustic or background music and whether it will be internal to your building or external speakers), any external lighting (including security lighting) etc.
- details of how your licensed venue will operate, including the maximum number of patrons that will be in the venue at any one time, the hours of operation, the hours that you want to provide food, the maximum number of staff that will be in the venue at any one time and your staffing arrangements (for example, number and working hours of security staff, bar staff, waiters/waitresses, on-premises manager, and whether training will be given to bar staff in the responsible serving of liquor).
- details of waste management for your licensed venue including general waste and recycling, where waste will be stored, the total and individual capacity of bins, how and at what times waste will be taken to the street on collection days, whether or not you have bottle crushers etc.
- details of deliveries to your licensed venue, including what type of delivery vehicle will be used, the frequency and times of deliveries, which street / laneway the delivery vehicle will use and whether there is space for it to park without causing disruption etc.
- any potential impacts that you think your licensed venue might have on nearby properties, and how you will manage it and mitigate it.
- a written assessment by a qualified building surveyor detailing the patron capacity of the licensed premises.
Noise Amenity Action Plan (NAAP)
A Noise and Amenity Action Plan (NAAP) is a written document that details potential noise and amenity impacts that could result from the granting of the planning permit, and actions that will be undertaken by the operator of the venue in order to reduce these impacts.
You can go online on the Victorian Planning Portal and look at Clause 52.27 (Licensed Premises) and Clause 13.07 (Licensed Premises) in the Yarra Planning Scheme.
These policies explain when a NAAP is, and is not, required (for example, a NAAP is not required for an application for a restaurant (including a café) or for a packaged liquor outlet.
Where a NAAP is required, it should contain as much information about your venue as possible. It may vary with each application but as a minimum it should include the following:
- how the venue operator and staff will deal with any complaints, should they occur.
- how patrons will be managed within the venue (if patron capacity inside certain parts of the venue are capped or if an outdoor area closes at a set time and all patrons have to move inside the venue) and how patrons are managed during and immediately after the venue closes.
- how any large group bookings are managed.
- any smoking areas including their location, design and capacity, whether liquor will be consumed within them and how they will be managed.
Acoustic report
An acoustic report is a written document prepared by a professionally qualified acoustician that details all potential noise sources that could result from the granting of the planning permit, and actions that could be undertaken by the operator of the venue in order to reduce them.
You can go online on the Victorian Planning Portal and look at Clause 52.27 (Licensed Premises) and Clause 13.07 (Licensed Premises) in the Yarra Planning Scheme.
These policies explain when an acoustic report is required. For example, an acoustic report is not required for an application for a packaged liquor outlet and is only sometimes required for a restaurant (including a café).
Accumulative impact assessment
An accumulative impact assessment is a written document that identifies and addresses the extent to which a proposal for a new or modified licensed premises is likely to contribute to a cumulative impact within an area.
Cumulative impact refers to both positive and negative impacts that can result from clustering a particular land use or type of land use. Potential cumulative impact from a cluster of licensed premises will vary between locations, depending on the mix and number of venues and whether the area is a destination for activities associated with the supply of liquor.
Cumulative impact is a product of the number and type of venues present, the way they are managed, and the capacity of the local area to accommodate those venues.
Practice Note 61
Download Practice Note 61: Licensed Premises: Assessing Cumulative Impact (PDF)
The Practice Note is prepared by the State Government, and explains cumulative impact in relation to licensed premises in the planning system and it provides guidance to assist you as a permit applicant when considering and responding to the potential cumulative impact of your proposal.