Skip to main content
Home of Manningham Council | Balance of city and country
Action
  • Pay icon
    Pay
    • Rates
    • Fine
    • Pet registration renewal
    • Application and permit invoice
    • Debtor account invoice
    • View all pay
  • Report icon
    Report
    • Missed bin collection
    • Illegally parked or abandoned vehicle
    • Report noise
    • Complain about Council services
    • View all report
  • Apply icon
    Apply
    • Hard rubbish collection
    • Job
    • Tenders
    • Pet registration
    • Immunisation session
    • View all apply
Main navigation
  • Waste and recycling
    • Visit waste and recycling
    • Bins and collections
      • Visit bins and collections
      • Bin collection days
      • Report a missed bin collection
      • Order, repair, swap or cancel your bins
      • Book a bundled branches collection
      • Book a hard rubbish collection
      • Apply for a skip bin permit
      • What can and cannot go into your bins
      • Food Organics Garden Organics (FOGO)
    • Find your local transfer stations (tips) and recycling centres
      • Visit find your local transfer stations (tips) and recycling centres
      • Container deposit scheme
    • How to dispose of your items
      • Visit how to dispose of your items
      • Soft plastics recycling
      • Chemicals and hazardous waste
      • Electronic waste (e-waste)
      • Food waste and composting
    • Report dumped rubbish or litter
  • Property and development
    • Visit property and development
    • Rates and valuations
      • Visit rates and valuations
      • Pay your rates
      • Request a certificate of ownership
      • Update your details
      • How to read your valuation and rates notice
      • How rates are calculated
      • Apply for a land information certificate
      • Request ownership details
    • When do you need a permit
      • Visit when do you need a permit
      • Apply for a planning permit
      • Object to a planning permit application
      • The planning permit process
      • The building permit process
    • All permits and fees
      • Visit all permits and fees
      • Apply for a planning permit
      • Planning and land-use
      • Real estate advertising
      • Building and construction
      • Infrastructure and drainage
      • Septic tanks and waste management
      • Road closures and access through council-owned land
      • Business-related permits
    • Guides and maps
      • Visit guides and maps
      • Townhouse and Low-Rise Code
      • VicSmart Permit applications for two dwellings on a lot
      • Trees
      • Fences
      • Swimming pools and spas
      • Septic tanks
      • Heritage listed properties
      • Build sustainable properties
      • Build safe properties
      • Preparing for emergencies
    • Request official property information
      • Visit request official property information
      • Copy of building plans
      • Request a planning property enquiry
      • Regulation 51 statement
      • Certificates of ownership
      • Land information certificates
    • View planning application portal
    • Key projects
  • Parking, roads and footpaths
    • Visit parking, roads and footpaths
    • Parking
      • Visit parking
      • Apply for a parking permit
      • Report an illegally parked or abandoned vehicle
      • Pay a parking fine
    • Street drains
      • Visit street drains
      • Drainage projects design and construction
      • Report a blocked or damaged street drain
      • Apply for works, drainage and stormwater connection permit
    • Roads and footpaths
      • Visit roads and footpaths
      • Footpath maintenance and construction
      • Report a damaged footpath or road
      • Report dumped rubbish or litter
      • Apply for a temporary road closure
    • Street trees and nature strips
      • Visit street trees and nature strips
      • Report an issue with a tree on public land
    • Infringements and fines
      • Visit infringements and fines
      • Pay a fine
      • Apply for a payment plan or extension of time
      • Nominate another person for a parking infringement
      • View your parking infringement photo online
      • Apply for an infringement review
      • Contest an infringement in Court
  • Pets and animals
    • Visit pets and animals
    • Pet registrations and permits
      • Visit pet registrations and permits
      • Apply for an additional animal permit
      • Update your pet's registration details
    • Register your pet
    • Find your missing pet
      • Visit find your missing pet
      • Manningham Pound
    • Report a barking dog
    • Native animals and insects
  • Business
    • Visit business
    • When do you need a permit
    • All business permits and fees
      • Visit all business permits and fees
      • Food businesses
      • Health and beauty business
      • Accommodation businesses
      • Apply for a footpath trading permit
    • How to guides and support for businesses
      • Visit how to guides and support for businesses
      • Does my event need council approval
      • Apply for busking approval
      • Book a community event sign
      • Organising an event
    • Tenders
    • Home based business
    • Starting a new business
  • Arts, venues and recreation
    • Visit arts, venues and recreation
    • Places and spaces
      • Visit places and spaces
      • Find a park, reserve or playground
      • Find a venue for hire
      • Find local markets and shopping centres
      • Find local community learning centres
      • Find a recreation facility or leisure centre
    • Arts, crafts and theatre
      • Visit arts, crafts and theatre
      • Manningham Art Studios
      • Manningham Art Gallery
      • Doncaster Playhouse
      • Discover our public art
    • Find a local sports club
    • Grants, funding and opportunities
    • What's on
  • Assistance and support services
    • Visit assistance and support services
    • For new residents
    • For parents, guardians and families
      • Visit for parents, guardians and families
      • Maternal and Child Health services
      • Find a kindergarten or preschool
      • Find a local school
      • Find a playgroup or toy library
      • Find childcare services
      • Immunisation services
    • For people with disabilities
      • Visit for people with disabilities
      • Encouraging inclusive employment
      • Apply for an accessible parking permit
    • For our local multicultural communities
    • For older adults
      • Visit for older adults
      • Encouraging positive ageing
      • Assisted transport for older adults
      • Find clubs for older adults
      • Preventing elder abuse
    • For young people
      • Visit for young people
      • Apply for the TAC L2P program
    • Grants and funding
      • Visit grants and funding
      • Community Grant Program
      • Manningham Community Fund
      • Recreation Capital Works Funding
      • Freedom of the City award
      • Financial hardship relief
    • Wellbeing support services
  • Climate and environment
    • Visit climate and environment
    • Take climate and environmental action
      • Visit take climate and environmental action
      • Climate and sustainability education for schools
      • Climate and sustainability education for kinders and community groups
    • Electrify Your Life
      • Visit electrify your life
      • Find an electric vehicle charging station
      • Manningham Solar Savers
    • Find an environmental grant or rebate
      • Visit find an environmental grant or rebate
      • Apply for assistance to preserve your bushland
      • Manningham Solar Savers
    • Living with the natural environment
      • Visit living with the natural environment
      • Native animals and insects
      • Pest animals and insects
      • Plants and ecology
      • Protecting our waterways
      • The Green Wedge
      • Manningham's Backyard Diversity Series
      • Tree management
  • About council
    • Visit about council
    • How council works
      • Visit how council works
      • Find your local councillor and ward
      • Council meetings
      • Committees and working groups
      • Our organisation structure and executive team
      • Policies
      • Strategies and action plans
      • Guiding legislations (LGA and our Local Law)
      • Council elections
    • Discover our area, history and demographics
      • Visit discover our area, history and demographics
      • Maps
      • View our demographics
      • Our First Nations history
      • Find local historical groups and societies
    • Careers
      • Visit careers
      • How to apply for a career with us
    • News
      • Visit news
      • Submit a news story
      • Subscribe to Manningham eNews
      • View Manningham Matters
      • Manningham Matters in your language
      • View all news stories
      • View all media releases
    • What's on
  • Contact us
    • Visit contact us
    • Get information in your language
    • Give us feedback
    • Make a complaint
  • Receive your rates notice via email
Are you looking for
Book a hard rubbish collection Find your bin collection day Report a missed bin collection
Are you looking for
Register your pool or spa Report illegal noise Pay a fine
Are you looking for
Apply for a parking permit Report a damaged footpath or road Report an issue with a tree on public land
Are you looking for
Register your pet Report a barking dog View the Lost Pets Database
Are you looking for
COVID-19 business support Apply for a tender Apply for a Community Development Grant
Are you looking for
Explore our parks, reserves and trails Visit Aquarena Visit our libraries
Are you looking for
Apply for financial hardship relief COVID-19 Support Helping you prepare for an emergency
Are you looking for
Find your local councillor and ward Find Council Meetings Work with us in Manningham
Are you looking for
699 Doncaster Road, Doncaster 3108 Call us (03) 9840 9333

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Search
Displaying 441 - 460 of 618
River Peel
… Find out more about River Peel by Michael Bellemo and Catriona Macleod, 2000. Tags Public Art … River Peel …

River Peel draws on the local heritage and surrounding landscape, imitating the Yarra River as it bends and turns through the area.

The sculpture also represents the peel of an apple to relate to the history of orcharding in the areas of Doncaster and Templestowe.

In 2001, River Peel was awarded the Joseph Reed Award for Urban Design.

Originally located at the Fitzsimons Lane and Porter Street roundabout in Templestowe, the work was relocated to the current site in 2022 as part of a Major Road Projects Victoria upgrade.

 

Location of artwork

  •  205 Fitzsimons Lane, Templestowe, VIC 3106
  •   View on map
     

About the artists

Bellemo and Cat is a Melbourne-based architect/artist partnership. The multi-disciplinary team was established in 1998 by Michael Bellemo and Cat Macleod. Based in Northcote, in inner urban Melbourne, the work of the firm varies widely in both scale - from domestic to the public, and location - from the urban to the rural.

The work of Bellemo and Cat is a wandering line of inquiry back and forth. From the construction of a house to the twisting of a sculpture. It enables them to carry the methods and results of experimentation in both the fields of architecture and sculpture back and forth like busy ants. Resulting in sculptural architectural works and pragmatic approaches to urban design.

 

Learn more about Bellemo and Cat 

  • Website - Bellemo and Cat
Related news and events
  • Artist Terry Napier walks down the Tunstall Square laneway which is flanked by brick walls painted a sage green which feature images of his paintings in frames.
    Bringing art into everyday places: our new PU...
    A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming...
    8 Oct 2025 Liveable Places and Spaces
  • Help inspire a new artwork at Mullum Mullum S...
    We're inviting Manningham residents to contribute to a meaningful and exciting new public art project at Mullum Mullum...
    23 Aug 2024 Healthy Community
    archived
  • Migrant Peace public artwork community worksh...
    Help shape Manningham’s new public artwork at Ruffey Lake Park .
    2 Aug 2024 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived
  • Expressions of interest for a new public artw...
    We're inviting expressions of interest from artists to develop and implement a new public artwork celebrating women...
    24 Nov 2023 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived

Related downloads

Public Art and Collection Policy
Public Art and Collection Policy
pdf
205.7 KB
UPDATED: 3 October 2025
Download
download

 

Public Art
Read more
I Am a Man Like You

Find out more about I am a Man Like You by Anthony Pryor, 1986. ...

The open wooden zigzag and tight zigzag represent human energy and spirit – these were occasionally referred to as “ personality lines” – and the curving fan of staggered steps symbolises movement. 

Sharp edges and shiny surfaces mix with eroded metals to create a sense of liveliness, and the combination of straight angled pieces and smooth curved lines creates the illusion that the sculpture is standing proudly and saluting the sky. 

I Am a Man Like You has a gentle but strong line and is far simpler and cleaner than Pryor’s other works. It does include some of the reoccurring symbols that appear in many of Pryor’s other works.

Commissioned by the Doncaster and Templestowe branch of the Movement Against Uranium Mining to commemorate the International Year of Peace in 1986. Funded by the Visual Arts Board of the Australian Council and the City of Doncaster and Templestowe.

 

Location of artwork

  • Finns Reserve, Templestowe Road and Union Street, Templestowe Lower, VIC 3107
  • Map: View on map
     

About the artist

Anthony Denis Pryor was born in Melbourne in 1951 and lived to the age of 40. Throughout his short career, Pryor created some of the most recognisable public sculptures in Melbourne.

Anthony Pryor’s work dots the Australian landscape from Townsville and Canberra to outside many important buildings in Mebourne. His works are immediately recognisable for their characteristic energy, line and dynamic form. 

A respected teacher of sculpture at RMIT, he was much admired for his dedication to his pupils and the process of teaching. His work is much loved and the respect he gained from fellow artists is justly deserved. 

 

Learn more about Anthony Pryor 

  • Website - National Gallery of Victoria
Related news and events
  • Artist Terry Napier walks down the Tunstall Square laneway which is flanked by brick walls painted a sage green which feature images of his paintings in frames.
    Bringing art into everyday places: our new PU...
    A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming...
    8 Oct 2025 Liveable Places and Spaces
  • Help inspire a new artwork at Mullum Mullum S...
    We're inviting Manningham residents to contribute to a meaningful and exciting new public art project at Mullum Mullum...
    23 Aug 2024 Healthy Community
    archived
  • Migrant Peace public artwork community worksh...
    Help shape Manningham’s new public artwork at Ruffey Lake Park .
    2 Aug 2024 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived
  • Expressions of interest for a new public artw...
    We're inviting expressions of interest from artists to develop and implement a new public artwork celebrating women...
    24 Nov 2023 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived

Related downloads

Public Art and Collection Policy
Public Art and Collection Policy
pdf
205.7 KB
UPDATED: 3 October 2025
Download
download
Public Art
Read more
Childhood Cheeks, Grown-Up Madness
… viewers into the subtle interplay between innocence and experience. The canvas unfolds as a vibrant narrative, … with expressive paint strokes sharing tales of enthusiasm and introspection, while whimsical clay forms add a tangible … layers of personal evolution. Image courtesy of the Arts Manningham. Photo by Charlie Kinross.  Manningham Art …

This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

Nani Puspasari is a Chinese-Indonesian visual artist based in Naarm (Melbourne). Her latest exhibition Childhood Cheeks, Grown-Up Madness is an emotive exploration that beckons viewers into the subtle interplay between innocence and experience.

The canvas unfolds as a vibrant narrative, with expressive paint strokes sharing tales of enthusiasm and introspection, while whimsical clay forms add a tangible layer to the storytelling. This artistic journey transcends mere observation, offering a profound reflection on the paradoxical nature of the path to adulthood.

The installation stands as an emotional proof to the delightful chaos inherent in the shift from carefree childhood to the intricate realities of grown-up life. It urges individuals to embrace the enduring beauty found in the inherent madness of growth and self-discovery, even within the complexities of life, creating a space for a heartfelt exploration of the multifaceted layers of personal evolution.

Image courtesy of the Arts Manningham. Photo by Charlie Kinross. 

Past Exhibitions
Read more
Warrandyte Community Centre mural

Find out more about the Warrandyte Community Centre mural by Angharad Neal-Williams, 2023. ...

It was great to get input from a wide range of community members who helped inform the design through the series of workshops.

Common themes that were explored included the river, the natural environment and the experience of walking along and looking across the river to the other side.

The design captures these themes whilst incorporating bright colours that will sit within, and complement the surrounding environment.

 

Location of artwork

  •  Warrandyte Community House - 2 Webb Street Warrandyte, VIC 3113
  •   View on map

 

About the artist

Angharad Neal-Williams is an Illustrator, muralist and graphic recorder based in Melbourne.

Her work combines strong line drawing with controlled colour and shape to create thoughtful, fun and conceptual drawings.

She utilises both digital and traditional mediums to ensure outcomes feel natural and expressive through quirky imperfections in the simple line work. Her style is distinctly optimistic and focuses strongly on the importance of composition and line.

 

Learn more about Angharad Neal-Williams

  • Website - Angharad Neal-Williams
  • Instagram - @angharad.nw
Related news and events
  • Artist Terry Napier walks down the Tunstall Square laneway which is flanked by brick walls painted a sage green which feature images of his paintings in frames.
    Bringing art into everyday places: our new PU...
    A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming...
    8 Oct 2025 Liveable Places and Spaces
  • Help inspire a new artwork at Mullum Mullum S...
    We're inviting Manningham residents to contribute to a meaningful and exciting new public art project at Mullum Mullum...
    23 Aug 2024 Healthy Community
    archived
  • Migrant Peace public artwork community worksh...
    Help shape Manningham’s new public artwork at Ruffey Lake Park .
    2 Aug 2024 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived
  • Expressions of interest for a new public artw...
    We're inviting expressions of interest from artists to develop and implement a new public artwork celebrating women...
    24 Nov 2023 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived

Related downloads

Public Art and Collection Policy
Public Art and Collection Policy
pdf
205.7 KB
UPDATED: 3 October 2025
Download
download

 

Public Art
Read more
Ayr St South ground mural

Find out more about the Ayr St South ground mural by Tom Civil, 2022. ...

This playful and bold ground artwork attempts to reflect on our connection to nature as we go about our lives in a heavily urbanised and concrete and asphalt covered world.

The artwork is also about how the places we live in were in the past, and how they could be in the future.

The ‘contour lines’ reference the topography of the land as a 1:1 scale map that we walk through. A compass is used as a simple practical guide in direction and navigating the city, with the sun and moons represented to show the passing of days and months. There are references to the local flowers of tea tree and eucalyptus, local ladybugs and dragonflies, and magpie feathers.

I hope people find unexpected games within the design too, whether jumping from flower to flower, following a dot track or exploring the compass.

This project was funded by Manningham Council and the Department of Jobs, Regions and Precincts COVID Safe Outdoor Activation Fund.

 

Location of artwork

  •  Parkview Reserve, Ayr Street South, East Doncaster, VIC 3108
  •   View on map

 

About the artist

Tom Civil is an artist, muralist, community art facilitator and printmaker. 

Tom has been making art in the streets of Melbourne for over 18 years, and has painted over 30 commissioned murals across town in the last ten years.

Tom's ground artworks reference through the language of mapping and symbology, our connection to nature in a heavily urbanised and concrete and asphalt covered world. The ground artworks also allow us to day-dream about how the places we live were in the past, and how they could be in the future. They also create fun interactive play moments in our daily lives.

 

Learn more about Tom Civil

  • Website - Tom Civil
  • Instagram - @thomascivilian
Related news and events
  • Artist Terry Napier walks down the Tunstall Square laneway which is flanked by brick walls painted a sage green which feature images of his paintings in frames.
    Bringing art into everyday places: our new PU...
    A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming...
    8 Oct 2025 Liveable Places and Spaces
  • Help inspire a new artwork at Mullum Mullum S...
    We're inviting Manningham residents to contribute to a meaningful and exciting new public art project at Mullum Mullum...
    23 Aug 2024 Healthy Community
    archived
  • Migrant Peace public artwork community worksh...
    Help shape Manningham’s new public artwork at Ruffey Lake Park .
    2 Aug 2024 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived
  • Expressions of interest for a new public artw...
    We're inviting expressions of interest from artists to develop and implement a new public artwork celebrating women...
    24 Nov 2023 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived

Related downloads

Public Art and Collection Policy
Public Art and Collection Policy
pdf
205.7 KB
UPDATED: 3 October 2025
Download
download

 

Public Art
Read more
I Fall to Pieces
… artworks by two Naarm-based artists, Matthew Harris and Nicholas Currie. The exhibition traverses topics of mental health and healing.  Rich and differing First Nations materials and processes are …

This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

I Fall to Pieces brings together artworks by two Naarm-based artists, Matthew Harris and Nicholas Currie. The exhibition traverses topics of mental health and healing. 

Rich and differing First Nations materials and processes are deployed along with key tenants of Western Abstraction, offering conceptual and immediate encounters with paint and form.

Matthew Harris, of mixed European and Koorie descent, debases dominant hierarchies through socially critical painting and sculpture. Nicholas Currie is an emerging artist, curator, and descendant of the Mununjali clan of Yugambeh people of Brisbane and Beaudesert.

Matthew Harris is represented by FUTURES. Nicholas Currie appears courtesy of FUTURES.

Image credit: Nicholas Currie, Big Purple, 2023, acrylic on linen, 200 x 250 cm. Courtesy of the Artist and FUTURES. 

  • I Fall to Pieces - List of Artworks
    I Fall to Pieces - List of Artworks
    pdf
    270.14 KB
    UPDATED: 22 April 2024
    Download
    download
Past Exhibitions
Read more
A Space of Facial Deconstruction
… the interior of Gallery One.  The gallery environment and self-portraits submitted by Manningham residents are … senses. In a continuous process of meeting, overlapping and collision - in endless movement, the ongoing change and exchange will create a drawing installation over the …
This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

Manningham Art Gallery is excited to present Gosia Wlodarczak's A Space of Facial Deconstruction. 

Over a five-day onsite performance, Gosia will create a large-scale drawing installation spanning across the interior of Gallery One. 

The gallery environment and self-portraits submitted by Manningham residents are translated into shapes through Gosia’s senses. In a continuous process of meeting, overlapping and collision - in endless movement, the ongoing change and exchange will create a drawing installation over the period of the performance.

The result will be a stunning group portrait of the Manningham community.

View the performance

  • Visit the gallery between 11.00am to 5.00pm from Tuesday 29 November to Saturday 3 December to watch Gosia's drawing performance

View the completed artwork

  • Visit the gallery during regular opening hours up from Wednesday 7 December to Saturday 17 December to see the completed artwork.

During your visit to the gallery, you can also explore A Fragment of the Infinite Magnificence by Zahra Marsous in Gallery Two. 

For further information on submitting your self-portrait and getting involved, please visit Gosia Wlodarczak: A Space of Facial Deconstruction.

Photo Credit: Longin Sarnecki

 

 

 

 

 

Past Exhibitions
Read more
Templestowe Village and Together We Rise
… the mural Together We Rise by Robert Young, Keedan Rigney and Lukas Kasper, 2022. Tags Public Art … Templestowe Village and Together We Rise …

This piece represents joy, life, culture and connection to country and community.

It is a new story being told in this space, one of rejuvenation and new life. These totems are the new protectors of this space, the spiritual protectors of gathering and community.

Through this tough time, our spirit is still strong, and our community is there.

The art aims to bring life and colour to the street and features three local Manningham animals – the black swan, platypus and wombat. 

Robert says the idea is that “the activation of creativity and art in this space helps to bring the community together”.

This project was funded by Manningham Council and the Department of Jobs, Regions and Precincts COVID Safe Outdoor Activation Fund.

 

Location of artwork

  •  Bendigo Bank, Templestowe Village -  128 James Street, Templestowe VIC 3106
  •   View on map

 

About the artists

Robert Michael Young, Keedan Rigney and Lukas Kasper are the three artists behind the footpath artwork at Templestowe Village. 

 

Learn more about the artists

  • Instagram - @robertmichaelyoung
  • Instagram - @kasperart
  • Instagram - @corneliuspaint
Related news and events
  • Artist Terry Napier walks down the Tunstall Square laneway which is flanked by brick walls painted a sage green which feature images of his paintings in frames.
    Bringing art into everyday places: our new PU...
    A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming...
    8 Oct 2025 Liveable Places and Spaces
  • Help inspire a new artwork at Mullum Mullum S...
    We're inviting Manningham residents to contribute to a meaningful and exciting new public art project at Mullum Mullum...
    23 Aug 2024 Healthy Community
    archived
  • Migrant Peace public artwork community worksh...
    Help shape Manningham’s new public artwork at Ruffey Lake Park .
    2 Aug 2024 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived
  • Expressions of interest for a new public artw...
    We're inviting expressions of interest from artists to develop and implement a new public artwork celebrating women...
    24 Nov 2023 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived

Related downloads

Public Art and Collection Policy
Public Art and Collection Policy
pdf
205.7 KB
UPDATED: 3 October 2025
Download
download

 

Public Art
Read more
Kaleidoscope of Character - A Cabaret Series
… Kaleidoscope of Character - A Cabaret Series Arts, theatre and music Kaleidoscope of Characters comprises nine cabaret … in The Art of Seeking Attention." Doncaster Playhouse Arts Manningham Doncaster Playhouse Whats On … Kaleidoscope …

Kaleidoscope of Characters comprises nine cabaret acts across a season of 7 performances. Each night will feature a group of performers each presenting their self-devised cabaret.

 

Performance Schedule:

Wednesday 15th November:

  • Brotherband with their EP "Little Fish" and Support Act: Charlie McCosh

 

Thursday 16 November:

  • Emily Dingle in Self-Fulfilled Prophecy
  • Imogen Whittaker in The Last Word

 

Friday 17 November:

  • Lady Whisper in The Art of Seeking Attention
  • Emma Blake in Basic Witch
  • Pas x Rory in These Gays, They’re Trying to Murder Me

 

Saturday 18 November:

  • Helmet Von Püsh in Püsh Presents “Taste.”
  • Jenn Biggs & Jess May in Body of Work
  • Pas x Rory in These Gays, They’re Trying to Murder Me

 

Wednesday 22 November:

  • Emma Blake in Basic Witch
  • Latecha Khairy in How Did I Get Here?

- Jenn Biggs & Jess May in Body of Work

 

Thursday 23 November:
- Imogen Whittaker in The Last Word
- Emily Dingle in Self-Fulfilled Prophecy

 

Friday 24 November:
- Helmet Von Püsh in Püsh Presents “Taste.”
- Latecha Khairy in How Did I Get Here?
- Lady Whisper in The Art of Seeking Attention."

Arts Manningham
Doncaster Playhouse
Whats On
Read more
Mirrors
… artist Katrin Koenning, she intimately explores connection and belonging through a deeply personal and immersive constellation of images drawn from the artist’s … Image courtesy of the Artist.  Manningham Art Gallery Arts Manningham Past Exhibitions … Mirrors …

In this stunning new exhibition by artist Katrin Koenning, she intimately explores connection and belonging through a deeply personal and immersive constellation of images drawn from the artist’s archive across time and space.

Artist Biography 
b. 1978. Dortmund, Germany. Lives and works in Naarm/Melbourne, Australia.

Pursuing intimacy and interconnection, Koenning's work centers practice as relational encounter, exploring themes such as community, kinship, grief and love. In extended image-dialogues, Katrin uses fragments and slippages to suggest narrative spaces and communities that are allied, fluid and multiplicit. Many of her series render non-human human entanglement.

Her work is regularly exhibited in Australia and internationally including in presentations at the National Gallery of Victoria and the National Portrait Gallery, Canberra; Centre for Contemporary Photography, Melbourne; Australian Centre for Photography, Sydney; the Museum of Australian Photography, Melbourne; Ishara Art Foundation, Dubai; Chobi Mela, Bangladesh; and Paris Photo. Her work is held in numerous institutional and private collections and has been published in The New Yorker, Vogue.com, Zeit Magazine, The Guardian, Esquire Italy, Der Spiegel, Yucca Magazine, California Sunday and many other places.

Katrin Koenning, yanakie (one), 2021, archival pigment print, 40cm x 30cm, Ed. 1/6 +2AP. Image courtesy of the Artist. 

Arts Manningham
Past Exhibitions
Read more
Progeny
… of dynamic works, spanning video, sculpture, painting, and digital media by Edwina Green. The works collectively highlight Green’s creative practice and research interests across recent years (2019-2023). … ‘the descendants of a person, animal or plant; offspring’ and pulls from the artists continued connectivity between …
This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

Progeny is a collection of dynamic works, spanning video, sculpture, painting, and digital media by Edwina Green. The works collectively highlight Green’s creative practice and research interests across recent years (2019-2023).

Progeny in its direct meaning is to be ‘the descendants of a person, animal or plant; offspring’ and pulls from the artists continued connectivity between ancestral lines, intergenerational discourse, and concurrence of being both ancestor and descendant.

Informed by her identity as a Trawlwoolway First Nations woman, motifs of weaving, hand harvested and sewn bags, kelp, spoken word, organic movements on canvas, images of home, and oysters communicate a delicate ancestral tribute, and the current dance in which Green is choreographing with her multidisciplinary, experimental practice.

Progeny interrogates introspection, historical association, vulnerability, and an ability to invest in the artist's practice with a sense of intentional curiosity and closeness. 

Edwina Green, Oyster. Image by Jordan Halsall.

Past Exhibitions
Read more
Are you Procrastinating? By Carol Yang
… produced by the fashion industry, Carol creates wearable and functional sculptures that highlights the procrastinator … as the protagonist. Carol’s work demonstrates the feelings and activities of procrastination visually in a humorous way, … talks, demonstrations, workshops and open studios. Arts Manningham … Are you Procrastinating? By Carol Yang …

As part of Craft Contemporary 2023 we are presenting: 

Are you Procrastinating? by Carol Yang. 

Using waste produced by the fashion industry, Carol creates wearable and functional sculptures that highlights the procrastinator as the protagonist.

Carol’s work demonstrates the feelings and activities of procrastination visually in a humorous way, while exploring the emotional state of procrastination.

@carol_yang_

On display in the foyer of the Manningham Civic Centre building from Monday 2 October to Friday 3 November 2023. 

Check out our other exhibit Soil Clay, by Vivian Qiu or explore the full Craft Contemporary program guide. 

This exhibition is part of Craft Contemporary 2023, an annual festival delivered by Craft Victoria – the largest celebration of craft and design in Victoria. The festival brings together practitioners, educators, industry, and craft lovers to explore material practice as it is today. See, touch, experience and be inspired by 150+ art experiences, including exhibitions, talks, demonstrations, workshops and open studios.

Arts Manningham
Read more
Let Us Walk Together, Kol-ing-wod-ong-gnul

Find out more about Let Us Walk Together, Kol-ing-wod-ong-gnul by Wathaurong Glass Pty Ltd, 2001....

Let us walk together depicts aspects of the characteristics, history and development of the municipality. 

The overall form of the panels is curved along the upper edge, which symbolises the rolling hills of the area visible to the north and east, while the staggered lower edge represents the city skyline and the municipality’s built environment.
 

  • Panel 1 - water symbols represent the Birrarung, Mullum Mullum and Koonung Creeks
  • Panel 2 - depicts windbreaks planted to protect the fruit trees
  • Panels 3, 10 and 12 - tell of clearing the land, planting of crops and orchards and the early development of the suburbs
  • Panel 4 - the lizard tracks symbolise animal life
  • Panel 5 - rain and flooding has significantly impacted on the land and habitation
  • Panel 6 - the coming together of artists at Heide
  • Panel 7 - represents fire used to clear the land and the bushfires that have wreaked havoc
  • Panel 8 - the body paint symbolises the dance performed at the meeting of the Kulin Nation
  • Panel 9 - represents multiculturalism, unity and sense of community
  • Panel 11 - the campsites or suburbs and the roads leading to and from Manningham
  • Panel 13 - the x-ray image of an animal stomach represents the possum skin cloaks distinctive to First Nations people from southeast Australia
  • Panel 14 - snake tracks

To find out more about  the commissioning of this artwork, view the video produced by Message Stick.


Scar Tree Shields

Scar trees have had their bark removed by First Nations people.

The removal of bark does not kill the tree but leaves a clearly visible and generally symmetrical scar. The symmetry of the scar is one way of telling whether the scar was caused by human action rather than of natural causes. Scars can range in length from thirty centimetres to five metres. The size of the scar provides a clue as to whether the bark was used for a container, shield, a canoe or a slab for making a shelter.

There are a number of scar trees in the area of the Bolin Bolin Swamp along the Birrarung.  

This work was commissioned to celebrate the Centenary of Federation and the building of the City’s Function Centre. It was supported by the Federal Government through the Federation Community Projects Fund.

 

Location of artwork

  •  Level 2, Manningham Civic Centre, 699 Doncaster Road, Doncaster VIC 3108
  •   View on map

 

About the artists

In 1998 Wathaurong Glass was formed to express Aboriginal art in glass. The techniques used to produce their products include the use of kiln forming (slumping glass), sandblasting or any other technique they feel is suitable to achieve the desired result.


The name “WATHAURONG” (wathawurrung or wadda wurrung) is a recognised tribe, it consisted of 25 groups (clans). The boundaries of Wathaurong are from Geelong, north to Werribee River, northwest to Bacchus Marsh, south west to Cressy, south east to Colac, east to Lorne and north back to Geelong, encompassing the Bellarine Peninsula.

 

Learn more about Wathaurong Glass 

  • Website - Wathaurong Glass and Arts
Related news and events
  • Artist Terry Napier walks down the Tunstall Square laneway which is flanked by brick walls painted a sage green which feature images of his paintings in frames.
    Bringing art into everyday places: our new PU...
    A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming...
    8 Oct 2025 Liveable Places and Spaces
  • Help inspire a new artwork at Mullum Mullum S...
    We're inviting Manningham residents to contribute to a meaningful and exciting new public art project at Mullum Mullum...
    23 Aug 2024 Healthy Community
    archived
  • Migrant Peace public artwork community worksh...
    Help shape Manningham’s new public artwork at Ruffey Lake Park .
    2 Aug 2024 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived
  • Expressions of interest for a new public artw...
    We're inviting expressions of interest from artists to develop and implement a new public artwork celebrating women...
    24 Nov 2023 Liveable Places and Spaces
    archived

Related downloads

Public Art and Collection Policy
Public Art and Collection Policy
pdf
205.7 KB
UPDATED: 3 October 2025
Download
download

 

Public Art
Read more
Bringing art into everyday places: our new PUBLIC VIEW program
… into outdoor galleries. On this page Manna Ward Public Art Arts Manningham … Bringing art into everyday places: our new …
Article Content

A bold new initiative, PUBLIC VIEW, is inviting the community to experience art as part of daily life – transforming familiar urban spaces into outdoor galleries.

Manningham Mayor, Councillor Deirdre Diamante, welcomed the initiative as a meaningful way to reconnect with creativity, nature and one another. 

“In the rush of daily life, it’s easy to overlook the beauty woven into our surroundings. PUBLIC VIEW invites us to find moments to pause, take notice and engage more deeply with the spaces and people around us,” Cr Diamante said.

“Bringing creative expression into everyday environments opens space for reflection and sparks curiosity. It’s a gentle invitation to connect in ways we often overlook,” she added.

Two women and a boy looking at framed artworks by Terry Napier on the green painted brick wall of Tunstall Square laneway
Community members view the exhibition at the Tunstall Square Laneway Gallery

The current exhibition, view of nature in art, selected works by Terry Napier is now on display at Tunstall Square in Donvale. 

A celebrated natural history artist, Terry has lived in Park Orchards for more than 57 years and has been painting since childhood. Terry has works held in Victorian collections. Renowned for his contributions to art education and his intricate nature studies, Terry’s work encourages viewers to pause and observe the natural world around them.

“Exhibiting at Tunstall Square is another chance to show people the magic and beauty in nature – to share with them what intrigues me and perhaps remind them of what we are in danger of losing. Art in public spaces can be that reminder,” Terry said. 

To learn more about the exhibition, visit manningham.vic.gov.au/view-nature-art.

Top image: Terry Napier at the Tunstall Square Laneway exhibition of his work.

A sage-green  painted brick wall in the Tunstall Square laneway which has three framed prints of flowers, flowering gums and birds hanging on it.
Terry Napier's work on show at the Tunstall Square Laneway Gallery.


 

Manna Ward
Public Art
Arts Manningham
Read more
Painted Country
… Napaltjarri, Clara Napurrula, Rene Sundown and Adrian Jurra Tjungurrayi. Drawing upon their rich … evoking deeper resonances. Working from Iwantja Arts in South Australia and Papunya Tula Artists in the … knowledge. With special thanks to the Artists; Iwantja Arts, South Australia; Papunya Tula Artists, Northern …

This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

Painted Country presents the work of five Australian First Nations artists - Nellie Ngampa Coulthard, Brenda Napaltjarri, Clara Napurrula, Rene Sundown and Adrian Jurra Tjungurrayi.

Drawing upon their rich artistic, cultural, and ancestral knowledge, each artist paints unique depictions of Country, refracted through memory and lived experience. Using restrained colour palettes, the artists each capture the subtle shifts of light, native flora, ancestral stories, and culturally significant sites across the vast desert regions of Western Australia, South Australia, and the Northern Territory.

Presented together, these diverse artistic perspectives and practices converge to reveal a rich and nuanced portrayal and understanding of the Australian desert landscape. Atmospheric and harmonious, these works transcend naturalistic representation, evoking deeper resonances.

Working from Iwantja Arts in South Australia and Papunya Tula Artists in the Northern Territory, the artists uphold and carry forward ancestral and artistic traditions through their practice and deep cultural knowledge.

With special thanks to the Artists; Iwantja Arts, South Australia; Papunya Tula Artists, Northern Territory; and Alcaston Gallery, Melbourne, who partnered with Manningham Art Gallery to curate this major exhibition. 

Adrian Jurra Tjungurrayi is an emerging Pintupi artist whose rhythmic, tessellating compositions recall his familial cultural and artistic lineages and herald the bold future of Papunya Tula painting. Tjungurrayi paints Yunala, the name of both a desert flora with an interlacing root network and a significant site on his ancestral Country, expressed in meandering lines and geometric forms. Adrian's soft tonal gradations conjure the salt lakes of his Country, resulting in a highly sophisticated and contemporary aesthetic.

Brenda Napaltjarri is an emerging Pintupi artist from Walungurru (Kintore), in the far west of the Northern Territory, Australia. Napaltjarri’s powerful practice recalls the concentric and inwardly focused energy of her father’s work, the late Shorty Lungkata Tjungurrayi. Refining her father's practice further, the elegant simplicity of Napaltjarri’s radiating circles emanate a visceral energy, undulating with hypnotic motion.    

Clara Napurrula is an emerging Pintupi artist from Walungurru (Kintore), in the far west of the Northern Territory, Australia. Napurrula is recognised for her precision and elegance, painting fields of finely dotted lines that shimmer and surge across the canvas. Napurrula is the daughter of renowned Pintupi artist Wintjiya Napaltjarri (c. 1932 – 2014) a pioneer of the women’s Western Desert art movement. As a second-generation Pintupi artist, Clara Napurrula’s practice serves as an important continuation of the women’s Papunya Tula art movement.

Nellie Ngampa Coulthard paints the landscapes of her childhood, Yankunytjatjara Country near Oodnadatta, South Australia. Coulthard’s paintings are refined in technique and composition, accenting bold pinks, golden browns and burnt oranges and defined by the outstretched linear branches of the Acacia Murrayana Wattle that sit at the heart of her compositions. 

Rene Sundown is a senior Yankunytjatjara artist from Indulkana, in far north South Australia. Sundown paints delicate fields of cream and gold that recall the subtle shifts in colour of the Ngura Tali, Sand Dune Country near Erldunda in the Northern Territory where she was raised.
Her refined palette evokes the shifting dunes and sun-warmed grasses of the central desert, intersected with bold linear compositional markers delineating sites of cultural significance.

Image Credit: Nellie Ngampa Coulthard, Tjuntala Ngurangka - Country with Wattle (Acacia Murrayana), 2023, synthetic polymer paint on linen, 152 x 167 cm (detail). Courtsey of The Artist, Iwantja Arts and Alcaston Gallery.

Past Exhibitions
Read more
Retrace Your Steps!
… longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery. Lara Chamas and Hootan Heydari present a selection of recent work in our … together two remarkable artists, each with unique styles and practices.  While each artist approaches their mediums in … the exploration of themes such as home, familial memory and generational migrant experiences of leaving their home …

This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

Lara Chamas and Hootan Heydari present a selection of recent work in our main gallery, titled Retrace Your Steps!

This exhibition brings together two remarkable artists, each with unique styles and practices. 

While each artist approaches their mediums in distinct ways, their work shares a profound connection through the exploration of themes such as home, familial memory and generational migrant experiences of leaving their home countries due to war and political upheaval.

Their works are both poetic and poignant, speaking to both personal stories and broader political histories.

Lara Chamas is a Lebanese artist, born and raised in Naarm (Melbourne). Her work comprises of sculptural objects and installations that reflect on family, memory, and domestic life.

Hootan Heydari is an Iranian-Australian artist, who predominantly works in sculpture and photography. His art captures connections between the past and present, distilling echoes of history into contemporary expressions. Heydari is represented by Futures Gallery.

This exhibition contains artwork that explores themes of war and violence, which may be difficult for some visitors. Please speak to our staff if you would like more information before attending. We thank you for your understanding.  

Contact the Manningham Art Gallery, gallery@manningham.vic.gov.au or 9840 9333. Find local wellbeing support services.  

 


Photo credit: Lara Chamas, Pestle that He made, Jido (mama), for crushing garlic, Hummus; Chickpeas; Knife that He made, Jido (mama), for chopping parsley, tabouli; Corer that He made, Jido (mama), for hollowing zucchini coosa mahshe; and Mould that He made, Jido (mama), for filled biscuits, ma’amoul; 2021, cast bronze objects, variable sizes. Image courtesy of the Artist. 

Past Exhibitions
Read more
Textile Temporalities
… Textile Temporalities is an exhibition that explores and reflects on the temporal nature of craft practices, human connectedness, and sites of intimacy.  Led by artist Shannon Slee, whose … 170 x 200cm. Image by Simon Strong. Manningham Art Gallery Arts Manningham Upcoming exhibitions Whats On … Textile …

Textile Temporalities is an exhibition that explores and reflects on the temporal nature of craft practices, human connectedness, and sites of intimacy. 

Led by artist Shannon Slee, whose practice investigates the role of discarded clothing to connect with personal and social histories, our small gallery will be showcasing a range of recent works from the artist and a special participatory artwork made in collaboration with older people in Manningham. 

Visitors to the gallery will also have the opportunity to get involved through a textile inspired activity. 

Artist Biography 
Shannon Slee is a visual artist living and working in Narrm. Her practice engages with the handmade to consider intimate moments of connection within the flexible aesthetic of textiles. She explores practices of reusing, sewing, spinning, and weaving, with a particular interest in how craft modalities distort time, invite tactile engagement, and evoke memory. Through her work, she investigates rhythms of making, and the narrative and emotions embedded in material processes.

In 2024 she was awarded a Masters of Contemporary Art from the University of Melbourne. She has recently exhibited at the Public Records Office, Melbourne; Five Walls Project Space, Melbourne; Linden Project Space, Melbourne; fortyfive downstairs, Melbourne; Australian Tapestry Workshop, Melbourne and George Paton Gallery at the University of Melbourne. 

Image: Shannon Slee, Textile Assemblage for Carolyn (back), (detail), 2023, Preston op-shop dress, artists’ family sewing box scraps, blanket, thread. 170 x 200cm. Image by Simon Strong.

Arts Manningham
Upcoming exhibitions
Whats On
Read more
Pages of Me: A Bird, an Eye, Clouds, Ice cream by Beci Orpin
… the journey of finding happiness through individuality and embracing one's unique self. Drawing from her … her sketchbook, blending bold patterns, random imagery, and messages of realistic optimism.  In addition to … touches on themes of future nostalgia, luck (both good and bad), and femininity. Together, these elements create a …

This exhibition is no longer showing in the Manningham Art Gallery.

Pages of Me is a new multimedia project by Beci Orpin, exploring the journey of finding happiness through individuality and embracing one's unique self.

Drawing from her textile-focused background, Orpin delves into mascot culture, crafting a larger-than-life mascot set within a large textile structure. The textiles will feature oversized pages from her sketchbook, blending bold patterns, random imagery, and messages of realistic optimism. 

In addition to celebrating positive individualism, the work touches on themes of future nostalgia, luck (both good and bad), and femininity. Together, these elements create a visual representation of Orpin's metaphysical self—both weird and wonderful.

The exhibition will also invite viewers to get involved, encouraging them to create their own mascots based on the qualities they appreciate about themselves, fostering pride in their identity.

Image courtesy of the artist.

Past Exhibitions
Read more
Barbara Hepworth - In Equilibrium
… was one of the leading British artists of her generation and the first woman sculptor to achieve international … the first time. Forty works from prestigious international and national collections, including sculptures in stone, … free for Manningham residents. Image by Clytie Meredith. Arts Manningham Whats On … Barbara Hepworth - In Equilibrium …

Barbara Hepworth was one of the leading British artists of her generation and the first woman sculptor to achieve international recognition.

Barbara Hepworth: In Equilibrium brings her remarkable achievements to Australian audiences for the first time.

Forty works from prestigious international and national collections, including sculptures in stone, wood, bronze and other metals and a select group of paintings will be on display.

Developed in consultation with the Hepworth Estate, the exhibition has been designed by award-winning architecture firm Studio Bright.

Entry to Heide is free for Manningham residents.

Image by Clytie Meredith.

Arts Manningham
Whats On
Read more
Dracula the Play at Doncaster Playhouse
… Dracula the Play at Doncaster Playhouse Arts, theatre and music Dracula comes to Manningham!  Playhouse Players' … dressed and themed food and drink.  Doncaster Playhouse Arts Manningham Doncaster Playhouse Whats On … Dracula the …

Dracula comes to Manningham! 

Playhouse Players' “Dracula the Play” opens on World Dracula Day on Friday 26 May at the Doncaster Playhouse.

Local Director, Peter T Nathan is bringing to the stage Bram Stoker’s iconic work adapted by Steven Dietz. 

Dietz’s 1996 version remains faithful to Bram Stoker’s original story. It evokes the same chilling tone created by Stoker and emulates the style of language common at the end of the 19th Century.

There will be special prizes on opening night for best dressed and themed food and drink. 

Arts Manningham
Doncaster Playhouse
Whats On
Read more
Pagination
  • First page ‹‹
  • Previous page ‹
  • …
  • Page 19
  • Page 20
  • Page 21
  • Page 22
  • Current page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • …
  • Next page ›
  • Last page ››
Was this page helpful?
We use your feedback to improve this website
What was helpful?
What was unhelpful?
We may need to contact you to get more information about your experience with our website.
If your feedback needs an immediate response, contact us instead.
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

Back to top

Stay in touch with everything that is happening at Council and around our community. View Privacy Policy.

Join our mailing list

Translate this website

Footer
  • About council
  • Accessibility
  • Careers
  • Complaints
  • Feedback
  • Your councillors
  • Sitemap

All news

Find parks, reserves and trails

Find venues and facilities

What's on in events 

View Manningham Matters

Privacy Policy

Translated documents

""

 

 

  • facebook
  • instagram
  • youtube

Manningham Civic Centre

699 Doncaster Road
Doncaster Victoria
Australia 3108

Contact us

(03) 9840 9333

Interpreter (03) 9840 9355

manningham@manningham.vic.gov.au

© Manningham City Council

aboriginal flag Torres Strait flag

Manningham Council acknowledges the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung people as the Traditional Owners of the land and waterways now known as Manningham. Council pays respect to Elders past, present and emerging, and values the ongoing contribution to enrich and appreciate the cultural heritage of Manningham. Council acknowledges and respects Australia’s First Peoples as Traditional Owners of lands and waterways across Country, and encourages reconciliation between all.

Manningham Council also values the contribution made to Manningham over the years by people of diverse backgrounds and cultures.

Manningham websites

  • Your Say
  • Whitehorse Manningham Libraries
  • Manningham Business
  • Manningham Function Centre
  • Waste and recycling
  • Property and development
  • Parking, roads and footpaths
  • Pets and animals
  • Business
  • Arts, venues and recreation
  • Assistance and support services
  • Climate and environment
  • About council
  • Contact us
  • Receive your rates notice via email
  • back
  • Waste and recycling
  • Bins and collections
  • Find your local transfer stations (tips) and recycling centres
  • How to dispose of your items
  • Report dumped rubbish or litter
  • back
  • Bins and collections
  • Bin collection days
  • Report a missed bin collection
  • Order, repair, swap or cancel your bins
  • Book a bundled branches collection
  • Book a hard rubbish collection
  • Apply for a skip bin permit
  • What can and cannot go into your bins
  • Food Organics Garden Organics (FOGO)
  • back
  • Bin collection days
  • 'In home' bin collection service
  • back
  • Order, repair, swap or cancel your bins
  • Start a new waste service or add an additional bin
  • Repair or replace a broken, damaged or missing bin
  • Swap your bin size
  • Cancel your bins
  • back
  • How to dispose of your items
  • Soft plastics recycling
  • Chemicals and hazardous waste
  • Electronic waste (e-waste)
  • Food waste and composting
  • back
  • Property and development
  • Rates and valuations
  • When do you need a permit
  • All permits and fees
  • Guides and maps
  • Request official property information
  • View planning application portal
  • Key projects
  • back
  • Rates and valuations
  • Pay your rates
  • Request a certificate of ownership
  • Update your details
  • How to read your valuation and rates notice
  • How rates are calculated
  • Apply for a land information certificate
  • Request ownership details
  • back
  • Pay your rates
  • Apply for a rates concession rebate
  • Apply for rates payment assistance
  • back
  • How rates are calculated
  • Object to your property valuation
  • back
  • When do you need a permit
  • Apply for a planning permit
  • Object to a planning permit application
  • The planning permit process
  • The building permit process
  • back
  • The planning permit process
  • Request pre-application advice
  • Apply for a VicSmart planning permit
  • Request further information
  • Apply for a section 50 amendment
  • Apply for a section 57a Amendment
  • Apply to amend planning permit (section 72 or secondary consent)
  • Apply to have plans or documents approved (plans for endorsement)
  • Review of a planning decision at VCAT
  • Pay or transfer landscape bond
  • Get an extension of time for your planning permit
  • Request a section 173 agreement
  • Apply for landscape bond refund
  • back
  • The building permit process
  • Section 30 documents
  • Report and consent dispensations
  • Regulation 51 statement
  • Building plan copies
  • back
  • All permits and fees
  • Apply for a planning permit
  • Planning and land-use
  • Real estate advertising
  • Building and construction
  • Infrastructure and drainage
  • Septic tanks and waste management
  • Road closures and access through council-owned land
  • Business-related permits
  • back
  • Guides and maps
  • Townhouse and Low-Rise Code
  • VicSmart Permit applications for two dwellings on a lot
  • Trees
  • Fences
  • Swimming pools and spas
  • Septic tanks
  • Heritage listed properties
  • Build sustainable properties
  • Build safe properties
  • Preparing for emergencies
  • back
  • Trees
  • Remove a tree on your property
  • back
  • Fences
  • Build or update a fence
  • back
  • Swimming pools and spas
  • Remove a pool or spa
  • Build a swimming pool or spa
  • Register your pool or spa
  • Lodge a certificate of compliance for your pool or spa
  • back
  • Septic tanks
  • Apply for a septic tank permit
  • Maintain your septic tank
  • Connect to sewer and decommission your septic tank
  • back
  • Heritage listed properties
  • How to build on or renovate your heritage listed property
  • Get advice on your heritage listed property
  • Apply to the heritage restoration fund
  • Find a heritage place in our community
  • back
  • Find a heritage place in our community
  • Old Shire Offices
  • Pettys Orchard
  • Schramms Cottage
  • The former Warrandyte Post Office
  • back
  • Request official property information
  • Copy of building plans
  • Request a planning property enquiry
  • Regulation 51 statement
  • Certificates of ownership
  • Land information certificates
  • back
  • Parking, roads and footpaths
  • Parking
  • Street drains
  • Roads and footpaths
  • Street trees and nature strips
  • Infringements and fines
  • back
  • Parking
  • Apply for a parking permit
  • Report an illegally parked or abandoned vehicle
  • Pay a parking fine
  • back
  • Street drains
  • Drainage projects design and construction
  • Report a blocked or damaged street drain
  • Apply for works, drainage and stormwater connection permit
  • back
  • Roads and footpaths
  • Footpath maintenance and construction
  • Report a damaged footpath or road
  • Report dumped rubbish or litter
  • Apply for a temporary road closure
  • back
  • Street trees and nature strips
  • Report an issue with a tree on public land
  • back
  • Infringements and fines
  • Pay a fine
  • Apply for a payment plan or extension of time
  • Nominate another person for a parking infringement
  • View your parking infringement photo online
  • Apply for an infringement review
  • Contest an infringement in Court
  • back
  • Apply for an infringement review
  • Infringement review application form
  • back
  • Pets and animals
  • Pet registrations and permits
  • Register your pet
  • Find your missing pet
  • Report a barking dog
  • Native animals and insects
  • back
  • Pet registrations and permits
  • Apply for an additional animal permit
  • Update your pet's registration details
  • back
  • Find your missing pet
  • Manningham Pound
  • back
  • Business
  • When do you need a permit
  • All business permits and fees
  • How to guides and support for businesses
  • Tenders
  • Home based business
  • Starting a new business
  • back
  • How to guides and support for businesses
  • Does my event need council approval
  • Apply for busking approval
  • Book a community event sign
  • Organising an event
  • back
  • Arts, venues and recreation
  • Places and spaces
  • Arts, crafts and theatre
  • Find a local sports club
  • Grants, funding and opportunities
  • What's on
  • back
  • Places and spaces
  • Find a park, reserve or playground
  • Find a venue for hire
  • Find local markets and shopping centres
  • Find local community learning centres
  • Find a recreation facility or leisure centre
  • back
  • Find a venue for hire
  • Community venues and function spaces for hire
  • back
  • Arts, crafts and theatre
  • Manningham Art Studios
  • Manningham Art Gallery
  • Doncaster Playhouse
  • Discover our public art
  • back
  • Assistance and support services
  • For new residents
  • For parents, guardians and families
  • For people with disabilities
  • For our local multicultural communities
  • For older adults
  • For young people
  • Grants and funding
  • Wellbeing support services
  • back
  • For parents, guardians and families
  • Maternal and Child Health services
  • Find a kindergarten or preschool
  • Find a local school
  • Find a playgroup or toy library
  • Find childcare services
  • Immunisation services
  • back
  • Maternal and Child Health services
  • Book a Maternal and Child Health appointment
  • Find your Maternal and Child Health Centre
  • Join our Maternal and Child Health service
  • back
  • Find your Maternal and Child Health Centre
  • Deep Creek Maternal and Child Health Centre
  • Doncaster Maternal and Child Health Centre
  • Templestowe Lower Maternal and Child Health Centre
  • Tunstall Maternal and Child Health Centre
  • back
  • For people with disabilities
  • Encouraging inclusive employment
  • Apply for an accessible parking permit
  • back
  • For older adults
  • Encouraging positive ageing
  • Assisted transport for older adults
  • Find clubs for older adults
  • Preventing elder abuse
  • back
  • Grants and funding
  • Community Grant Program
  • Manningham Community Fund
  • Recreation Capital Works Funding
  • Freedom of the City award
  • Financial hardship relief
  • back
  • About council
  • How council works
  • Discover our area, history and demographics
  • Careers
  • News
  • What's on
  • back
  • How council works
  • Find your local councillor and ward
  • Council meetings
  • Committees and working groups
  • Our organisation structure and executive team
  • Policies
  • Strategies and action plans
  • Guiding legislations (LGA and our Local Law)
  • Council elections
  • back
  • Find your local councillor and ward
  • Cr Geoff Gough
  • Cr Peter Bain
  • Cr Jim Grivas
  • Cr Andrew Conlon
  • Cr Laura Mayne
  • Cr Deirdre Diamante
  • Cr Anna Chen
  • Cr Isabella Eltaha
  • Cr Carli Lange
  • back
  • Council meetings
  • Ask a question at our next council meeting
  • How to submit a petition to Manningham
  • back
  • Committees and working groups
  • Disability Advisory Committee
  • Heritage Advisory Committee
  • Liveability, Innovation and Technology Committee
  • Open Space and Streetscape Advisory Committee
  • back
  • Guiding legislations (LGA and our Local Law)
  • View public documents and registers
  • Request freedom of information
  • back
  • Council elections
  • Voting in an election
  • The role of a Councillor
  • Candidate Election Campaign Donation Returns
  • back
  • Discover our area, history and demographics
  • Maps
  • View our demographics
  • Our First Nations history
  • Find local historical groups and societies
  • back
  • Maps
  • View aerial photography using our maps
  • Discover your neighbourhood using our maps
  • Find planning information about a property using our maps
  • back
  • News
  • Submit a news story
  • Subscribe to Manningham eNews
  • View Manningham Matters
  • Manningham Matters in your language
  • View all news stories
  • View all media releases
  • back
  • Contact us
  • Get information in your language
  • Give us feedback
  • Make a complaint
Are you looking for
Book a hard rubbish collection Find your bin collection day Report a missed bin collection
Are you looking for
Register your pool or spa Report illegal noise Pay a fine
Are you looking for
Apply for a parking permit Report a damaged footpath or road Report an issue with a tree on public land
Are you looking for
Register your pet Report a barking dog View the Lost Pets Database
Are you looking for
COVID-19 business support Apply for a tender Apply for a Community Development Grant
Are you looking for
Explore our parks, reserves and trails Visit Aquarena Visit our libraries
Are you looking for
Apply for financial hardship relief COVID-19 Support Helping you prepare for an emergency
Are you looking for
Find your local councillor and ward Find Council Meetings Work with us in Manningham
Are you looking for
699 Doncaster Road, Doncaster 3108 Call us (03) 9840 9333