The Urban Developer
AdvertiseEventsWebinars
Urbanity
Awards
Sign In
Membership
Latest
Menu
Location
Sector
Category
Content
Type
Newsletters
AFFORDABLE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT SUMMIT THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2025
AFFORDABLE HOUSING SUMMIT THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 2025
EVENT DETAILSDETAILS
TheUrbanDeveloper
Follow
About
About Us
Membership
Awards
Events
Webinars
Listings
Resources
Terms & Conditions
Commenting Policy
Privacy Policy
Republishing Guidelines
Editorial Charter
Complaints Handling Policy
Contact
General Enquiries
Advertise
Contribution Enquiry
Project Submission
Membership Enquiry
Newsletter
Stay up to date and with the latest news, projects, deals and features.
Subscribe
ADVERTISEMENT
SHARE
print
Print
DevelopmentPhil BartschThu 07 Aug 25

Rich-Lister Jobs Queen Pitches Pencil-Thin Brisbane Tower

Brisbane Adelaide Street Russo Tower DA hero

One of Australia’s wealthiest women has pitched plans for a pencil-thin 36-storey residential tower along the riverfront of the Brisbane CBD.

Entrepreneur and jobs queen Sarina Russo is behind the proposal that comprises 20 three-bedroom apartments across either single or dual levels.

It is earmarked for a 367sq m site at 457 Adelaide Street occupied by a five-storey commercial building that Russo Custodians acquired in 1999 for $1.25 million.

Russo, a high-profile businesswoman who heads up an employment and training empire, has an extensive property portfolio across Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria. Her net worth was last estimated at $271 million.

The Adelaide Street site also fronts Howard Street and is just 10m wide.

Under the plans, the existing building—Jamison House—would be demolished to make way for the high-end apartment tower.

“The proposal exhibits outstanding architectural merit through the delivery of a visually engaging and climate responsive building that responds to the site’s constraints through screening measures, articulation, recession and landscaping,” an Urbicus planning report said.

Renderings of the 36-storey residential tower proposed for 457 Adelaide Street in the Brisbane CBD.
▲ Renderings of the 36-storey residential tower proposed for 457 Adelaide Street in the Brisbane CBD.

While the proposed tower exceeds the 12-storey height limit under the City Centre Neighbourhood Plan, a performance outcome is being sought, justifying its uplift to align with the prevailing pattern of development and capitalising on the site’s proximity to major transport routes and city amenities.

Designed by architects Nettletontribe, the scheme also includes 689sq m of communal space.

Two podium levels feature a wine bar that opens out to a terrace with a backdrop of cascading greenery as well as an adjacent wellness centre and gym with access to outdoor zones “promoting movement and mindfulness in a nature-infused setting”.

The rooftop amenities include a swimming pool, deck, barbecue facilities and breakout area.

Renderings of the 36-storey residential tower proposed for 457 Adelaide Street in the Brisbane CBD.
▲ Renderings of the highrise proposed for the banks of the Brisbane River.

Onsite carparking for 24 vehicles would be provided on the lower ground levels with space optimised through the use of a car stacker system.

“This new apartment development presents a contemporary addition to the Brisbane River skyline, thoughtfully rejuvenating the urban fabric while maintaining visual harmony with the city’s iconic Story Bridge,” a design statement said.

“The tower is envisioned as a luminous lantern fronting the Brisbane River, its architecture defined by a delicate interplay of solid and void, transparency and texture.

“By night, the tower gently glows, reinforcing its lantern-like presence within the skyline. This integration of light, texture, and landscape embeds the tower harmoniously within its riverine setting, creating a sophisticated architectural identity.”

ResidentialQueenslandBrisbaneArchitecturePlanningProject
AUTHOR
Phil Bartsch
The Urban Developer - Writer
More articles by this author
ADVERTISEMENT
TOP STORIES
Improving capacity using immersion cooling instead of the traditional cooling systems used in data centres today.
Exclusive

The Cloud in Your Basement: How Cooling Tech Will Reshape Data Centres

Renee McKeown
5 Min
EPISSOD Centurion, Mac Park EDM
Exclusive

From Singapore to Sydney: Centurion Digs into Australian Living Sectors

Clare Burnett
6 Min
The Treehouse Frasers Community Studio Johnston.
Exclusive

How Designing for Connection is Creating Highrise Returns

Vanessa Croll
8 Min
Exclusive

Launching Queensland’s Future: The Man Guiding the Million-Home Plan

Phil Bartsch
10 Min
Singapore Smart City AI hero
Exclusive

AI Gaining Pace But ‘You Cannot Synthesise Soul’

Clare Burnett
6 Min
View All >
El Toro Hotel Revamp EDM
Hotel

Eight-Storey Hotel Planned for Mexican Pub Site at Liverpool

Clare Burnett
Mirvac is expanding its WA portfolio with an 83ha site in Perth’s north-east corridor of Bullsbrook
Residential

Mirvac Adds Bullsbrook Site to Perth Greenfield Plans

Renee McKeown
Sponsored

Why Built Environments Demand Layered Thinking, Not Siloed Delivery

Partner Content
VIA Architects strengthens sector capabilities to meet rising complexity in Australia's built environment...
LATEST
El Toro Hotel Revamp EDM
Hotel

Eight-Storey Hotel Planned for Mexican Pub Site at Liverpool

Clare Burnett
3 Min
Mirvac is expanding its WA portfolio with an 83ha site in Perth’s north-east corridor of Bullsbrook
Residential

Mirvac Adds Bullsbrook Site to Perth Greenfield Plans

Renee McKeown
2 Min
Architecture

Why Built Environments Demand Layered Thinking, Not Siloed Delivery

Partner Content
5 Min
Improving capacity using immersion cooling instead of the traditional cooling systems used in data centres today.
Exclusive

The Cloud in Your Basement: How Cooling Tech Will Reshape Data Centres

Renee McKeown
5 Min
View All >
ADVERTISEMENT
Article originally posted at: https://www.theurbandeveloper.com/articles/rich-lister-jobs-queen-pitches-pencil-thin-brisbane-tower