{"id":"nsw:epi-2006-155a","name":"Standard Instrument—Principal Local Environmental Plan","slug":"standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan","collection":"regulation","jurisdiction":"nsw","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"155a of 2006","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":181778,"registerId":"nsw-nsw:epi-2006-155a-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"# Part 1 Preliminary\n\nPart 1 Preliminary\n\nDirection.\n\nIn this standard instrument, provisions are identified as “compulsory” (including in certain cases only) or “optional” by those words being placed in brackets in connection with the clause or other discrete provision or provisions concerned. If an optional provision is adopted, it is to be adopted in the form (and in accordance with the directions) set out in this instrument. If an optional provision is not adopted, the number or other identifier of the provision is to be set out in the Plan with the words “Not adopted” or words to the same effect. If a compulsory provision is not applicable (because of the circumstances referred to in the heading to the provision), the number or other identifier of the provision is to be set out in the Plan with the words “Not applicable” or words to the same effect.\n\nAny additional provisions (not inconsistent with the mandatory provisions) included in the Plan are generally to be included at the end of the Part, clause, subclause etc and are to be numbered in accordance with the usual protocol applicable to amendments made to existing Acts and statutory instruments.","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Name of Plan [compulsory]","content":"#### 1 Name of Plan [compulsory]\n\n1.1 Name of Plan \\[compulsory\\]\n\n> This Plan is \\[*Name of local government area or other relevant name*\\] Local Environmental Plan \\[*Year*\\].\n> \n> Direction—\n> \n> If required, an additional name may be added in brackets before the year to distinguish the Plan from another Plan in the same local government area.\n> \n> **cl 1.1 (previously cl 1):** Renumbered 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\]. Am 2020 (762), Sch 1\\[1\\].","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Permitted or prohibited development","content":"# Part 2 Permitted or prohibited development\n\nPart 2 Permitted or prohibited development","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Land use zones [compulsory]","content":"#### 2 Land use zones [compulsory]\n\n2.1 Land use zones \\[compulsory\\]\n\n> The land use zones under this Plan are as follows—\n> \n> > Rural Zones\n> \n> > RU1 Primary Production\n> > \n> > RU2 Rural Landscape\n> > \n> > RU3 Forestry\n> > \n> > RU4 Primary Production Small Lots\n> > \n> > RU5 Village\n> > \n> > RU6 Transition\n> \n> > Residential Zones\n> \n> > R1 General Residential\n> > \n> > R2 Low Density Residential\n> > \n> > R3 Medium Density Residential\n> > \n> > R4 High Density Residential\n> > \n> > R5 Large Lot Residential\n> \n> > Employment Zones\n> \n> > E1 Local Centre\n> > \n> > E2 Commercial Centre\n> > \n> > E3 Productivity Support\n> > \n> > E4 General Industrial\n> > \n> > E5 Heavy Industrial\n> \n> > Mixed Use Zones\n> \n> > MU1 Mixed Use\n> \n> > Special Purpose Zones\n> \n> > SP1 Special Activities\n> > \n> > SP2 Infrastructure\n> > \n> > SP3 Tourist\n> > \n> > SP4 Enterprise\n> > \n> > SP5 Metropolitan Centre\n> \n> > Recreation Zones\n> \n> > RE1 Public Recreation\n> > \n> > RE2 Private Recreation\n> \n> > Conservation Zones\n> \n> > C1 National Parks and Nature Reserves\n> > \n> > C2 Environmental Conservation\n> > \n> > C3 Environmental Management\n> > \n> > C4 Environmental Living\n> \n> > Waterway Zones\n> \n> > W1 Natural Waterways\n> > \n> > W2 Recreational Waterways\n> > \n> > W3 Working Waterways\n> > \n> > W4 Working Waterfront\n> \n> Direction 1.\n> \n> Additional zones or subzones are not to be prescribed.\n> \n> Direction 2.\n> \n> If the land to which the Plan applies does not include any of the above zones, the reference to the zone in this clause and the provisions relating to it in the Land Use Table in clause 2.3 may, but need not, be included.\n> \n> **cl 2.1 (previously cl 10):** Renumbered 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\]. Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\]; 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[8\\]; 2011 (82), Sch 1 \\[1\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[2\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[1\\]–\\[5\\], Sch 3\\[1\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[1\\].","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"pt","sectionType":"part","heading":"Land Use Table","content":"# pt Land Use Table\n\nLand Use Table\n\nNote—\n\nState environmental planning policies, including the following, may be relevant to development on land to which this Plan applies—\n\n> [State Environmental Planning Policy (Housing) 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2021-0714)\n\n> [State Environmental Planning Policy (Transport and Infrastructure) 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2021-0732), Chapter 2—relating to infrastructure facilities, including air transport, correction, education, electricity generating works and solar energy systems, health services, ports, railways, roads, waste management and water supply systems\n\n> [State Environmental Planning Policy (Resources and Energy) 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2021-0731), Chapter 2\n\n> [State Environmental Planning Policy (Resilience and Hazards) 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2021-0730), Chapter 3\n\n> [State Environmental Planning Policy (Industry and Employment) 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2021-0723), Chapter 3\n\n> [State Environmental Planning Policy (Primary Production) 2021](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2021-0729), Chapter 2\n\n**Note:** Ins 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[11\\]. Am 2011 (362), Sch 1 \\[5\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[1\\]; 2021 (711), Sch 1\\[2\\]. Subst 2022 (71), Sch 1\\[3\\]. Am 2022 (628), Sch 1\\[2\\].\n\n**Directions:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[10\\]; 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[12\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[7\\]; 2011 No 62, Sch 2.31; 2013 No 111, Sch 3.27 \\[1\\]; 2017 (492), Sch 1 \\[1\\] \\[2\\]; 2018 (477), Sch 1 \\[1\\]; 2019 (620), Sch 2\\[4\\]–\\[7\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[6\\] \\[7\\]; 2021 (711), Sch 1\\[3\\]; 2022 (592), Sch 1\\[1\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[2\\] \\[3\\].\n\nDirection 1.\n\nAdditional objectives may be included in a zone at the end of the listed objectives to reflect particular local objectives of development, but only if they are consistent with the core objectives for development in the zone as set out in the Land Use Table.\n\nDirection 2.\n\nSpecified uses may be added to (but not removed from) the list of development that is permitted or prohibited in a zone. Additional uses may be added to an item of a zone even if some uses are already specified in that item. Additional permitted uses for particular land (but not all land in a particular zone) may be set out in Schedule 1.\n\nDirection 3.\n\nItems 2, 3 and 4 of each zone require a relevant entry to be inserted. The following may be entered—\n\n> (a) particular uses in alphabetical order,\n\n> (b) the word “Nil”,\n\n> (c) the words “Any development not specified in item \\[*specify item number or numbers*\\]”,\n\n> (d) particular uses in alphabetical order followed by the words “Any other development not specified in item \\[*specify item number or numbers*\\]”,\n\nso long as all residual (ie non-specified) uses are covered.\n\nDirection 4.\n\nRespite day care centres must be permitted wherever a centre-based child care facility is permitted in the Land Use Table.\n\nDirection 5.\n\nOnly the following types of development may be included in the Land Use Table—\n\n> Advertising structures; Agricultural produce industries; Agriculture; Agritourism; Air transport facilities; Airports; Airstrips; Amusement centres; Animal boarding or training establishments; Aquaculture; Artisan food and drink industries; Attached dwellings\n> \n> Backpackers’ accommodation; Bed and breakfast accommodation; Bee keeping; Biosolids treatment facilities; Boarding houses; Boat building and repair facilities; Boat launching ramps; Boat sheds; Building identification signs; Business identification signs; Business premises\n> \n> Camping grounds; Car parks; Caravan parks; Cellar door premises; Cemeteries; Centre-based child care facilities; Charter and tourism boating facilities; Co-living housing; Commercial premises; Community facilities; Correctional centres; Creative industries; Crematoria\n> \n> Dairies (pasture-based); Dairies (restricted); Data centres; Depots; Dual occupancies; Dual occupancies (attached); Dual occupancies (detached); Dwelling houses\n> \n> Early education and care facilities; Eco-tourist facilities; Educational establishments; Electricity generating works; Emergency services facilities; Entertainment facilities; Environmental facilities; Environmental protection works; Exhibition homes; Exhibition villages; Extensive agriculture; Extractive industries\n> \n> Farm buildings; Farm experience premises; Farm gate premises; Farm stay accommodation; Feedlots; Flood mitigation works; Food and drink premises; Forestry; Freight transport facilities; Function centres; Funeral homes\n> \n> Garden centres; General industries; Goods repair and reuse premises; Group homes; Group homes (permanent) or permanent group homes; Group homes (transitional) or transitional group homes\n> \n> Hardware and building supplies; Hazardous industries; Hazardous storage establishments; Health consulting rooms; Health services facilities; Heavy industrial storage establishments; Heavy industries; Helipads; Heliports; High technology industries; Highway service centres; Home-based child care; Home businesses; Home industries; Home occupations; Home occupations (sex services); Horticulture; Hospitals; Hostels; Hotel or motel accommodation\n> \n> Independent living units; Industrial retail outlets; Industrial training facilities; Industries; Information and education facilities; Intensive livestock agriculture; Intensive plant agriculture\n> \n> Jetties\n> \n> Kiosks\n> \n> Landscaping material supplies; Light industries; Liquid fuel depots; Livestock processing industries; Local distribution premises\n> \n> Marinas; Markets; Medical centres; Mooring pens; Moorings; Mortuaries; Multi dwelling housing\n> \n> Neighbourhood shops; Neighbourhood supermarkets\n> \n> Offensive industries; Offensive storage establishments; Office premises; Open cut mining; Oyster aquaculture\n> \n> Passenger transport facilities; Pig farms; Places of public worship; Plant nurseries; Pond-based aquaculture; Port facilities; Poultry farms; Primitive camping grounds; Public administration buildings; Pubs\n> \n> Recreation areas; Recreation facilities (indoor); Recreation facilities (major); Recreation facilities (outdoor); Registered clubs; Research stations; Residential accommodation; Residential care facilities; Residential flat buildings; Resource recovery facilities; Respite day care centres; Restaurants or cafes; Restricted premises; Retail premises; Roads; Roadside stalls; Rural industries; Rural supplies; Rural workers’ dwellings\n> \n> Sawmill or log processing works; School-based child care; Schools; Secondary dwellings; Self-storage units; Semi-detached dwellings; Seniors housing; Service stations; Serviced apartments; Sewage reticulation systems; Sewage treatment plants; Sewerage systems; Sex services premises; Shops; Shop top housing; Signage; Small bars; Specialised retail premises; Stock and sale yards; Storage premises\n> \n> Take away food and drink premises; Tank-based aquaculture; Timber yards; Tourist and visitor accommodation; Transport depots; Truck depots; Turf farming\n> \n> Vehicle body repair workshops; Vehicle repair stations; Vehicle sales or hire premises; Veterinary hospitals; Viticulture\n> \n> Warehouse or distribution centres; Waste disposal facilities; Waste or resource management facilities; Waste or resource transfer stations; Water recreation structures; Water recycling facilities; Water reticulation systems; Water storage facilities; Water supply systems; Water treatment facilities; Wharf or boating facilities; Wholesale supplies\n\nDirection 6.\n\nA direction in this Land Use Table that requires a land use to be permitted with or without development consent in a particular zone is taken to be a direction that the land use be permitted with development consent but only—\n\n> (a) for the purposes of the automatic adoption of amendments to the mandatory provisions of this standard instrument by a local environmental plan that has adopted those mandatory provisions (a standard plan), and\n\n> (b) if the direction commences after the commencement of the standard plan.\n\nDirection 7—\n\nAt least 1 type of commercial premises or health services facilities must be permitted wherever shop top housing is permitted in the Land Use Table.\n\nZone RU1 Primary Production\n\n> **Zone RU1:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[11\\] \\[12\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[8\\] \\[9\\]; 2011 (362), Sch 1 \\[6\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Farm buildings\n> \n> > Intensive livestock agriculture\n> \n> > Intensive plant agriculture\n> \n> > Roads\n> \n> > Roadside stalls\n\nZone RU2 Rural Landscape\n\n> **Zone RU2:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[11\\] \\[13\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Farm buildings\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone RU3 Forestry\n\n> **Zone RU3:** Am 2012 No 96, Sch 4.41 \\[1\\]; 2018 No 40, Sch 3.12 \\[1\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[3\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone RU4 Primary Production Small Lots\n\n> **Zone RU4:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[14\\]–\\[16\\]. Subst 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[10\\]. Am 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Extensive agriculture\n> \n> > Farm buildings\n> \n> > Intensive plant agriculture\n> \n> > Roads\n> \n> > Roadside stalls\n\nZone RU5 Village\n\n> **Zone RU5:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[15\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[11\\]; 2017 (492), Sch 1 \\[3\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[4\\] \\[5\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[8\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone RU6 Transition\n\n> **Zone RU6:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[16\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[12\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[4\\] \\[5\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[9\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone R1 General Residential\n\n> **Zone R1:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[15\\] \\[17\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[11\\]; 2017 (492), Sch 1 \\[3\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[6\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone R2 Low Density Residential\n\n> **Zone R2:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[15\\]; 2009 (362), cl 3 (1); 2017 (492), Sch 1 \\[4\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[7\\]; 2021 (711), Sch 1\\[4\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone R3 Medium Density Residential\n\n> **Zone R3:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[18\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[11\\]; 2017 (492), Sch 1 \\[3\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[4\\] \\[5\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[10\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone R4 High Density Residential\n\n> **Zone R4:** Am 2009 (362), cl 3 (2); 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[11\\]; 2017 (492), Sch 1 \\[3\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[9\\] \\[10\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[11\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone R5 Large Lot Residential\n\n> **Zone R5:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[15\\] \\[16\\] \\[19\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[9\\] \\[13\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[8\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone E1 Local Centre\n\n> **Zone E1:** Ins 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[12\\]. Am 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\] \\[6\\].\n> \n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Building identification signs\n> \n> > Business identification signs\n> \n> > Home businesses\n> \n> > Home industries\n> \n> > Home occupations\n> \n> > Recreation areas\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone E2 Commercial Centre\n\n> **Zone E2:** Ins 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[12\\]. Am 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\] \\[7\\] \\[8\\].\n> \n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Building identification signs\n> \n> > Business identification signs\n> \n> > Home businesses\n> \n> > Home industries\n> \n> > Home occupations\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone E3 Productivity Support\n\n> **Zone E3:** Ins 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[12\\]. Am 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Building identification signs\n> \n> > Business identification signs\n> \n> > Home industries\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone E4 General Industrial\n\n> **Zone E4:** Ins 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[12\\]. Am 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Building identification signs\n> \n> > Business identification signs\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone E5 Heavy Industrial\n\n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Building identification signs\n> \n> > Business identification signs\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone MU1 Mixed Use\n\n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Building identification signs\n> \n> > Business identification signs\n> \n> > Home industries\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone SP1 Special Activities\n\n> **Zone SP1:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[22\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[11\\]; 2019 (620), Sch 2\\[8\\] \\[9\\].\n\nZone SP2 Infrastructure\n\n> **Zone SP2:** Am 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[12\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Aquaculture\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone SP3 Tourist\n\n> **Zone SP3:** Am 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone SP4 Enterprise\n\n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone SP5 Metropolitan Centre\n\n> Direction 1—\n> \n> This zone may only be used in the following local government areas—\n> \n> > City of Sydney\n> \n> > North Sydney\n> \n> Direction 2—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone RE1 Public Recreation\n\n> **Zone RE1:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[31\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental facilities\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone RE2 Private Recreation\n\n> **Zone RE2:** Am 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental facilities\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Roads\n\nZone C1 National Parks and Nature Reserves\n\nZone C2 Environmental Conservation\n\n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n\nZone C3 Environmental Management\n\n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Roads\n> \n> Home industries, kiosks, cellar door premises, neighbourhood shops and roadside stalls may, but need not be, permitted with development consent.\n\nZone C4 Environmental Living\n\n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Roads\n> \n> Home industries may, but need not be, permitted with development consent.\n\nZone W1 Natural Waterways\n\n> **Zone W1:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[41\\] \\[42\\]; 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[13\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[26\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[3\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[21\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Environmental facilities\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n\nZone W2 Recreational Waterways\n\n> **Zone W2:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[41\\] \\[43\\]–\\[45\\]; 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[13\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[22\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Boat sheds\n> \n> > Environmental facilities\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Water recreation structures\n\nZone W3 Working Waterways\n\n> **Zone W3:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[45\\]–\\[48\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[25\\] \\[27\\]; 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[2\\]; 2022 (726), Sch 1\\[4\\].\n> \n> Direction.\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Boat sheds\n> \n> > Environmental facilities\n> \n> > Environmental protection works\n> \n> > Water recreation structures\n\nZone W4 Working Waterfront\n\n> Direction—\n> \n> The following must be permitted with or without development consent in this zone—\n> \n> > Roads","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Permitted with consent","content":"#### 3 Permitted with consent\n\n3 Permitted with consent\n\n> Aquaculture; Dwelling houses; Extractive industries; Open cut mining","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prohibited","content":"#### 4 Prohibited\n\n4 Prohibited","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"Part 3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Exempt and complying development","content":"# Part 3 Exempt and complying development\n\nPart 3 Exempt and complying development\n\n**pt 3, direction:** Rep 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[49\\].","sortOrder":157},{"sectionNumber":"Part 4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Principal development standards","content":"# Part 4 Principal development standards\n\nPart 4 Principal development standards","sortOrder":161},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Miscellaneous provisions","content":"# Part 5 Miscellaneous provisions\n\nPart 5 Miscellaneous provisions","sortOrder":169},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Relevant acquisition authority [compulsory]","content":"#### 5 Relevant acquisition authority [compulsory]\n\n5.1 Relevant acquisition authority \\[compulsory\\]\n\n> > (1) The objective of this clause is to identify, for the purposes of section 3.15 of the Act, the authority of the State that will be the relevant authority to acquire land reserved for certain public purposes if the land is required to be acquired under Division 3 of Part 2 of the [Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1991-022) (the owner-initiated acquisition provisions).\n> > \n> > Note.\n> > \n> > If the landholder will suffer hardship if there is any delay in the land being acquired by the relevant authority, section 23 of the [Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991](/view/html/inforce/current/act-1991-022) requires the authority to acquire the land.\n> \n> > (2) The authority of the State that will be the relevant authority to acquire land, if the land is required to be acquired under the owner-initiated acquisition provisions, is the authority of the State specified below in relation to the land shown on the Land Reservation Acquisition Map (or, if an authority of the State is not specified in relation to land required to be so acquired, the authority designated or determined under those provisions).\n> > \n> > | Type of land shown on Map | Authority of the State |\n> > | Zone RE1 Public Recreation and marked “Local open space” | Council |\n> > | Zone RE1 Public Recreation and marked “Regional open space” | The corporation constituted under section 2.5 of the Act |\n> > | Zone SP2 Infrastructure and marked “Classified road” | Transport for NSW |\n> > | Zone C1 National Parks and Nature Reserves and marked “National Park” | Minister administering the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 |\n> > \n> > Direction.\n> > \n> > Land is required to be shown on the Land Reservation Acquisition Map if it is expressly set apart by the Plan exclusively for a public purpose referred to in section 3.14(1)(c) of the Act. However, any such land that is held by an authority of the State, or by a public company or a subsidiary of a public company (within the meaning of the [Corporations Act 2001](http://www.legislation.gov.au/) of the Commonwealth) is not required to be shown on that Map. An authority of the State is to be listed for all land shown on the Land Reservation Acquisition Map, but the land is not to be so reserved and the authority listed unless the authority consents to its being listed.\n> \n> > (3) Development on land acquired by an authority of the State under the owner-initiated acquisition provisions may, before it is used for the purpose for which it is reserved, be carried out, with development consent, for any purpose.\n> \n> **cl 5.1 (previously cl 25):** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[62\\]. Renumbered 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\]. Am 2011 No 41, Sch 5.52; 2019 (620), Sch 2\\[13\\]–\\[15\\]; 2020 No 30, Sch 4.92; 2021 (650), Sch 1\\[25\\].","sortOrder":170},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 1","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Additional permitted uses","content":"# Schedule 1 Additional permitted uses\n\nSchedule 1 Additional permitted uses\n\n(Clause 2.5)\n\n**sch 1:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\].","sortOrder":197},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 2","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Exempt development","content":"# Schedule 2 Exempt development\n\nSchedule 2 Exempt development\n\n(Clause 3.1)\n\nNote 1.\n\n[State Environmental Planning Policy (Exempt and Complying Development Codes) 2008](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2008-0572) specifies exempt development under that Policy. The Policy has State-wide application. This Schedule contains additional exempt development not specified in that Policy.\n\nNote 2.\n\nExempt development may be carried out without the need for development consent under the Act. Such development is not exempt from any approval, licence, permit or authority that is required under any other Act and adjoining owners’ property rights and the common law still apply.\n\n**sch 2:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[90\\] \\[182\\]; 2008 No 39, Sch 1.4 \\[1\\]–\\[6\\]; 2008 No 62, Sch 2.52 \\[3\\]–\\[9\\]; 2009 (516), Sch 1 \\[2\\] \\[3\\] (am 2009 No 106, Sch 2.38); 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[26\\] \\[27\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[55\\] \\[56\\].","sortOrder":198},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 3","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Complying development","content":"# Schedule 3 Complying development\n\nSchedule 3 Complying development\n\n(Clause 3.2)\n\nNote.\n\n[State Environmental Planning Policy (Exempt and Complying Development Codes) 2008](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2008-0572) specifies complying development and the complying development conditions for that development under that Policy. The Policy has State-wide application. This Schedule contains additional complying development not specified in that Policy.\n\n**sch 3:** Subst 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[91\\]. Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\]; 2010 (161), Sch 2 \\[28\\] \\[29\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[57\\]; 2014 No 33, Sch 2.36 \\[6\\].","sortOrder":199},{"sectionNumber":"sch.3-sec","sectionType":"section","heading":"General conditions","content":"#### sch.3-sec General conditions\n\nGeneral conditions\n\n> Any development specified in Part 1 is subject to the same conditions set out in Schedule 6 to [State Environmental Planning Policy (Exempt and Complying Development Codes) 2008](/view/html/inforce/current/epi-2008-0572).","sortOrder":202},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 4","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Classification and reclassification of public land","content":"# Schedule 4 Classification and reclassification of public land\n\nSchedule 4 Classification and reclassification of public land\n\n(Clause 5.2)\n\n**sch 4:** Subst 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[92\\]. Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[182\\].","sortOrder":203},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 5","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Environmental heritage","content":"# Schedule 5 Environmental heritage\n\nSchedule 5 Environmental heritage\n\n(Clause 5.10)\n\nDirection.\n\nThis Schedule should generally be divided into 3 parts (one for heritage items, one for heritage conservation areas and one for archaeological sites). If agreement is reached with the Aboriginal community to list Aboriginal objects or Aboriginal places of heritage significance, the Schedule should also include separate parts listing any such object or place. In all cases, the relevant matter should be listed in alphabetical order in each respective Part according to suburb or locality name (and by street name within each such suburb or locality).\n\nThe description of a heritage item should be included in a column headed “Item” and should include a brief description of those things that are part of the heritage significance of the item—for example, “House, front garden and front fence”, or “Lindsey (including homestead, outbuildings, stables, Bunya Pine tree and driveway)” or “Dunmore Park (including bandstand, fountain and avenue of fig trees)”. If any interior features are part of the heritage significance of a heritage item, these should also be described—for example “Lindsey (including original bathroom, dining room fireplace with mantelpiece and original detailing throughout)” or “Lindsey (including all interior features)”. Any thing that is part of the heritage significance of a heritage item should also be included in the inventory of heritage items.\n\nHeritage items cannot be identified in the Schedule as having “State significance” unless they are listed on the State Heritage Register. However, a heritage item may be listed in the Schedule as a “nominated item of State significance” (or as “State nominated”) if the item has been identified as an item of potential State significance in a publicly exhibited heritage study and the Council has nominated the item in writing to the Heritage Council.\n\n**sch 5:** Am 2007 (600), Sch 2 \\[93\\] \\[182\\]; 2011 (102), Sch 2 \\[58\\].","sortOrder":207},{"sectionNumber":"Schedule 6","sectionType":"schedule","heading":"Pond-based and tank-based aquaculture","content":"# Schedule 6 Pond-based and tank-based aquaculture\n\nSchedule 6 Pond-based and tank-based aquaculture\n\n(Clause 5.19)\n\n**sch 6:** Ins 2019 (133), Sch 1 \\[17\\].","sortOrder":208},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Site location requirements","content":"## Division 1 Site location requirements\n\nDivision 1 Site location requirements","sortOrder":210},{"sectionNumber":"Division 2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Operational requirements","content":"## Division 2 Operational requirements\n\nDivision 2 Operational requirements","sortOrder":212},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definition","content":"#### 6 Definition\n\n6 Definition\n\n> In this Division—\n> \n> intensive aquaculture has the same meaning as it has in the [Fisheries Management (Aquaculture) Regulation 2017](/view/html/repealed/current/sl-2017-0443).","sortOrder":217},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conservation exclusion zones","content":"#### 7 Conservation exclusion zones\n\n7 Conservation exclusion zones\n\n> > (1) Must not be carried out on the following land, except to the extent necessary to gain access to water—\n> > \n> > > (a) land declared an area of outstanding biodiversity value under the [Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016](/view/html/inforce/current/act-2016-063),\n> > \n> > > (b) vacant Crown land,\n> > \n> > > (c) land within a wetland of international significance declared under the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.\n> \n> Note.\n> \n> Nothing in this clause affects any requirement under an Act relating to land specified in this clause to obtain a licence or other authority under that Act for development of the land.","sortOrder":220},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Flood liability","content":"#### 8 Flood liability\n\n8 Flood liability\n\n> Must be designed or constructed on land so that it will not be inundated by the discharge of a 1:100 ARI (average recurrent interval) flood event.","sortOrder":221},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Species selection","content":"#### 9 Species selection\n\n9 Species selection\n\n> Species of fish or marine vegetation cultivated or kept must be consistent with the relevant aquaculture industry development plan (within the meaning of clause 5.19).","sortOrder":223},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Pond design","content":"#### 10 Pond design\n\n10 Pond design\n\n> > (1) Must not require the construction of new ponds, water storages, dams or buildings.\n> \n> > (2) Must not be located on permanent watercourses, creeks, billabongs or isolated outreaches of creeks or rivers.\n> \n> > (3) Must be capable of preventing the escape of stock into natural waterbodies or wetlands.","sortOrder":224},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Culture water","content":"#### 11 Culture water\n\n11 Culture water\n\n> Must use freshwater.","sortOrder":225}],"analysis":{"flash_summary_failed":{"failed":true,"reason":"A positive credit balance is required for all requests, including BYOK, so fallback providers remain available. Add credits at https://vercel.com/d?to=%2F%5Bteam%5D%2F%7E%2Fai%3Fmodal%3Dtop-up to continue.","source":"analysis-cron"},"summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The original 2006 instrument was designed as a standardised template to bring consistency to NSW council planning zones. Over time, its scope has expanded and been restructured significantly — most notably in 2021 when a wholesale rezoning system overhaul abolished the existing business (B1–B8) and industrial (IN1–IN4) zones and introduced new zone categories. New zones for mixed-use, waterways, and special purposes were also introduced that had no equivalent in the original instrument. What began as a tidying-up exercise in standardisation has evolved into an ongoing active policy vehicle for reforming land use categories across the entire state."},"complexity_factors":["The instrument is a template or 'meta-law' that feeds into dozens of individual council LEPs (Local Environmental Plans), creating a layered regulatory structure that requires understanding multiple instruments simultaneously","Extensive amendment history spanning nearly 20 years with over 50 distinct point-in-time versions, making it difficult to determine what rules applied at any given date","Major structural overhaul in 2021 abolished and replaced entire categories of zones (B and IN series), requiring users to understand both old and new zone naming conventions","Zone renumbering (e.g., E-series to C-series) without full content equivalence creates confusion for anyone relying on older planning documents or approvals","The instrument itself does not operate independently — it must be read alongside each council's own LEP, the Standard Instrument (Local Environmental Plans) Order 2006, and the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979","No actual substantive provisions are displayed in the text provided — users must navigate to the live instrument to access the actual rules, adding a navigation barrier","The dual-layer system (what councils must include vs. what they may vary) requires expertise to interpret in any specific local context","Frequent and sometimes very rapid amendments (e.g., two versions within one day in November 2022) indicate ongoing policy instability that increases compliance risk"],"plain_english_summary":"## What is this law?\n\nThe **Standard Instrument—Principal Local Environmental Plan** (known as the \"Standard Instrument LEP\") is a NSW Government template that sets the ground rules for **land use planning** across all local council areas in New South Wales.\n\nThink of it as a master blueprint that every NSW council must use as the foundation for their own local planning rules. It defines what types of activities and buildings are allowed in different **land use zones** (categories of land, like residential, industrial, commercial, or conservation areas).\n\n## Who does it affect?\n\nThis law touches **virtually everyone in NSW**:\n- **Homeowners and property buyers** — it determines what you can build or do on your land\n- **Businesses and developers** — it controls what commercial or industrial activities are permitted in different areas\n- **Landowners in rural and conservation areas** — it sets limits on development near environmentally sensitive land\n- **Local councils** — they must use this template when writing their own planning rules\n\n## What does it actually do?\n\nThe instrument creates a standardised system of **land use zones** — labelled codes like R1 (general residential), E1/C1 (national parks and nature reserves), B2/MU1 (local commercial centres), IN1 (general industrial), and so on. Each zone specifies:\n- What uses are **permitted without council approval**\n- What uses **require development consent** (i.e., you need to apply to council)\n- What uses are **prohibited entirely**\n\nThis standardisation means that similar zones work the same way across different council areas, making planning more predictable and consistent.\n\n## Key changes over time\n\nThis instrument has been amended **dozens of times** since 2006. Some major shifts include:\n- In **2021**, many older business zones (B1–B8) and industrial zones (IN1–IN4) were **abolished** and replaced with new zone categories\n- Environmental zones were **renumbered** (e.g., E1 became C1, E2 became C2, and so on)\n- New zones were **added**, including zones for mixed-use areas (MU1), waterways (W4), and special purposes (SP4, SP5)\n\n## Why does it matter?\n\nIf you want to build a house extension, open a shop, run a farm stay, or develop land in NSW — this instrument (as adopted by your local council) determines whether you can do it, and on what terms. Getting it wrong can mean costly refusals or legal action."},"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"other","section":"Status Information / Currency of version","severity":"low","reasoning":"The access timestamp of 5 April 2026 is presented alongside a version current from 19 September 2025. This is internally consistent only if the document was genuinely accessed on that future date. No substantive legislative flaw, but the temporal framing is unusual and could mislead users about which version applies at any given point.","confidence":0.4,"description":"The document is described as 'Current version for 19 September 2025 to date (accessed 5 April 2026 at 16:04)' — meaning the system is reporting an access date of 5 April 2026, which is a future date relative to any realistic drafting or publication context, yet purports to describe a currently-in-force instrument. While not logically impossible, this raises questions about the temporal validity claims of the 'current' version descriptor."},{"type":"other","section":"Zone SP4 history note","severity":"low","reasoning":"The history note formatting conflates insertion and amendment references in a manner that makes it unclear whether Zone SP4 had operative content from 2021 or only became substantively complete in 2022. This creates a potential gap in the zone's operative life.","confidence":0.35,"description":"Zone SP4 is recorded as inserted by 2021 (650), Sch 1[13] AND ALSO amended by 2022 (726), Sch 1[4][10]. However, the insertion note itself references '2022 (726), Sch 1[4][10]' as part of the insertion entry rather than as a separate amendment, creating ambiguity as to whether the zone existed in any valid form between insertion in 2021 and amendment in 2022, or whether the insertion itself was only completed by the 2022 instrument."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"Zone C1/C2/C3/C4 renumbering history","severity":"medium","reasoning":"A single amending instrument (2021 No 650) renumbered all existing E-zones to C-zones, signalling a policy decision to abandon the E-prefix, yet the same instrument inserted Zone E5 using the discarded E-prefix. This is an internal inconsistency in the 2021 amendment's own scheme. Zone E5 sits as an orphan in an otherwise defunct naming convention, creating classification confusion for practitioners.","confidence":0.75,"description":"Zones C1–C4 are described as 'previously Zone E1–E4' and renumbered by 2021 (650). However, Zone E5 was inserted by the same 2021 (650) instrument. This means the 2021 instrument simultaneously abolished the E-zone numbering series (by renumbering E1–E4 to C1–C4) while also creating a new zone using the E-series prefix (E5), resulting in a single remaining zone carrying a prefix series that was otherwise abandoned. Zone E5 was not subsequently renumbered to align with the C-series."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"Zone B1–B8 and IN1–IN4 repeal / Zone E5 and MU1 insertion (2021 No 650)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The 2021 instrument's internal logic is contradictory: it purports to rationalise zone naming by replacing E-zones with C-zones, yet inserts E5 as a new zone in the very series being retired. Practitioners applying the post-2021 instrument face a zone classification system where the E-prefix simultaneously means 'abolished series' (E1–E4) and 'active zone' (E5).","confidence":0.72,"description":"The 2021 (650) instrument repealed all B-zones (B1–B8) and all IN-zones (IN1–IN4) via Schedule 3[2], while simultaneously inserting Zone E5, Zone MU1, Zone SP4, Zone W4, and renumbering E1–E4 as C1–C4. This creates a structural absurdity: the instrument that dismantles one complete naming series (Business and Industrial zones) also introduces a new zone (E5) into a series (Environmental) that it is simultaneously converting to C-series nomenclature."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"Version history: 30/11/2022","severity":"medium","reasoning":"A version operative for exactly one day (30 November 2022) creates genuine compliance uncertainty. Any development application lodged, assessed, or determined on that day would need to identify which version applied. Given the instrument is a standard template for LEPs, a one-day version affecting substantive planning controls is practically unworkable and potentially impossible for consent authorities to administer.","confidence":0.8,"description":"A historical version is recorded as 'Current from 30/11/2022 to 30/11/2022' — a version with a zero-day operative period. A legislative instrument that is 'in force' for a single calendar day (with the same commencement and end date) raises questions about whether it ever had practical operative effect, and whether any development applications assessed on that date would have been assessed under this version or the preceding/following version."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"medium","section_a":"Zone E1–E4 renumbering to C1–C4 (2021 No 650, Sch 1[14]–[20])","section_b":"Zone E5 insertion (2021 No 650, Sch 1[12])","confidence":0.78,"description":"The same 2021 amending instrument that systematically converted the Environmental (E) zone prefix to Conservation (C) prefix for Zones E1–E4 simultaneously inserted a new Zone E5, retaining the E-prefix it had just abandoned. This creates a direct internal contradiction within a single instrument's reform logic."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"Zone IN4: Am 2019 (133), Sch 1[2]. Rep 2021 (650), Sch 3[2]","section_b":"Zone IN1–IN3: Am 2019 (133), Sch 1[4][5]. Rep 2021 (650), Sch 3[2]","confidence":0.45,"description":"Zone IN4 was amended by 2019 (133) under a different schedule reference (Sch 1[2]) than IN1–IN3 (Sch 1[4][5]), yet all four zones were repealed by the same provision of the 2021 instrument (Sch 3[2]). The 2019 amendment treated IN4 differently from IN1–IN3 under the same amending instrument, suggesting IN4 may have had a substantively different character, yet it was swept up in the same blanket repeal as the others without any differential transitional treatment being visible in the history notes."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"Status Information: 'The provisions displayed in this version of the legislation have all commenced'","section_b":"History notes: Multiple zones repealed by 2021 (650), Sch 3[2]","confidence":0.38,"description":"The Status Information states that 'all provisions displayed have commenced,' yet the current version of the instrument necessarily excludes the repealed B-zones and IN-zones. If those zones are not displayed, the statement is tautologically true but misleading: it certifies commencement of provisions that exist only because other provisions (the repealed zones) have been removed. The certification does not address whether transitional provisions for development applications assessed under the repealed zones have also commenced, which is a material omission."}]},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"completionTokens":723},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":9,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The instrument has expanded significantly from its original 2007 form. Originally a relatively straightforward zoning template, it has grown to incorporate: detailed aquaculture regulations (Schedule 6), music venue protections (clause 5.20), dark sky preservation for Siding Spring Observatory (clause 5.14), defence communications facility buffers (clause 5.15), intensive livestock agriculture controls (clause 5.18), and comprehensive flood planning provisions (clauses 5.21-5.22). The 2021-2023 amendments in particular added substantial environmental and climate adaptation content that goes well beyond traditional land use planning."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross-referencing between clauses, schedules, and external legislation (SEPPs, Fisheries Act, Heritage Act, etc.)","Multiple conditional layers: compulsory vs optional provisions, zone-specific requirements, and geographic restrictions (e.g., Siding Spring Observatory proximity)","Nested definitions and exceptions throughout (e.g., 'intensive aquaculture' defined by reference to repealed regulations)","Detailed technical requirements in schedules (e.g., lumens limits for lighting, pond design specifications for aquaculture)","Frequent amendment history embedded in clause notes creating visual clutter and version complexity","Direction notes interspersed with operative provisions creating dual-layer reading required","25 distinct zones with individual Land Use Table entries and specific permitted/prohibited use lists","Heritage, flood, bush fire, and environmental overlays adding intersecting regulatory frameworks"],"plain_english_summary":"This is a **template** (called a \"standard instrument\") that every council in New South Wales uses to create their own Local Environmental Plan (LEP). Think of it as a master form that councils fill out to control what can be built in their area.\n\n**What it does:**\n- **Zones land into categories** like residential, rural, industrial, commercial, and conservation — 25 different zone types in total\n- **Sets rules for each zone** about what development is allowed without approval, what needs council approval, and what's banned\n- **Provides standard clauses** that councils must or can choose to include, covering things like:\n  - Minimum lot sizes for subdivisions\n  - Building height limits\n  - Heritage protection\n  - Flood planning\n  - Bush fire safety\n  - Exempt and complying development (fast-track approvals)\n\n**Key features:**\n- **Compulsory provisions** — must be included in every council's plan\n- **Optional provisions** — councils can choose whether to include them\n- **Direction notes** — instructions to councils on how to customise each clause\n- **Land Use Table** — the heart of the plan, listing hundreds of development types (from dwelling houses to oyster aquaculture) and which zones permit them\n\n**Who it affects:**\n- **Property owners and developers** — determines what they can build and whether they need approval\n- **Councils** — use this template to draft their local plans\n- **The community** — shapes the character of neighbourhoods and protects environmental values\n\n**Why it matters:**\nThis template ensures consistency across NSW while allowing local flexibility. It determines whether your neighbour can build a duplex, whether a factory can open near your home, and whether farmland can be subdivided. Recent updates added protections for music venues (preventing councils from rejecting licences based on music genre or dancing) and strengthened flood planning rules in response to climate change."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan","history":"/api/acts/standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan/history","analysis":"/api/acts/standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/standard-instrument-principal-local-environmental-plan/documents"}}