WANNEROO: The City of Wanneroo has officially opened a new bird viewing structure and boardwalk at Lake Joondalup, creating a purpose-built bird-watching point on the eastern bank of the lake in Perth’s northern suburbs. The facility, located just north of Rotary Park in Yellagonga Regional Park, gives visitors a new vantage point over wetland habitat while linking into the area’s existing walking paths. The opening marks the latest public access upgrade at a lake that forms part of Perth’s largest remaining metropolitan freshwater system.

The City of Wanneroo said the project cost A$2.2 million and was jointly funded with the Western Australian government, which contributed A$1.9 million. State authorities have described the facility as a government-funded project delivered by the city. City officials said the development followed community and council requests made in 2015 and 2018, with a feasibility study completed in 2020 before design and construction proceeded. The project places formal visitor infrastructure at a section of shoreline long used by walkers, parkgoers and birdwatchers.
The structure includes a universally accessible lower viewing level and an upper platform designed to widen views across Lake Joondalup and surrounding vegetation. City officials said the design was inspired by the form of a wetland bird nest and that much of the assembly was undertaken off site to shorten construction time at the foreshore. By connecting directly to established paths, the new facility is intended to let visitors observe birds and other wildlife without leaving designated access routes through the park.
Wetland access and habitat protection
Lake Joondalup is part of Yellagonga Regional Park, a 13-kilometre chain of interconnected wetlands that extends through Perth’s northern suburbs. The City of Joondalup says the park is one of seven regional parks on the Swan Coastal Plain and describes Lake Joondalup as the largest remaining lake in the Perth metropolitan area. Local authorities say the wetlands support more than 120 bird species as well as turtles, frogs, rakali and other native fauna, making the area a key site for conservation, recreation and environmental education.
Planning material released during public consultation said the Lake Joondalup facility was intended to provide birdwatchers with safe viewing access while helping protect vegetation and wildlife from unauthorised entry into fragile habitat. Concept documents showed a formal entry point, boardwalk access, interpretive elements and revegetation around the embankment. The Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions has also said new facilities across Yellagonga Regional Park include interpretive signage designed to improve visitor understanding of the landscape and its environmental values.
Part of wider park upgrades
The Lake Joondalup opening sits within a broader program of works across Yellagonga Regional Park. The Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions says the state is investing A$14.7 million in upgrades that include new limestone pathways, parking works, a 380-metre accessible boardwalk at Lake Goollelal, mountain bike trail infrastructure and planting intended to improve water quality. State officials said the bird viewing structure and boardwalk at Lake Joondalup were formally opened as part of that wider push to make the park more accessible while retaining its bushland setting.
For visitors, the new platform adds a designated stop for bird-watching, photography and wetland observation at a site already used for walking and nature-based recreation. For park managers, it creates a formal vantage point that can help concentrate foot traffic on defined infrastructure rather than the foreshore itself. With access from Rotary Park and direct links to surrounding paths, the facility adds a new public viewing point over one of Perth’s most important wetland habitats while supporting efforts to manage visitor movement through sensitive areas – By Content Syndication Services.
