Esplanade Road Closure

Surfers Paradise is Fun City

Surfers Paradise is not like any other place in the country. It’s a suburb that looks like a city — a city built on leisure.

At just six square kilometres it packs in more activity than half the nation’s capital cities put together. This place, with its joke name and its wild success, defies every assumption about how a city should work.

History

From the moment the first hotels went up, Surfers Paradise set itself apart. We weren’t built for industry or politics — we were built for holidays, for fun. That heritage runs deep, and it’s why the Esplanade has always been the meeting point between the beach and the city.

The Reputation

Our reputation has always been larger than life. Surfers is famous, sometimes infamous, but always iconic. And that’s the point — people all over the world know us. They come here expecting energy, colour and a bit of cheek. It’s why millions of tourists return every year.

The Small Businesses that make it fun

At the heart of Surfers are the small businesses that make Surfers really unique: surf schools, electric scooter hire, jet boat and slingshot rides, GoCabs, parasailing, escape rooms, hair braiding – its a small business capital where people make unique business out of fun things to do. Our street level action is distinct to any other city. The Esplanade is the drawcard. Take that away, and you don’t just close a road — you strip away the small faamily businesses that give Surfers Paradise its distinct colour. The Espolanade is an economic lifeline, cutting it makes trading harder for hundreds of family businesses.

The skyline is a bar chart of popularity

Look at Surfers Paradise compared to the rest of the Gold Coast. The skyline is like a bar chart showing the popularity of the Esplanade edge, peaking at the Surfers Paradise Esplaande. Demographics show we’re younger, more diverse, less car-dependent and more progressive. Apartment living is the norm, not the exception. That makes us unique in Australia — a true urban beach culture.

The Esplanade – Lifeblood

And at the centre of it all is the Esplanade.

It’s where subcultures overlap: swimmers and surfers, skaters and scooters, runners, diners, tourists in muscle cars, and locals on bikes. Different speeds, different rhythms, all flowing together in one place. That’s what makes it work.

Cultural Fit

Look at the people of Surfers Paradise. Fit, active, colourful, mobile. Any age, any background, any ethnicity. We are more diverse and progressive than the Australian average. Any city in the world would give their back teeth to have such a healthy cultural attractor as our Esplanade.

Closing

And this is why the council’s project misses the mark. It never once asks the key question:

How do we best showcase Surfers Paradise to the world?

Instead, it tries to apply borrowed suburban solutions that erase the very thing that makes Surfers Paradise great.

What can you do?

Take our survey

30 questions the Council didn’t ask about the The Surfers Paradise Esplanade Closure Trial

The consultation is open until November 16, 2025. If this matters to you, join us in speaking up now.

Contact your local member

Email John-Paul Langbroek (federal member for Surfers Paradise)

Contact the Council

Email Cr Darren Taylor (Councillor for Division 10)

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