
Home Extension Westleigh — Design, Approval, Structural, Build
Full-service extensions in Westleigh 2120: structural survey of existing 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations home, design, Hornsby Shire Council approval, engineering, weatherproofed construction, matched finish to original dwelling.
Quick Answer
A home extension in Westleigh costs $150,000–$600,000+. Rear extension from $150K, second-storey addition from $300K. Buildana manages design, Hornsby Shire Council approvals, and construction under one fixed-price contract.
Extending Homes in Westleigh
Westleigh homeowners with 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations-era properties are increasingly turning to home extensions to gain space without the disruption of a full move. With typical lots of 700–1,200m², most Westleigh properties can accommodate ground-floor or second-storey extensions under Hornsby Shire Council's planning controls. Buildana manages feasibility, design, approvals, and construction for Westleigh extension projects under one fixed-price contract.
For a extension in Westleigh, the economics are the framing question. Median price $1.8M–$2.6M Hornsby/Asquith/Mount Colah; $2.4M–$3.6M Cherrybrook/Beecroft/Pennant Hills; $3.0M–$8.0M+ Galston/Arcadia acreage; build cost on 700–1,200m² blocks scales by site conditions and specification. Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) ground (moderately to highly reactive clay) keeps foundations honest — $24,000–$42,000 band — and blowouts on that line are the single most common reason fixed-price contracts elsewhere don't stay fixed. Buildana itemises the slab, structural engineering, and geotech work upfront so you see the actual cost in the contract. R3 zoning in pockets of Westleigh opens up dual occupancy potential — worth exploring even if you're not initially considering it.
Buildana manages the complete home extension process in Westleigh — from design consultation and structural engineering through to DA or CDC approval, and fixed-price construction to handover. Extend your home without the stress.
Read our Home Extension Cost Guide 2026 or explore extension approval pathways in NSW.
- Home extensions in Westleigh from $150K
- Hornsby Shire Council DA and CDC approvals managed
- Ground floor, rear and second-storey additions
- Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) soil — structural engineering included
- 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations-era homes assessed for extension suitability
- Connect new to existing — clean, matched finish
- 6-year structural warranty
- Free design consultation — near Thornleigh (2 km) station

Reviewed by Oliver Alameri
Licensed Builder (NSW 487805C) · Master of Property Development · PhD Student · Building across Western Sydney since 2010
Why Extend Your Home in Westleigh?
Westleigh is the bushland-fringe residential suburb west of Thornleigh — 1970s–1990s brick on 700–1,200m² R2 blocks backing onto Berowra Valley National Park. BAL-12.5 to BAL-29 typical. Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock with rock excavation typical.
Westleigh's rural-residential character and 700–1,200m² blocks set it apart from standard suburban development. R2 Low Density predominant / R3 Medium Density on Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara/Pennant Hills station precincts / R4 (Hornsby CBD high-rise zone) / RU2 Rural Landscape (Galston/Berrilee/Arcadia/Forest Glen/Glenorie acreage belt) zoning means different controls apply — larger setbacks, on-site services, and site-specific engineering. Transport access via Thornleigh (2 km) connects Westleigh to the wider Sydney network. 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations-era homes in Westleigh often have good structural foundations worth building on. Extensions add living space at a fraction of the full rebuild cost. Ground conditions (Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA)) across Westleigh are well understood by local builders — Buildana's engineering accounts for moderately to highly reactive soil movement.
Home extension builder in Westleigh — key facts
- Suburb
- Westleigh, NSW 2120
- Council / LGA
- Hornsby Shire Council (Hornsby Shire)
- Primary zoning
- R2 Low Density predominant / R3 Medium Density on Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara/Pennant Hills station precincts / R4 (Hornsby CBD high-rise zone) / RU2 Rural Landscape (Galston/Berrilee/Arcadia/Forest Glen/Glenorie acreage belt)
- Typical lot size
- 700–1,200m²
- Soil class
- Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA)
- Median house price
- $1.8M–$2.6M Hornsby/Asquith/Mount Colah; $2.4M–$3.6M Cherrybrook/Beecroft/Pennant Hills; $3.0M–$8.0M+ Galston/Arcadia acreage
- Home era
- 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations
- Typical price range
- $150,000 – $600,000+
- Typical timeline
- 6–12 months design to handover
- Approval pathway
- CDC for most rear extensions, DA for second-storey
Building in Westleigh — Local Context
What Westleigh Soil Means for Your Extension
Most blocks across Westleigh (2120) classify as Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) — moderately to highly reactive clay. Translation for a home extension: foundation cost lands somewhere between $24,000–$42,000, depending on building footprint and how the engineer reads the borehole. Reactive soils move with seasonal moisture. A waffle pod alone won't cut it on a Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) site — you need stiffened edge beams, sometimes piered footings, and careful detailing around wet areas to stop differential movement showing up as cracking. Buildana includes the geotech report, structural engineering, and slab design in every quote. No site allowance, no provisional sum.
What Hornsby Shire Council Wants to See
Approval in Westleigh comes down to documentation quality. Hornsby Shire Council processes a high volume of residential applications, and the ones that get approved fast share three traits: clean drawings that show every required setback dimension on plan; a BASIX certificate that matches the actual specification (not a stand-in); and an engineering package sized correctly for the Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) ground. We prepare every document at full lodgement standard the first time.
Realistic Budget for Westleigh
For a home extension in Westleigh, the budget conversation starts with what you actually want versus what the site supports. Most quotes you'll get from volume builders strip out the things that matter on Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) soil — engineered slab upgrade, decent waterproofing, real drainage design, BASIX-compliant glazing — and present them as variations after you sign. We don't do that. Buildana's contract is fixed-price including everything required to deliver a extension that complies with NCC 2025 on a 700–1,200m² block in Westleigh.
Designing for the Westleigh Streetscape
Westleigh's housing stock is predominantly from the 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations. Thornleigh (2 km) from the nearest station. The local anchor is Westleigh shops + Westleigh Park + Berowra Valley NP. For a home extension, the streetscape question matters more than most builders admit — a brand-new double-storey on a street of single-storey 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations weatherboards will draw council attention on bulk and scale, even if technically compliant. Buildana designs the front elevation to read appropriately for the street while modernising the floor plan and structure behind it. Materials palette, roof pitch, fenestration rhythm — all chosen to settle into the existing rhythm rather than fight it.
What Recent Approvals Show
Hornsby Shire Council's recent decisions for Extensions in Westleigh reveal a clear pattern — applications with proper structural engineering tied to the existing footings on Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) soil and clean shadow analysis to neighbours' POS are progressing without RFIs. Sloppy lodgement adds 4-8 weeks of round-trip; clean lodgement doesn't.
Builder's Take on Westleigh
Matching brick on a Westleigh extension: 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations brick is often discontinued. We specify a close-match or deliberately contrast with render or cladding so the extension reads as intentional, not as a failed match. Done well, an intentional contrast looks better than a forced match.
Extension or move? In Westleigh, the maths usually favours extension once you factor in stamp duty ($40K–$60K), agent fees ($25K–$40K), and moving costs. An extension of $200K–$350K often delivers the space without the 12-week disruption of moving.
Westleigh vs Nearby Suburbs
Westleigh vs nearby suburbs — key metrics for extending.
| Suburb | Median Price | Typical Lot | Soil Class | Era | Station |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Westleigh2120this suburb | $1.8M–$2.6M Hornsby/Asquith/Mount Colah; $2.4M–$3.6M Cherrybrook/Beecroft/Pennant Hills; $3.0M–$8.0M+ Galston/Arcadia acreage | 700–1,200m² | Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) | 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations | Thornleigh (2 km) |
| Thornleigh2120 | $1.8M–$2.6M Hornsby/Asquith/Mount Colah; $2.4M–$3.6M Cherrybrook/Beecroft/Pennant Hills; $3.0M–$8.0M+ Galston/Arcadia acreage | 700–1,200m² typical (Hornsby/Asquith/Pennant Hills/Beecroft/Wahroonga boundary/Cherrybrook); 1–5ha acreage (Galston/Berrilee/Arcadia/Forest Glen/Glenorie/Berowra Heights bushland fringe) | Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) | 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations | Thornleigh |
| Normanhurst2076 | $1.8M–$2.6M Hornsby/Asquith/Mount Colah; $2.4M–$3.6M Cherrybrook/Beecroft/Pennant Hills; $3.0M–$8.0M+ Galston/Arcadia acreage | 700–1,200m² typical (Hornsby/Asquith/Pennant Hills/Beecroft/Wahroonga boundary/Cherrybrook); 1–5ha acreage (Galston/Berrilee/Arcadia/Forest Glen/Glenorie/Berowra Heights bushland fringe) | Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) | 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations | Normanhurst |
| Pennant Hills2120 | $2.6M–$3.6M premium heritage | 700–1,200m² typical (Hornsby/Asquith/Pennant Hills/Beecroft/Wahroonga boundary/Cherrybrook); 1–5ha acreage (Galston/Berrilee/Arcadia/Forest Glen/Glenorie/Berowra Heights bushland fringe) | Class Hawkesbury Sandstone bedrock predominant (saw-cutting, rock-anchoring $30K–$120K above standard substructure) / Class M Wianamatta Shale on Cherrybrook/Beecroft ridges / bushfire-prone land BAL-12.5 to BAL-FZ on virtually all bushland-fringe (most of the LGA) | 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations | Pennant Hills |
Median price, soil class, and lot size shape build feasibility and final cost. Buildana assesses every site against these and other constraints during the free feasibility stage.
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How It Works
From First Call to Final Key
The first job on an extension is finding out what you're extending onto. Westleigh homes from the 1900s–1940s Federation heritage (Beecroft/Cheltenham/Pennant Hills/Wahroonga boundary) + 1960s–1990s brick (Cherrybrook/Asquith/Mount Colah/Mount Kuring-gai) + 2010s+ R3/R4 redevelopment around Hornsby/Asquith/Waitara stations were built to different standards — we open walls, check footings, verify load paths. The existing house has to carry the new work.
⏱Design follows the existing roof. A bad extension looks like a bolt-on; a good one reads as original. Matched brickwork or contrasting render (whichever the architecture calls for), tied-in roofline, continuous flooring where it should be continuous.
⏱Construction happens while you live in the house. That means weatherproofing every night, staging the works so kitchens and bathrooms don't disappear on the same week, and keeping the site clean of debris that doesn't belong in a family home.
⏱Finish is seamless. Paint match, floor match, roofline match, brick match where possible. The only way to tell the extension is new is the date on the plans.
⏱Quality Promise
Our Westleigh home extensions connect old-to-new cleanly. Matched brickwork, tied roofline, no awkward transitions.
Cost Guide
| Item | Estimated Range |
|---|---|
| Simple rear extension (single wall removal, no roof change) | $90,000 – $200,000 |
| Moderate extension (multiple openings, roof extended) | $200,000 – $380,000 |
| Complex extension (structural steel portals, re-roofing) | $380,000 – $600,000 |
| Second-storey tie-in (existing house re-engineered) | $350,000 – $650,000 |
Prices are indicative for Western Sydney (2025). Actual costs depend on site, specifications, and approvals.
Our Team
Oliver Alameri
Founder / Director / Builder · MPropDev · PhD Student
Ahmad Alameri
Accounts Manager
Claire Wendell
Project Manager
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Last updated: 1 April 2026
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