Vicinity Centres has consolidated full ownership of Uptown Brisbane, acquiring its co investor’s stake in the CBD shopping centre and outlining a $300 million repositioning of the former Myer Centre.
The move gives the national retail landlord complete control of one of the most prominent assets on Queen Street Mall. The investment program is expected to be rolled out in stages over the coming years, with works focused on modernising interiors, reshaping the retail mix and elevating the centre’s dining and entertainment offer.
Uptown occupies a strategic position at the northern gateway to Queen Street Mall, extending through to Elizabeth Street across multiple levels anchored by its central atrium. Once a dominant force in Brisbane retail, the complex in recent years has struggled with ageing finishes, upper level vacancy and a tenancy mix that has lacked cohesion. Portions of the building have felt tired, transitional and, at times, visibly underutilised.
Vicinity has made clear that it intends to reposition Uptown as a premium, experience led destination.
“From a customer and retail perspective, Uptown’s future offer would be modelled more closely on Emporium Melbourne,’’ Vicinity CEO and managing director Peter Huddle said. “Our vision is to curate an Emporium style destination in Brisbane’s CBD – a comprehensive, experience led retail environment that brings together fashion, dining, entertainment, leisure and technology in a highly productive multi level format.’’
It is an ambitious comparison.
Emporium Melbourne underwent a $1.2 billion transformation completed in 2014 ($1.62 billion in today’s dollars). The redevelopment delivered major structural works, new façades, vertical expansion, simplified circulation and a wholesale reinvention of its surrounding precinct. It was not a cosmetic refresh. It was a city shaping retail statement.
Uptown’s $300 million allocation, while substantial in isolation, sits in a very different category when applied to a building of this scale and complexity.
Internally, Uptown requires significant attention. The once dramatic atrium now feels dated rather than iconic. Escalator stacks and split levels create a confusing vertical journey. Several upper levels have struggled to maintain consistent activation. Parts of the centre have been marked by boarded up tenancies and transitional uses that undermine the building’s original ambition.
There is no question capital is needed.
The question is whether $300 million is enough to truly transform what is arguably Brisbane’s most complicated retail asset.
Once services upgrades, compliance, tenancy churn, staging and new fitouts are factored in, the room for dramatic structural intervention narrows. On a project of this size, hundreds of millions can be absorbed quickly without fundamentally altering the building’s spatial logic.
The Elizabeth Street interface is perhaps the clearest litmus test.
While Queen Street Mall frontage benefits from pedestrian activity, the Elizabeth Street edge remains heavy, visually dated and car oriented. It reads more as the back of a building than the front of a city defining retail asset.
If Uptown is to genuinely reposition itself for the next decade, particularly with Cross River Rail and the new Albert Street station set to increase pedestrian flows nearby, that frontage demands bold urban design intervention.
Expanded glazing, softened edges, active ground level dining and a rebalanced pedestrian experience would require significant capital and collaboration. It is difficult to see how that level of transformation comfortably fits within the current budget envelope.
There is also a broader narrative at play.
Vicinity’s Emporium Melbourne redevelopment came with a $1.2 billion cheque. Uptown, a similarly prominent CBD asset in a rapidly growing capital city, receives $300 million.
Brisbane has long watched major institutional owners deploy their most ambitious capital into Sydney and Melbourne while Queensland assets receive more measured upgrades. The language of repositioning may be similar, but the scale of funding tells its own story.
None of this is to suggest Uptown will not improve. A comprehensive internal refresh, stronger tenant curation and a revitalised dining offer could materially lift performance. The centre desperately needs polish and direction.
But Brisbane should temper expectations of a billion dollar style rebirth and not get hopes up too much.
What is likely to emerge is a brighter, cleaner and more curated Uptown. What remains uncertain is whether the deeper structural and urban challenges that have defined the building for decades will be meaningfully addressed.
For a property sitting at one of the most strategic retail locations in Queensland’s capital, some may argue that a more audacious investment was warranted.
Instead, it unfortunately appears that Brisbane’s Uptown is poised to receive another lick of paint refurbishment rather than the transformative rebuild this site arguably demands.

Uptown being in the heart of the city, needs to knocked down and started again. Build a landmark tower with all new retail experiences.
What happened to the $500 million plan from last year? It needs $300 million just on the Elizabeth Street side of the building to activate the street level.
From the grubby toilets to the maze of empty shopfronts money needs to be spent.
Extend the cinema level to 16 or 24 screens, encourage retailers to put their flagship stores in the centre, esp stores not in Brisbane already.
Trouble is Vicinity only cares about its southern centres. It seems like every year Chadstone gets millions spent on it every year You have talked about Emporium and also Chatswood Chase is getting a refit.
As stated, $300 million will barely cover a paint job. Disappointed. Once again Brisbane is being treated with contempt by Vicinity.
ISPT is doing the same thing with the constant delaying of the Wintergarden redevelopment.
Meanwhile the rest of the CBD is thriving despite these 2 gaping holes in the Mall.
Do better Vicinity.
It’s definitely past its “used by” date. It is cramped and doesn’t have the high-end, open feel that I think modern iconic shopping destinations need. It’s a pity they didn’t take the opportunity to do a complete rebuild and include residential and hotel towers in the mix.
Sorry thats not going to cut it. Myers needs to come back we need another big retailer and a whole new redesign. Its cramped, terrible layout. That ugly bomb shelter looking eyesore needs to go. The elizabeth street side looks foul. This is not promising at all.
Couldn’t agree more.; was so disappointed with the announcement. This place needs to be reimagined and rebuilt (from scratch).
The entirety of Uptown needs to be completely demolished at this point and rebuilt as a modern shopping complex with high rise apartments above. The centre is well past its used by date, it’s old, outdated and the need for a multiple level shopping centre is gone.
A fresh coat of paint won’t fix long list of issues that Uptown currently has.
Just like all retail building’s, the rent these tenants are required to pay each month is extraordinarily to high, as you can see in every shopping centre. The owners of these buildings would rather see empty tenancies and hoardings than reduce the rent a little to keep retailers trading, especially for Mum and Dad investors who struggle who can not keep up with the big retailers.
How very disappointing.