For builders across Melbourne and Victoria who want fewer delays, safer sites, and quicker approvals.
A solid traffic plan is more than a drawing. It maps how trucks, cranes, pedestrians, cyclists and general traffic move safely around your work zone so council officers and VicRoads/Department of Transport and Planning (DTP) can sign off with confidence. In Victoria, you’ll usually deal with local councils for road occupation on local roads, and DTP/VicRoads when your works touch arterial roads or need authority to use traffic control devices. Getting the pathway right up front is the fastest route to “approved”.
Traffic planning for building sites bundles three moving parts:
A2Z builds AGTTM-aligned TMPs and TGS sets so the paperwork and the on-site setup match. The Austroads Guide to Temporary Traffic Management (AGTTM) is the national baseline most road authorities now reference.
Quick rule of thumb: Council = occupying local road space. DTP/VicRoads = authority to use devices on arterials (MoA). Complex jobs can need both. Policies and processing were centralised in 2022 to improve consistency.
A2Z designs to the AGTTM, which sets out best practice for planning, design, implementation and monitoring of temporary traffic management across Australia and New Zealand. Victorian reforms continue to align practice and accreditation to this guide.
For builders, this means your drawings use the right tapers, buffers, sight distances and sign lists and your on-site setup follows the same standard the assessor expects.
Processing times vary by authority and complexity. A practical window for straightforward applications is often around 10–15 business days; allow longer on arterials, near major events, or where multiple agencies are involved. Road Occupation Charges may apply on declared arterials; confirm early to avoid budget shocks.
Email us your site address, frontage photos, proposed dates/hours, and a brief scope (crane, hoarding, deliveries, service cuts). We’ll confirm the pathway (council and/or MoA), produce AGTTM-aligned TMP/TGS, and lodge a clean submission for the fastest realistic sign-off.
Yes if you’re occupying the road or footpath, council typically handles that consent. But if you also need traffic control devices on the arterial, you’ll require a VicRoads/DTP MoA as well. Some projects need both.
The TMP is the method and risk management; the TGS is the scaled, stage-by-stage diagram your crew sets out (devices, tapers, sight lines, controller positions). Both are expected in Victoria. austroads.gov.au
Allow a practical 10–15 business days for straightforward applications; complex sites, arterials and event periods can take longer.
When you need authority to use traffic control devices (e.g., lane closures, temporary speed limits) on arterial roads and in some cases on local roads depending on device type and impact.
Most Victorian authorities reference the Austroads Guide to Temporary Traffic Management (AGTTM). A2Z designs and implements to this standard.
Great construction traffic planning is simple on paper and powerful on site: pick the right approval path (council vs arterial), submit AGTTM-aligned TMP/TGS drawings, protect pedestrian access, and lock in realistic timeframes. Do those four things and you’ll cut delays, keep crews and road users safe, and get faster sign-off.
Our unparalleled expertise and support in managing traffic for your projects and events make us the glove-like fit for every one of your traffic needs.
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