An immersive indoor action park featuring more than a dozen giant themed slides, laser tag, junior go karting and parkour equipment is proposed for Hendra, with planners describing it as a first of its kind in Brisbane and Queensland.
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The development application, lodged with Brisbane City, outlines plans to transform an existing industrial building at Unit 21A, 441 Nudgee Road into “Slide Planet Brisbane,” an interactive entertainment venue catering primarily to school-aged children and their families. For families in nearby suburbs like Ascot and Hendra, the venue would represent a new local entertainment option, pending council approval.
The proposal comes from entertainment company Fever Up, the team behind several well-known Brisbane experiences including Dopamine Land in the CBD, Prison Island in Fortitude Valley, and the Harry Potter Forbidden Forest pop-up experience. The company already operates across parts of Australia and is looking to expand its Brisbane footprint.
What’s Inside Slide Planet?

According to the development application, the venue would offer five main activity categories: giant slides, circus and zipline experiences, sports and parkour on multi-use air courts, laser tag, and a dedicated junior activities zone for younger children.
The giant slides are the centrepiece of the proposal and are themed across a range of concepts, with names including a “black hole spiral slide,” “surf slide” and “avalanche slide” listed in the plans. Air courts, which use an inflatable material to allow guests to jump higher than they ordinarily could, can also be used for basketball, dodgeball and parkour.

The junior zone includes smaller slides, a jungle gym, a climbing area and go karting, with age restrictions applying to different activities within the zone. The venue would also include a zipline, jump tower, birthday party rooms, a toddler area, a bar, cafe and lobby spaces, all within a building footprint of around 3,000 square metres.
Guests would purchase tickets for a set time slot, typically 90 to 120 minutes, choosing either an all-ages or junior-only access pass. The venue could accommodate up to around 400 children at capacity. Parents and guardians who prefer to watch rather than participate would be able to stay on site without needing a participation ticket, similar to how existing trampoline and indoor adventure parks in Brisbane currently operate.
Why Hendra?

Planners note that multiple Brisbane locations were considered before settling on the Nudgee Road site. Its proximity to arterial roads, the separation from residential noise receivers, and the size of the existing building made it a strong fit. The site sits within walking distance of Brisbane Airport DFO, Skygate, and Golf Central.
The venue would sit alongside some notable neighbours in the industrial estate, including the Hungry Jack’s state headquarters. A Bounce facility (formerly Urban Xtreme), which offers large indoor trampolines, adventure courses and climbing walls, is located just metres from the planned site. The development application acknowledges the similarity but describes the venue as a “unique offering which will be a first within Australia.”
Additional parking spaces are planned to manage the expected increase in traffic. Operating hours would vary between school terms and holidays, with the venue running as late as 10pm during school holiday periods. Weekends are flagged as the anticipated peak trading times.
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The concept already operates across multiple locations in the United States, but this would be the first in Brisbane and Queensland. A spokesperson for Fever Up confirmed the company is still working through final contractual arrangements, with more details expected to be made public within the coming weeks.
Published 12-June-2026














