Homes perched on Australia’s stunning eastern coast were at risk of being swept away yesterday, after days of driving rain, high winds and monster swells smashed the coastline.
The last 48 hours have brought fresh warnings of gale-force winds, rain and powerful surf to an area north of Sydney, where around 40 seafront properties have been damaged by successive storms in the last month.
“I’ve been living on this beach for 18 years,” said resident Gordon Cahill “we’ve had various storm events come and go. This time we’ve been nailed.”
Erosion has long posed a threat in the seaside town of Wamberal, destroying homes in the 1970s and again washing away huge swathes of the beachfront from properties in 2016.
But as climate change drives rising sea levels and increases the frequency and severity of storms, the beach will be unlikely to recover as well between storms as it has done in the past.
The government estimates 39,000 buildings are located close to “soft” shorelines around Australia and are at risk of erosion.
Before the winter storms, residents of Wamberal had been campaigning for coastal 
protections to be built.
Cahill, whose deck collapsed in the storm after the surf ripped away chunks from his neighbours’ properties, has been living on the beach for 18 years and said sandstone blocks put in place by the original owners of the property had saved his home.
He blamed local authorities for not allowing other residents to build similar protections.
Margaret Brice - one of the few people to have remained to brave the latest weather - said the episode was “devastating” and “nerve-racking.”
“You can feel the vibrations through the house, you go and look out every day and a little bit more has slipped away,” she said as set after set of frothing foam chipped away at the already crumbling cliff face below.
Unlike some houses in the area, now directly endangered by erosion, her home had foundations driven into the bedrock but as the coast fell away, she wondered what would be left if nothing was done.
“The garden is somewhere where we can’t go,” she said. “People are out of their homes.”
When she built her home in 2001, she was told the local government was planning a revetment wall to protect the area but planning was still underway almost two decades later.
The Central Coast Council said in a statement on its website that a Sydney-based company had been appointed in May to prepare concept plans for a protection structure at Wamberal while further planning of the coastal management was ongoing.
Brice called on the authorities to act. “We don’t want a situation where living rooms are the front line of defence.”
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