Between 23 July 2022 and 23 July 2032, Queensland will plan, fund, contract and build more than at any time in its history. Most of that activity is disclosed in public records that are scattered, renamed, and quietly overwritten. This page tracks the independent record that keeps them — compiled daily, append-only, attributed to source.
| 14,261 | development applications first seen and kept since tracking began latest entry: 13 Jun 2026 |
| 424,525 | government contracts disclosed since 2021, as published by Queensland agencies |
| 530,958 | historical contract disclosures preserved from earlier years |
| 616 | ministerial infrastructure designations recorded — the parallel planning pathway |
| 849 | forward procurement lines — work government says is coming |
| 196,116 | licensed building contractors on the public register |
Figures as of 14 Jun 2026, 3:07am AEST. Every figure is a count of source records, not an estimate.
Compiled daily. Council application portals, agency disclosure logs, the licence register, designation notices and procurement pipelines are read every day and written into one place, with the date each item was first seen.
Append-only. When a source page is revised, renamed in a departmental restructure, or taken down, the record here does not change. What was published, and when, stays kept — including, where it happens, the fact that a source became unavailable.
Attributed and correctable. Every figure traces to a public source. Errors are corrected within 24 hours of verification, and the correction is itself part of the record.
Catching what moves first: lodgements, mobilisations and awards surfaced while they are still decisions someone can act on.
Peak delivery. The diary becomes the reference: who applied, who built, what was promised, what was paid — kept while it happens, not reconstructed after.
When the decade is examined — and it will be — the only continuous, independent account of how it was delivered is the one that was kept all along.