A quick coffee run in Stones Corner rarely stays a quick coffee run.
You stop for breakfast, wander past a vintage rack, duck into a bookstore, grab lunch, run into someone you know, and somehow the afternoon disappears. That ability to keep people lingering has long been part of the precinct’s appeal — and this month, locals are being rewarded for doing exactly that.

Shop, Savour, Win
Throughout the month of May, shoppers who spend $20 or more at participating Stones Corner precinct businesses can enter the Shop Savour Win campaign, a month-long promotion designed to encourage visitors to explore more of the precinct’s evolving high street.
Ten $100 EFTPOS gift cards are up for grabs across the campaign, with bonus entries available for those who visit multiple participating businesses.


or use this QR code to upload receipts

In a precinct built around wandering, discovering and staying a little longer than planned, the Shop Savour Win campaign may be one of the easiest competitions in Brisbane to enter.
Pro Tip: You get additional entries for visiting multiple businesses—so go ahead, explore the whole strip.
A Precinct Back in the Spotlight
‘Shop Savour Win at Stones Corner’ is an initiative under Brisbane City Council’s Growing Precincts Together program and forms part of broader efforts to increase foot traffic and support local traders within the Stones Corner Suburban Renewal Precinct, which stretches along Logan Road between Gladys Street and Cornwall Street.
While the area has always had a loyal local following, recent upgrades and renewed interest in the precinct have helped cement its reputation as one of Brisbane’s most distinctive inner-south shopping and dining destinations.
The revival has been especially noticeable around the upgraded Hanlon Park/Bur’uda corridor and the Logan Road high street, where a growing mix of hospitality venues, independent retailers and wellness operators has brought fresh energy back into the neighbourhood.
That renewed momentum was on full display during the recent Stones Corner Festival, which drew strong crowds and highlighted the precinct’s growing appeal as both a local destination and a broader lifestyle hub for Brisbane’s southside.
People are rediscovering that “old-school high street” magic. It’s a mix of independent spirit and eclectic character that big-box shopping malls just can’t replicate.
More Than Just a Shopping Strip
Unlike larger shopping centres built around speed and convenience, Stones Corner still trades heavily on character. The strip remains intentionally eclectic — part suburban village, part dining precinct, part vintage treasure hunt.
Visitors can move from specialty cafés and multicultural dining venues through to boutique retail, bookstores, craft beer spots, salons, fitness studios and independent service providers, all within a relatively compact and walkable section of Logan Road.

The area’s accessibility also continues to work in its favour. Positioned just over four kilometres from the CBD and connected by both the busway and nearby rail links, Stones Corner occupies a rare middle ground — close to the city while still retaining the feel of a genuine neighbourhood high street.
The Businesses Driving the Precinct
Food has become one of the precinct’s biggest attractions, with Sri Lankan, Italian, Indian, Malaysian, Japanese and Latin American venues sitting alongside long-running pubs, modern cafés and craft beer bars.
Popular names along the strip include Walkway to Ceylon, Sasso Italiano, Mirchh Masala, Clove n’ Honey, Stone Throw Espresso, Mourning Roast and the historic Stones Corner Hotel.
Retail also remains a major part of the precinct’s identity. Alongside anchor businesses such as ALDI and Healthyworld Pharmacy, the area is home to independent bookstores, vintage retailers, boutique fashion stores, artisan florists, beauty operators and specialty lifestyle businesses.
The precinct also supports a growing mix of wellness and professional services, ranging from fitness studios and float therapy operators through to salons, medical clinics and employment services.
One of the best-known examples of Stones Corner’s independent spirit is Books@Stones, the long-running bookstore that has become a local institution along the strip.

The precinct’s blend of long-standing operators and newer arrivals has helped create the kind of street environment where people are encouraged to slow down, browse, and spend time exploring.
Built Around Discovery
The Shop Savour Win campaign is ultimately built around that sense of discovery.
Rather than focusing on a single shopping centre or major retailer, the promotion encourages visitors to move through the broader precinct — grabbing coffee, browsing boutiques, staying for dinner, and exploring businesses they may not have noticed before.
For many locals, that authenticity remains the drawcard.
The precinct’s roots stretch back to the late 1800s, when James Stone operated a ginger beer business near the corner of Logan and Old Cleveland Roads. Elements of that history still remain visible today, from heritage shopfronts through to the wartime air raid shelter near the library.
Published 12-May-2026
Brisbane Suburbs Online News is a proud supporter of Brisbane City Council’s Growing Precincts Together program.











