Sydney Olympic Park: Difference between revisions

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=== Parklands ===
=== Parklands ===
* [[Bicentennial Park]] - 40 Hectares of Parkland, opened in 1988 to celebrate [[Australian Bicentenary|Australia's Bicentenary]]
* [[Bicentennial Park]] - 40 Hectares of Parkland, opened in 1988 to celebrate [[Australian Bicentenary|Australia's Bicentenary]]
* Wentworth Common
* Archery Park
* Blaxland Riverside Park along Parramatta River (Redevelopment to open March 2007)
* 425 Hectares of Parkland, throughout the Olympic Park site
* 425 Hectares of Parkland, throughout the Olympic Park site



Revision as of 09:00, 10 December 2006

33°50′52″S 151°3′58″E / 33.84778°S 151.06611°E / -33.84778; 151.06611

Sydney Olympic Park
The Olympic Boulevarde (the main street)
map

Sydney Olympic Park is a 640-hectare site located at the heart of Sydney, in the suburb of Homebush Bay, New South Wales, Australia. It was built for the 2000 Olympics and continues to be used for sporting and cultural events, including the Sydney Royal Easter Show. It is served by the Olympic Park railway line and station.

Sydney Olympic Park is operated by the Sydney Olympic Park Authority. The site was previously intended (pre-Olympic bid) for a massive urban renewal project of the Homebush Bay area, of which the renewal masterplan was altered to accommodate venues for the 2000 Olympics.

History

The Wann-gal clan of Indigenous Australians lived in the area before British settlement. The area was called "The Flats" by a scouting party shortly after the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788. It became part of the Newington Estate in 1807 which was acquired by John Blaxland. The Government acquired some of the land for an aged women's home in the late 19th century. Much of the land was filled in from the river and wetlands. [1]

In the mid-1980s an area bounded by Australia Avenue and what are now Herb Elliott Avenue and Sarah Durack Ave was promoted as a 'technology park' called the Australia Centre.

However, apart from a few relatively high tech businesses like AWA Microelectronics, BASF, Phillips and Sanyo, the idea did not catch on and the Australian Technology Park is now in Eveleigh. In any event, a decade later the entire area became the site for the Sydney 2000 Olympics.

Before its transformation, a large part of Olympic Park was an industrial wasteland after 100 years of industrial & military ventures on the site. The site was once home to a brickworks, abattoir and an armaments depot as well as being the site for eight of Sydney's rubbish dumps.

Since the end of the 2000 Olympics, Sydney Olympic Park is being converted to a multipurpose facility with a number of businesses re-locating to the area.

Recent Developments

2006 has seen a resurgence in development. The first of three major Commonwealth Bank Office buildings is in an advanced stage of construction, and a five star Sofitel hotel is in the early stages.

Events

Currently there are nearly 1800 events which are held at the park every year, including the Sydney Royal Easter Show, National Rugby League and Australian Rugby League games at Telstra Stadium, and athletics and swimming events. It has hosted the Big Day Out music festival and has been the venue for free, open air performances as part of the Sydney Festival.

The Newington Armoury was the venue for a music festival during Easter 2006.

Some venues function have changed from the original one in the 2000 Olympics, such as the Baseball stadium shown on this map which has become the Sydney showground, and also the Olympic stadium has been renamed the Telstra stadium.

Management

Stadium Australia
Sydney Superdome

Facilities

Sydney 2000 Olympics venues

  • Telstra Stadium (capacity 110,000 at time of Olympics, now 83,500) [2]
  • Acer Arena (formerly Sydney Superdome) (capacity: Basketball 18,000; Gymnastics 15,000)
  • Sydney Showgrounds - Home of Sydney's Royal Easter Show
  • Sydney Olympic Park Athletic Centre
  • Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Centre (capacity 17,500)
  • Sydney Olympic Park Tennis Centre (capacity 16,200)
  • Sydney Olympic Park Hockey Centre (capacity 15,000) — Also referred to as the "State Hockey Centre".
  • Sydney Olympic Park Archery Centre (capacity 4,500)
  • Sydney Olympic Park Sports Centre (capacity 5,000)
  • Sydney Olympic Park Sports Halls

Non-Olympic facilities

  • Sydney Olympic Park Golf Centre
  • Sydney Olympic Park Mountain X - Mountain Biking
  • Monster Skate Park

Accommodation

Transport

Parklands

  • Bicentennial Park - 40 Hectares of Parkland, opened in 1988 to celebrate Australia's Bicentenary
  • Wentworth Common
  • Archery Park
  • Blaxland Riverside Park along Parramatta River (Redevelopment to open March 2007)
  • 425 Hectares of Parkland, throughout the Olympic Park site

Restricted areas

External links