Sunday, December 6, 2015

Sydney - 2

Friday 4 December  
Built on Sandstone

Heather, Keith, Ned and I drove over to Camperdown, a suburb of Sydney where Gillian and Nigel live. We then caught the bus to Central from where we started our Sydney walk via Goods Line – the route Gillian had scouted out on foot, researched and mapped the week prior to our arrival.  

Goods Line was part of the first railway that opened in NSW in 1855, and is modeled after the High Line in NYC. Used to transpsort goods from Darling Harbour to the rail yards near Redfern, it wasn’t until the 1870s when the Darling Harbour Goods Yard was built on reclaimed mud flats in Cockle Bay. At this time, Darling Harbour became an international transport and manufacturing hub, and the Goods Line became vital to the movement of coal, shale, timber, wheat, and produce.  



 The Goods Line prospered until the 1960s when plans for a new seaport in Port Botany were realized, and due to the increasing use of road transportation, the use of the rail line declined. In 1984, the last goods train left Darling Harbour Goods Yard.
 











En route we passed the recently completed Frank O. Gheary building that is part of UTS (University of Technology, Sydney).


 We walked to the Power House Museum – on the list to visit next time we are in Sydney. 

At Paddy’s Market Keith said g’day and hopped on the train for Bondi Beach.


We went on to walk through the construction site of the future downtown convention and arts center of Sydney, the Chinese Gardens, then Darling Harbour before Bangaroo Reserve. This is the future dock area. The park is built of Sydney sandstone with impressive displays of Australian native plants. Bangaroo is named for the woman who used to negotiate between the Aboriginal Peoples and the British.



We had lunch at the restaurant at the end of the wharf of Sydney Theatre at Walsh Bay before heading off to Bondi Beach to pick up Keith and Garry. Then, we hit horrendous Friday afternoon traffic en route home to Avalon (Northern Beaches).

View from Restaurant

Bondi Beach

Garry Smailes (Spider) and Ned







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