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The Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre at Darling Harbour was a venue of the 2000 Summer Olympic Games and a key meeting venue of APEC Australia 2007. The heritage listed Pyrmont Bridge spans the width of the harbour Cockle Bay, the southern end of Darling Harbour, in 2021, with Harbourside Shopping Centre (demolished in 2023) at right, and ...
It is located at the southern end of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of the City of Sydney. Haymarket includes much of Sydney's Chinatown, Thaitown and Railway Square localities. Haymarket is adjacent to Darling Harbour and is surrounded by the suburbs of Ultimo, Chippendale, Surry Hills and the Sydney CBD.
It comprises the majority of the Haymarket suburb, between Central station and Darling Harbour. It is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney, and is Australia's largest Chinatown. [2] Sydney, and the colony of New South Wales, experienced Chinese migration as early as 1828.
The garden is a unifying element tying the larger scale of the new Darling Harbour and older, more intimate spaces of Haymarket's streets and lanes. The continuing development of Sydney's Chinese communities are reflected in its Southern Chinese design and artisanship, in conjunction with Sydney and New South Wales' materials and construction.
107–117 Sussex Street: Royal George Hotel, Sydney (c. 1858), listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register, [5] [6] the City of Sydney heritage register, and the (since defunct) Register of the National Estate. [7] 121–127 Sussex Street (1850s), listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register.
After British settlement, the area was first known as 'Rush Cutting Bay' because the swampy land was covered in tall rushes used by early settlers for thatching houses. In 1878, 2 hectares (6 acres) were reserved for recreation; and, after reclamation work was completed, Rushcutters Bay Park was created, bounded by New South Head Road and the bay at Sydney Harbour.