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Pages in category "Streets in Sydney" The following 78 pages are in this category, out of 78 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Albion Street, Surry ...
Streets in Sydney’s CBD were left flooded by soaking rain on the morning of January 17 as the city received further relief from dry and smoky conditions during a catastrophic bushfire season in ...
The expansion of Sydney suburbs to the east, south and west made the city too large to be depicted with much detail on most maps produced after the 1840s. Small laneways and alleys were seldom shown as the scale of maps increased. One of the maps that shows The Rocks at a good level of detail is the 1865 Trigonometrical Survey of Sydney.
George Street is a street in the central business district of Sydney. It was Sydney's original high street , and remains one of the busiest streets in the city centre. It connects a number of the city's most important buildings and precincts.
Harris Street is the main thoroughfare in the Inner West suburbs of Pyrmont and Ultimo in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It runs from the northern tip of the Pyrmont peninsula to Broadway in the central business district .
William Street commences at the intersection of Park and College Streets on the eastern edge of Hyde Park in the Sydney central business district and heads in an easterly direction as a four-lane, single carriageway road, widening into a dual-carriageway road just before it enters the Kings Cross Tunnel, before ending at the junction with Barcom Avenue, Waratah Street, Bayswater Road and New ...
Overhead bridges were built for Gloucester Street in 1862, Cumberland Street in 1864 and the Princes Street in 1867–68 (the latter demolished as part of the Sydney Harbour Bridge construction). [2] There is an inscription identifying Charles Moore, Mayor (1867–68) from this Bridge now relocated to the south wall of the cut.
Macquarie Street is named after Lachlan Macquarie, an early Governor of New South Wales (in office 1810–1821). [1] In the years since its founding in 1788, Sydney had developed organically, and by the early 1800s was lacking in major public buildings, and had a complex network of narrow streets.