Chippendale, New South Wales

Suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chippendale is a small inner-city suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia on the southern edge of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Sydney. Chippendale is located between Broadway to the north and Cleveland Street to the south, Central railway station to the east and the University of Sydney to the west.

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Chippendale
St Benedict's Catholic Church and University of Notre Dame Australia Broadway campus
Chippendale is located in Sydney
Chippendale
Chippendale
Location in metropolitan Sydney
Interactive map of Chippendale
CountryAustralia
StateNew South Wales
CitySydney
LGA
Location
  • 2 km (1.2 mi) south of CBD
Government
  State electorate
  Federal division
Area
  Total
0.46 km2 (0.18 sq mi)
Population
  Total7,803 (SAL 2021)[1]
  Density16,810/km2 (43,500/sq mi)
Postcode
2008
Suburbs around Chippendale
Glebe Ultimo Haymarket
Camperdown Chippendale Surry Hills
Darlington Darlington Redfern
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History

The area was first occupied by the Gadigal people of the Dharug Nation. William Chippendale was granted a 95-acre (38 ha) estate in 1819. It stretched to the present day site of Redfern railway station. Chippendale sold the estate to Solomon Levey, emancipist and merchant, in 1821, for 380 pounds. Solomon Levey died while in London in 1833. Levey's heirs sold over 62 acres (25 ha) to William Hutchinson.[2][3]

John Storey Memorial Dispensary (1926)

Chippendale has a number of heritage-listed sites, including the Regent Street railway station or 'Mortuary Station', located on the eastern side of the suburb.[4] The John Storey Memorial Dispensary on Regent Street was built in 1926 as a memorial to John Storey, a former Premier of New South Wales.[citation needed]

Chippendale is adjacent to the suburb of Darlington, separated by Cleveland Street (part of the Southern Arterial Route). A 1981 report stated Darlington and Chippendale, "in many respects, see themselves as one community sharing most facilities (these majorly in the north) and their chief 'destroyer', Sydney University". Common problems described in this report included north/south through traffic, heavily-trafficked dividing and bordering roads including Cleveland, Abercrombie and Lawson Streets, shortage of public space ad dearth of local shops.[5]:7/3 The report stated "Chippendale has a high aboriginal population based round the Aboriginal Housing Company".[5]:7/3

By 1981, Chippendale and Darlington had a resident parking scheme for 6 months.[5]:7/3

Commercial area

The eastern side of Chippendale, being adjacent to the CBD, has a greater mix use than other parts of the suburb. It includes smaller offices and warehouses as well as cafes and pubs. Transport for NSW has its headquarters here.[6]

The western side of Chippendale is mainly residential with businesses interspersed in some parts of the precinct.

One Central Park apartments

Central Park, Sydney

The 168-year-old Carlton & United brewery closed in December 2006. Frasers Property purchased the brewery site from the Foster's Group in 2007 and lodged a plan for a major renewal project of the 5.8-hectare (14-acre) site. The development proposal "Central Park" included approximately 255,000 m2 of commercial and residential space, retention of a number of heritage buildings and the development of a large new park called Chippendale Green.[7] One Central Park is a large mixed-use residential and commercial building on the site.

Balfour Street Park, at the corner of Balfour and O'Connor Streets, acts as a pedestrian gateway to Central Park. Chippendale has the lowest open space per person of any Sydney suburb (City of Sydney open space study, 2006). The addition of Chippendale Green has provided much needed green space; however, given the corresponding population increase from new developments, Chippendale now has less than 1 square metre of green space per resident.

Schools

The University of Notre Dame Australia sits along the northern border with campus buildings scattered through the suburb. The University of Technology, Sydney and the University of Sydney have campuses nearby. The Sydney campus of Curtin University is located at the eastern edge of Chippendale on Regent Street. The Boston University Sydney Campus is located on Regent Street in Chippendale.

Culture

Chippendale has become known as one of the key creative art districts of Sydney with more than a dozen galleries in the small neighbourhood (including White Rabbit Gallery, MOP Projects, and Pine Street Creative Arts Centre). Various creative events in the suburb also take place each year such as the Beams Festival. Artist residencies were offered with the cooperation of Frasers during the construction of Central Park and Chippendale houses a lively creative community.

Pubs

The Lansdowne Hotel hosts music, trivia nights, and other events.[8] In 2017, The Preatures played there.[9]

Transport

[more detail needed]

Chippendale is serviced by the nearby Central railway station and Railway Square bus interchange.

Chippendale has a number of cycling routes connecting to it, including the Broadway Cycle Link (connecting Darlington and Ultimo through Chippendale[10]) and the Glebe to Ultimo Cycleway.[11]

In 2013, a number of route options for the Broadway Cycle Link route were considered.[12]

In 2017, consultants were commissioned by the City of Sydney to undertake an Local Area Traffic Management (LATM) study of Chippendale to identify issues and develop a set of measures to improve public amenity.[13]

In 2018, the urban heat island effect was studied in Chippendale.[14]

Population

Demographics

The demographics of Chippendale changed significantly since the development of Central Park. At the 2021 census there were 7,803 people living in Chippendale. 30.0% of people were born in Australia. The most common other countries of birth were China 19.6%, Indonesia 5.6%, Thailand 3.0%, Hong Kong 2.5% and Malaysia 2.4%. 39.0% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin 22.0%, Cantonese 4.7%, Indonesian 4.3%, Thai 2.7% and Spanish 2.1%. The most common religious affiliation was "No Religion" 55.1%, followed by Catholic 10.2%, Not stated 10.2%, Buddhism 9.1% and Hinduism 2.3%.[15]

At the 2016 census there were 8,617 residents in Chippendale.

In contrast, at the 2011 census, there were 4,057 residents; 38.3% were born in Australia and 50.1% only spoke English at home.[16]

The 2016 census continued to show that the majority of people in Chippendale were attending an educational institution (58.2%). Of these, 67.3% were in a tertiary or technical institution.[17]

Notable residents

  • William Chippendale, Sydney land owner and farmer whose surname the suburb's name is derived from
  • David Malouf, writer[18]
  • Michael Mobbs, author of Sustainable House[19]

References

Further reading

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