Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Belmore Park

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Operated by
  
Sydney City Council

Phone
  
+61 2 9265 9333

Status
  
Open all year

Belmore Park

Location
  
Central, New South Wales, Australia

Nearest city
  
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Created
  
19 May 1868 (1868-05-19)

Address
  
191 Hay St, Haymarket NSW 2000, Australia

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hours

Similar
  
Central Railway Station - S, Prince Alfred Park, Hyde Park - Sydney, Sydney Town Hall, Museum railway station

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Belmore Park is a public park at the southern end of the Sydney CBD in the Australian state of New South Wales. Adjacent to the Central railway station it is bounded by Hay Street, Eddy Avenue, Elizabeth Street and Pitt Street. The area was previously known as Police Paddock and was part of a section of Crown land which included the Police Barracks, Devonshire Street Cemetery, Female Refuge of the Good Samaritan, Benevolent Asylum and a common. The area was landscaped and in 1868 it opened as a park dedicated to Somerset Lowry-Corry, 4th Earl Belmore the then Governor of New South Wales. In 1901 the whole area was resumed for the construction of Sydney’s Central Railway Station with the majority of excavated earth placed on the common, burying the original layout. During the 1908–09 Royal Commission for the Improvement of the City of Sydney and Its Suburbs major landscaping works for the area were proposed by commissioner Norman Selfe.

Contents

Due to its proximity to the city, and especially to Central Station, the park has long been a place for groups to gather—for protests, markets, events or performances. For example, in 1878 in front of a large crowd, Henri L'Estrange unsuccessfully tried twice to launch himself in a gas balloon, while during the 2000 Summer Olympics the park became one of five "live sites" where the games were publicly broadcast. In the late 1860s "Belmore Produce Markets" and Paddy's Markets were built in the area opposite the current park—now known as Haymarket.

The park is a key public transport hub. The final section of above-ground railway track forms the eastern edge of the park before going underground as the City Circle. All intercity buses from Sydney depart from Eddy Avenue to the south as do many local buses in the direction of the eastern suburbs of Sydney (including express buses to the University of NSW and Bondi). The western edge of the park is defined by a roadway ramp to the concourse level of the train station. The terminus loop of the Inner West Light Rail forms a ring around the entire park using ramps on both eastern and western edges to access the train station concourse.

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References

Belmore Park Wikipedia