Circular Quay, New South Wales
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This article is about the locality. For the racehorse of the same name, see Circular Quay (horse).
Circular Quay is a locality in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is located on the northern edge of the Sydney central business district on Sydney Cove, between Bennelong Point and The Rocks. It is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney.[1]
Circular Quay is made up of walkways, pedestrian malls, parks and restaurants. It hosts a number of ferry quays and a train station.
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[edit] Transport
Circular Quay is a major Sydney transport hub, with a large ferry, rail and bus interchange. The Cahill Expressway is a prominent feature of the quay, running from the east, over the elevated railway station to join the Sydney Harbour Bridge in the west.
Circular Quay was formerly a large tram terminus and interchange. As many Sydney bus routes follow the previous tram lines, the tram terminus has become a major bus terminus for many bus routes.[citation needed]
The railway station is the only station on the City Circle that is above ground. Additionally it is said to offer the best views of any CityRail railway station, as the platform looks out over (and is open to) the ferry terminus.[citation needed]
The warf complex hosts five commuter ferry warves and is the terminus for all public ferry routes in Sydney.[citation needed]
Both the Metro Light Rail, operator, and the Sydney city council has lobbied for the single light rail line to be extended to Circular Quay through the Central Business District, however the State Government contends that this would benefit neither commuters, nor traffic conditions throughout the CBD.[2]
[edit] Culture
Circular Quay is a focal point for many community celebrations, for both its historic significance as the birthplace of the Australian nation, and for its proximity to the Sydney icons of the Sydney Opera House and the Sydney Harbour Bridge. It is one of the main congregation points for the New Year's Eve and Australia Day fireworks displays.
Circular Quay is also the home of Sydney's Museum of Contemporary Art and the flagship City of Sydney Library in the historic Customs House.
[edit] History
Sydney Cove was the site of the initial landing of the First Fleet in Port Jackson. Circular Quay was originally mainly used for shipping and slowly developed into a transport, leisure and recreational centre. The Circular Quay railway station was opened on the 20th January 1956 and the elevated Cahill Expressway was opened on the 14th March 1958.
[edit] Tram Terminal
Circular Quay was the focal terminal point of most electric tram services to the eastern suburbs, then as now allowing easy transfer to ferries. For many years, 27 regular services operated from Circular Quay.
[edit] Notes and References
- ^ Geographical Names Board of New South Wales
- ^ Think bigger on light rail, says transport expert Sydney Morning Herald, March 26, 2006
[edit] External links
- Street map from Street Directory, MSN Maps and Multimap.
- Satellite image from Google Maps, WikiMapia and Terraserver.
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Alexandria | Beaconsfield | Camperdown | Chippendale | Darlinghurst | Darlington | Dawes Point | Elizabeth Bay | Erskineville | Eveleigh | Forest Lodge | Glebe | Haymarket | Millers Point | Moore Park | Paddington | Potts Point | Pyrmont | Redfern | Rosebery | Rushcutters Bay | Surry Hills | Sydney CBD | The Rocks | Ultimo | Waterloo | Woolloomooloo | Zetland | |
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Localities within the City of Sydney | Sydney |
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