Louise Sauvage Pathway

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Louise Sauvage Pathway 
Looking north towards ferry terminal
Line length: 6.3 km (3.9 mi)
Legend
Rivercat to Parramatta or City
River Walkto Newington Armory / toilets and water
Warning Signunexploded landmines
Rest Areawater
Silverwater Marker
Woo-La-Ra summit
Woo-La-Ra carpark
Rest Areawater
Weapons Museumheritage railway tour
Newington Nature Reservepre-settlement woodland
Bell Frog Boardwalk
To Bicentennial Park
Newington Armory south exitweekends only
Building 46 Rest Areatoilets and water
Holker Streetunderpass
Nerawang Wetland
US Navy artillery bunkerabandoned
Access to Precinct 3steps and Burma Road
Access to Precinct 3 Blaxlandsteps
Access to Precinct 3 Sandpiper
water
Avenue of Oceania
Path to Newington Marketplace
Haslams Creek Flats
Access to Precinct 2 Paavo Nurmisteps
Access to Precinct 2 Bobby Pearcesteps
Access to Precinct 2 Heidelberg
Newington Public School
Access to Precinct 1N Susie O'Neill
Haslams Fieldcricket oval
Access to Precinct 1N Michael Jordan
To Olympic Stadium
water / spiral hill Haslams Creek Marker
John Ian Wing Parade
Access to Precinct 1S Snowy Baker
Path to Teal Pond
Access to Precinct 1S Jesse Owens
Access to Precinct 1S Beaconsfield / Janet Evans
Olympic Park boundary
M4 Western Motorwayunderpass
Path to Parramattavia Duck River Cycleway

Named in honour of Australian paralympic wheelchair racer Louise Sauvage, the Pathway is the longest continuous section of pathway in Sydney Olympic Park. As such, the pathway is suitable for walking and pushbikes, as well as wheelchairs.

Facilities

The Pathway is two-lane, marked and sealed throughout, with numerous detours along its length, ranging from two-lane and marked, to one-lane sealed and an assortment of recognised and unrecognised unsealed paths. The pathway is only interrupted in two locations where the access roads cross into Newington, the former athletes' village. Amenities for travellers are provided along the path, including six water fountains and two toilet facilities.

Historical links

The Pathway provides a north-south link between the Parramatta River and the Western Motorway, passing the last remaining piece of virgin woodland in Sydney's Cumberland basin. The Pathway also provides access to Newington Armory as well as passing by some adjoining land, closed to all public access due to unexploded ordnance buried in the swamp.

Two of the former buildings of the Newington Arms Depot are accessed by the Pathway and no longer within the grounds of the Armory: Building 46, a renovated educational building operated by Energy Australia, and a former US Navy trench-style artillery bunker behind Newington Precinct 3. These bunkers were serviced by narrow-gauge railway to carry the highly sensitive explosive shells; the rail tracks are still maintained, and many are openly accessible via the Pathway.

Environmental links

Numerous waterways and wetlands adjoin the Pathway and its linking paths. Some of the water bodies such as Haslams Creek link to the Parramatta River, whereas others such as the Nerawang Wetlands are artificial lakes created as part of the Sydney Olympic Park environmental rejuvenation. The Bell Frog Boardwalk side-track provides access to some rare habitat of the Green and Golden Bell Frog.

The Newington Nature Reserve contains a Turpentine Ironbark Margin Forest[1] that survives intact in the same condition as it was before Sydney was colonised.

Recreation and Events

Each year in September the pathway is closed for one day to make way for long-distance bicyclists travelling through Olympic Park. The pathway forms an integral part of the route for sporting events such as the Sydney Spring Cycle[2].

For cross-city riding, many preferred routes will use the combination of Silverwater Road Bridge, River Walk and Louise Sauvage Pathway. Such routes include any travel from the Hills District to the southern suburbs around Liverpool, and from Parramatta to the inner-western suburbs or Sydney Airport via the Cooks River Cycleway.[3]

See also

References

  1. "River Walk & Louise Sauvage Pathway" (Press release). Olympic Park Authority. 2003-03-06. Retrieved 2010-05-16. 
  2. "Sydney Spring Cycle". Clubsonline.com.au. Retrieved 2010-05-16. 
  3. "Sydney and Parramatta bikemap" (PDF). NSW Government. Retrieved 2010-05-16. 

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