Urban renewal in Sydney
The urban renewal of Sydney is an ongoing land redevelopment process that is creating and reviving new urban centres across Sydney, Australia. Urban renewal refers to the refurbishment of derelict buildings, streets or neighbourhoods and is accompanied with the process of gentrification attributed by changes in land use and deindustrialisation of areas. In 2020, there are several projects underway and planned including Barangaroo, The Bays Precinct and Green Square.
Background
Since the early 1900s, Sydney has experienced rounds of urban renewal that continued to the 21st century with new plans and projects that contribute to the city's changing urban landscape. Sydney's urban redevelopment reflects the cycles of economic growth, with rapid housing development in periods of expansion, followed by the rise of poverty and misery in times of economic downturn. With the gold rush in the 1850s which later coincided with the 1860s depression, the inner-city slums of Glebe, The Rocks, Paddington, Surry Hills and Ultimo were born.Suburban living was reserved for the affluent and wealthy, which accounted for 4.29 percent of the colony in 1843. As the number of middle-class and bourgeois increased, so did the number of people living in Sydney suburbia where suburbanites made up 24.5 percent of the colony in 1891. The Victorian-era terrace houses that feature in some of Sydney's inner-city areas, were constructed as part of the building boom in the 1880s and featured 4-5 rooms with primitive features that were ahead of their time. At the end of the 19th century, inner-city living was no longer desirable as the suburbs became more accessible with the development and expansion of the Sydney railway network, leaving the terraces to despair. With the 1900 outbreak of the bubonic plague in Darling Harbour, the waterfront working-class slums that surrounded were razed and slated for renewal, due to the century-old unregulated building practices in place and poor sanitation. These areas were later redeveloped into warehouses and port facilities; marking the first of three rounds of redevelopment and slum clearing in Sydney.
Following the Second World War, there was an influx of immigrants that tripled Sydney's population and brought rise to the "Australian dream" of living in a suburban home on a quarter acre block. As Sydney's population grew, the city continued to sprawl to the west and south-west, where new "garden suburbs" were developed 50km from the city centre. In the 1970s, workplaces and inner-city factories started to move to the suburbs and commuting to the city started to lose its appeal. The inner-city slums were steadily redeveloped as professionals moved in, creating mixed communities that included the older working class, remnants of the underclass and light industry and service vendors. In the 21st century, living in these inner-city areas had become highly sought after and waves of gentrification have elevated house prices and transformed these former slums to cosmopolitan and trendy mixed precincts.
Regulatory background
Since the 1940s, urban renewal across Australian cities had been identified as key to its functioning in both state and federal government policies. In the late 1960s, there were calls for federal action over public agitation against the attitudes of neglect from state governments and the state of Australian inner cities. With the election of the Whitlam Government in 1972, the Department of Urban and Regional Development was established and tasked to develop an inner urban policy and assist urban regeneration projects. This led to the rehabilitation projects for Glebe, Waterloo and Wooloomooloo.The Department was abolished and incorporated into the Department of Environment, Housing and Community Development, where funding on urban and regional development halved, tighter budget reforms were enforced, and provisions for community and private sector involvement were made. Since the 1980s, government intervention in urban development shifted, leading to the progression of the neoliberisation of governance, enabling the private sector a greater role in delivering urban ambitions. Such restructuring led to the redevelopment of the inner-city areas of Pyrmont and Ultimo as part of the Australian Government's Building Better Cities Program. Fundamental to the success of the Program was private investment, which enabled redevelopment projects such as Pyrmont-Ultimo take shape.
In 2018, the NSW Government announced the latest vision for Sydney, A Metropolis of Three Cities, which sets out the plan for three cities across Greater Sydney.
Greater Sydney Region Plan - A Metropolis of Three Cities
Developed by the Greater Sydney Commission, The Greater Sydney Region Plan - A Metropolis of Three Cities lays out the vision for an integrated approach to land use and transport planning and aims to boost the liveability, productivity and sustainability for a growing Sydney population.The plan identifies three major cities:
- Central River City
- Eastern Harbour City
- Western Sydney Parkland City
1. Bayside West Precinct | 6. Greater Parramatta Growth Area | 11. St Leonards & Crows Nest |
2. The Bays Precinct | 7. Greater Penrith to Eastern Creek Growth Area | 12. Sydenham to Bankstown |
3. Epping and Macquarie Park Urban Renewal | 8. North West Growth Area | 13. Sydney Metro North West |
4. Ingleside Growth Area | 9. Redfern to Eveleigh | 14. Western Sydney Airport |
5. Greater Macarthur Growth Area | 10. South West Growth Area | 15. Wilton Growth Area |