Suburb/Locality
|
Company/Site
|
Industry/Function
|
Years of operation
|
Current land use / Replaced by
|
Watsons Bay
|
Transport for NSW
|
1907—1959, Lifeboat station;
1959–2015, Pilot boat station[124]
|
1907—2015
|
Building and jetty leased to Boating Industry Association and repurposed as a boating safety school.
|
Boating Industry Association
|
The Pilot Station – Boating Safety Education Centre [124]
|
2015—now
|
Still operating
|
Rose Bay
|
Rose Bay Water Airport
|
Seaplane landing space
|
1938—now
|
Still operating for light seaplanes only.
|
Qantas / Ansett
|
Flying boat base and hangars.[125][126][127]
|
1938—1974
|
|
Rushcutters Bay
|
Hardy's Rubber
Works (or Hardie's?)
|
Rubber factory[128]
|
c.1932
|
|
Rushcutters Bay Tram Depot
|
Public transport (cable trams then electric trams, and trolleybuses)[129] When originally constructed for cable trams, it was also the site of the winding house that propelled the cable.[130]
|
1898—1960
|
Rushcutters Bay Hotel
|
Potts Point / Garden Island
|
Royal Australian Navy
|
Naval dockyard and base. This base is known officially as Fleet Base East.[131]
|
1866—now
|
Still operating.
|
Royal Australian Navy
|
Captain Cook Graving Dock[132]
|
1945—now
|
Still operating
|
Woolloomooloo
|
Finger Wharf
|
Shipping wharf[133]
|
1913—c.1980
|
Repurposed as a hotel and residential.
|
Sydney Suburban Hydraulic Power Company
|
Hydraulic power pumping sub-station, located on Cowper Wharf Road.[134]
|
c.1920s
|
|
Fish Market
|
Public and wholesale fish market[135]
|
1871—c.1945
|
Astor apartments (block bounded by Bourke, Plunkett, Forbes and Wilson Sts)
|
Wharves
|
Shipping wharves on western shore.
|
|
Apartments
|
Bennelong Point
|
Quarry
|
Quarry used to obtain sandstone for early government buildings and seawalls.[136]
|
c.1788—c.1848
|
'Tarpeian Way', artificial cliff-face and Man o' War steps.
|
Lime Kilns
|
Lime Kilns once existed on the eastern side of Fort Macquarie, which burnt oyster and other shells to make lime.[137]
|
|
|
Fort Macquarie
|
Military fort that replaced earlier fortifications dating back to 1788.
|
1817—1901
|
Fort Macquarie Tram Depot
|
Fort Macquarie Tram Depot
|
Public transport (electric trams)[138][129]
|
1902—1955
|
Sydney Opera House
|
P&O Wharf
|
Passenger ship terminal, which stood to the west of the Fort Macquarie Tram Depot.[139] It was already disused by 1928, with P & O ships berthing at Woolloomooloo Bay in that year,[140] but the structure was still there c.1945.[139]
|
|
By c.1945 it was already known as the 'old P & O Wharf'. Now a part of area occupied by Sydney Opera House
|
Sydney Harbour Trust
|
Vehicular ferry wharf, located at Fort Macquarie, for vehicle ferries to Milsons Point until 1924 and, after 1924, Kirribilli.[36]
|
—1932
|
Closed after opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.
|
Circular Quay
(East) / Sydney Cove
|
Warehouses
|
Wool-stores and auction houses[141]
|
c.1840s
|
Now the site of the Bennelong Apartments buildings, colloquially known as ‘The Toaster’.
|
Circular Quay
/ Sydney Cove
|
Warehouse
(Mort's later Farmers & Graziers)
|
Wool-stores and auction house[142]
|
c. 1860—1960
|
Now the site of the AMP Building.
|
Ferry Wharves
|
Public transport
(Ferries)
|
-now
|
Newer ferry wharves
|
The Rocks /
Circular Quay
(West) / Sydney Cove
|
Overseas Passenger Terminal
|
Passenger terminal and wharf for ocean liners and cruise ships.
|
1958—now
|
Still in use. Major modifications made in 1988.
|
Government Dockyard
|
Dockyard[143][144]
|
1797—1859
|
Open space near Cadman's Cottage and part of Museum of Contemporary Art site. Cadman's Cottage is the former coxswains' barracks.
|
Commisariat Store
|
Government warehouses[145]
|
1810—1939
|
The Maritime Services Board Building now occupied by Museum of Contemporary Art
|
Metcalfe Bond Stores
|
Warehouse and bond store, built 1912–1916.[146]
|
c1912—?
|
Building repurposed as offices, restaurants, and retail arcade.
|
New South Wales Department of Public Works / George Street Electric Light Power Station
|
Intended to supply the Rocks and Millers Point area with direct-current electricity, and replace two small power stations operated by Public Works, this power station was inadequately sized and was an early victim of the debate over the merits of alternating current and direct current. No machinery was ever installed in it, and the building was left in a roofless state.[147][148] No longer needed, after Pyrmont Power Station opened in 1904.
|
1900—1908
|
The tall brick chimney (a landmark of the Rocks) is a relic of the original power station, but was never used.
The single-storey building was converted, by adding more floors in 1908, to house the Geological & Mining Museum (since closed), by Government Architect, Walter Liberty Vernon.[147]
|
Dawes Point
|
Sydney Ferries Limited / Sydney Harbour Trust
|
Horse ferry dock and later vehicular ferry wharf on the Sydney Cove side of Dawes Point. Redundant after the opening of Sydney Harbour Bridge and subsequently closed,
|
—1932
|
Open space with the remnants of the ferry site evident in the arrangement of the seawall.
|
Walsh Bay
|
Wharves
|
Shipping wharves
|
|
Repurposed wharves
|
Millers Point
|
John Leighton's flour mills
|
Wind-powered flour mills. John Leighton's nickname 'Jack the Miller' was applied to the area, as 'Jack the Miller's Point', later Millers Point.[149]
|
c.1814—
c.1842
|
Houses.
|
Windmill Street Quarry
|
Sandstone quarry.[150]
|
c.1790— c.1830
|
Buildings in Windmill Street, around where it dips in level.[150]
|
Millers Point / Darling Harbour / Barangaroo
|
Munn's Slipway
|
Boatyard and slipway.
|
1820s
|
Some stone flagging has been preserved in Nawi Cove.
|
Australian Gas Light
|
Gasworks, the first in Australia.[151]
|
1841—1921
|
Now occupied by part of the Barangaroo redevelopment. One building of the gasworks, later Building 1 of the MSB Stores Complex, remains standing.
|
Sydney City / Cockle Bay
|
Various flour mills
(Sussex Street)
|
Steam flour mills[152]
|
1830s
|
|
Sydney City / Bathurst Street
|
Gillespie Bros Flour Mill
|
Flour mill
|
—1921
|
Moved to Pyrmont in 1921.
|
Sydney City / Darling Harbour
|
Wharves
|
Coastal shipping wharves (general cargo)
|
|
Redeveloped as mixed use.
|
Sydney / Darling Harbour
|
Government Freezing Works
|
Freezing works including for export.[153]
|
c. 1899
|
|
Sydney / Darling Harbour
(former Barker Street)
|
Wearne's Flour Mill
|
Flour mill destroyed by fire in 1866. It stood near the foot of Bathurst St, in the former Barker St.[154] the business relocated to Goulburn Street. The Wearne family were associated with other mills in N.S.W.
|
—1866
|
|
P. N. Russell and Company
|
Ironworks and foundry. Steam-engines, boilers, rolling stock and mining equipment.[155]
|
1855—1875
|
Closed down after protracted industrial disputes.
C&G Hoskins started as a result of P & N Russell shutdown.[156]
|
Ultimo / Darling Harbour
|
Sydney Suburban Hydraulic Power Company / Hydraulic Pumping Station No.1
|
Pumphouse for hydraulic power to operate lifts, hoists, cranes, bank doors and wool dumping presses. The company was established in 1889, and the pump station commenced operating in 1891.[157][134][158] (The original water source was the company's water supply dam, located at what is now Zetland, around the north-west corner of South Dowling St. and O’Dea Ave. Water was pumped through 2.5 mile (4 km) of cast iron mains to the pump-house.)[157]
|
1889—1975
|
Building still standing. From 1988, it was used as a micro-brewery and bar and, subsequently, as a bar and restaurant.
Part of the company became Elevators Pty Ltd, in 1955, and is now a part of Kone.
|
Ultimo Power Station
|
Electricity for tram network.
|
1899—1963
|
Powerhouse Museum
|
Pyrmont / Darling Harbour
(see also
Darling Island)
|
Darling Harbour Yard
|
Rail goods yard and wharves.[159]
|
1856—
1993
|
Darling Harbour redevelopment
|
Goldsbrough Mort & Co.
|
Wool store.[160][161]
|
—1980s
|
The original building was repurposed, in 1995, with four new floors added, as 'the Goldsbrough' apartment building.
|
Farmers and Graziers
|
Wool store.
|
|
The original building was repurposed, as an apartment building by Meriton in 1998.[162]
|
Pyrmont coal wharves
|
Railway coal wharves (both loading and unloading of coal)
|
c.1870s—c1930s
|
Australian National Maritime Museum
|
David Drake
|
Shipyard at the foreshore end of Murray Street. The business relocated first to Jones Bay in 1881 and then to Bald Rock, Balmain in 1889.[163][164]
|
1875—1881
|
|
Pyrmont Power Station
|
Electricity supply. It was operated first by the City Council, then by Sydney County Council, from 1935, and last by Electricity Commission of New South Wales, from 1952.
|
1904—1983
|
Star Casino
|
Grain store
|
Grain stores for wharves[165]
|
c. 1903
|
|
Goodlet and Smith / Victoria Steam Saw and Joinery Mills
|
Sawmill and joinery works, on Murray Street and the western foreshore of Darling Harbour. Relocated to a site adjacent to the CSR sugar refinery in 1885.[166][167]
|
1872—1885
|
|
Pyrmont
|
Pyrmont Tin Smelting Company
|
Tin Smelter and jetty.[168][169][170]
|
1874—
(at least) 1918
|
Pyrmont Bay Park
|
Henry Vale & Company
|
Manufacturer of marine engines and locomotives. The factory was on a former street, known as Alma Street, that no longer exists.[171]
|
c.1875—1884
|
The works relocated to Auburn in 1884, eventually its site was occupied by part of the flour mill (see below)
|
Gillespie Bros Flour Mill
(Union Street)
|
Flour mill and grain silos on Union St and Edward st. (An earlier mill stood at the base of Bathurst St on (former) Barker St until 1921.)[172]
|
1921—1992
|
The Pyrmont mill was demolished in 1992 and replaced with a supermarket, office buildings and a part of the Star Casino's site.[173]
|
The Waterside Cold Stores
(Jones Bay)
|
Cold store.[174][175]
|
c.1932—c.1988
|
|
Goodlet & Smith
(Jones Bay)
|
Timber wharf, sawmill and timber yard. This timber business began in 1872, in nearby Murray Street on the western side of Darling Harbour, and relocated to its new site in 1885. The main building of five storeys, housed a large engine driving the machinery throughout the building. The site closed when the lease on the land expired in 1927.[167][176] (Goodlet & Smith also made bricks and roof tiles, at other places in Sydney. The Goodlet family were known as philanthropists.[177])
|
1885—1927
|
|
Thomas Chowne
(Jones Bay)
|
Shipyard that built thirteen vessels including two early harbour ferries.[178]
|
c.1840—c.1860
|
Sugar refinery (see below)
|
Colonial Sugar Refinery
(Jones Bay)
|
Sugar refinery and wharves.[179][180][181][182] To prepare for construction of the sugar refinery, the site was first quarried for sandstone, until its level was just above high-tide level.[183] The site had two grab-unloader cranes for unloading raw sugar and other bulk materials from the 1950s.
|
1875— 1993
|
Residential housing (‘Jackson's Landing’)
|
David Drake
|
Shipyard at Jones Bay. The business relocated from near Murray Street in 1881 and then relocated to Bald Rock, Balmain, in 1889.[163][164]
|
1881—1889
|
|
Saunder's Quarries
|
Quarries for building stone (sandstone).[184][185] The quarries had colloquial names, 'Paradise',[186] 'Half Way',[187] 'Purgatory',[188] and 'Hell.'[189] The quarries were the main source of the highly regarded 'yellowblock' freestone. Many notable Sydney sandstone buildings used stone from the quarries at Pyrmont.
|
1840s—1940s
|
Various uses. The Wentworth Park light rail stop is located inside the site of the former 'Half Way' quarry.[187] The Farmers & Graziers building is on the site of the 'Purgatory' quarry.[188]
|
City Iron Works
|
Iron works and rolling mills.[190][191][192] It was also known as 'Brown's Ironworks', after its owner, and was located nearby the Glebe Island Bridge.[193]
|
1865—1938
|
Relocated to Alexandria in 1938.[192] Its site became part of the CSR site and is now part of Waterfront Park, Pyrmont.
|
Blackwattle Bay
|
Sydney City Council / Municipal incinerator
|
The municipal incinerator was the largest of the six reverberatory furnace incinerators, in Sydney, built by Reverberatory Incinerator and Engineering Co. Pty Ltd, in buildings designed by architect Walter Burley Griffin. It stood at what is now the corner of Bank St and Quarry Master Drive, overlooking Blackwattle Bay. The road entrance was from Saunders St. The area had been quarried for sandstone previously.[194][195][196][197][198]
|
c.1936—1971
|
The practice of incinerating garbage became unacceptable, due to air pollution limits, and the incinerator closed. The building was left to decay, before being demolished in 1992. The site was reused to build a Meriton apartment block.
|
State Brickworks
|
Wharf and brick depot for bricks made at the brickworks, at Homebush Bay, and brought by water from there.[199]
|
c.1936
|
|
Hanson Australia
|
Concrete batching plant. (Replaced plant closed at new fish market site.)
|
2021—now
|
|
Allen Taylor & Company, Sexton & Binns, and others
|
Timber yards and wharves.[200]
|
c.1908
|
Sydney Fish Markets
|
Shell Company of Australia
|
Kerosene and Mineral turpentine unloading wharf and storage tanks[201]
|
|
Sydney Fish Markets
|
Sydney Fish Market
|
Wholesale and retail fish market.
|
1966—now
|
Still operating (2021) but planned to be relocated to the head of the bay.
|
Jones Brothers,
Wharf 21
|
Coal unloader and coal depot. It had a large gantry crane and a wooden coal bunker structure[200][202]
|
1926—c.1988
|
Derelict site for many years. Demolished as a part of the relocation of Sydney Fish Market, in 2021
|
RW Miller
|
Coal unloader and coal depot[202]
|
|
|
Howard Smith, Wharf 25
|
Coal unloader and coal depot[202]
|
c.1922
|
Site later cleared and used as mooring area by RW.Miller and later for 'Stone Fleet', as below.
|
Pioneer Concrete, later Hanson Australia
|
Wharf and bunkers for unloading and distribution of construction aggregate from the ships known colloquially as the 'Stone Fleet'.[203]
|
Until 2011
|
Became a concrete batching plant, as below.
|
Hanson Australia
|
Concrete batching plant.
|
Until c2020
|
Demolished for new Fish Market development in 2021. (Replaced by facility adjacent to the old Fish Market on the other side of Blackwattle Bay.)
|
Blackwattle Bay / Wentworth Park
|
Imperial Wool Purchase Scheme
|
Wool storage sheds in Wentworth Park, capacity 35,000 bales[204]
|
c1916—1923
|
Parkland (Wentworth Park)
|
Blackwattle Bay / Glebe
|
Kauri Timber Company
|
Timber unloading wharf, next wharf to the west of Howard Smith's coal wharf. Imported timbers included Kauri pine, 'Oregon', and Baltic pine. Timber yard and factory.
|
1883—1909
|
Sold to George Hudson and Son in 1909.[205]
|
George Hudson & Son Ltd.
|
Timber yard, factory and wharf.[206]
Scene of a huge fire in 1928[207] and a famous industrial dispute in 1929.[208] It was still expanding its area in 1950.[209]
|
1909—
1950s, at least
|
From 1979, Glebe High School, now Sydney Secondary College Blackwattle Bay Campus, and foreshore parkland.[210]
|
G.E. Crane and Sons / Sydney Lead Works
|
Leadworks with 190 foot high shot tower[211] In 1906, the site was also rolling lead sheet and making lead pipes.[212]
|
1893—1930
|
Partially demolished c.1950 (shot tower).
|
Municipality of The Glebe / Municipal Incinerator
|
The municipal incinerator building was designed by architect Walter Burley Griffin. Previously the site was a depot, where garbage was loaded onto barges, taken out to sea and dumped offshore. Eventually, the practice of incinerating garbage became unacceptable and the incinerator closed.[213][214][194]
|
1933 (or 1936)—1949
|
Much of the building has survived; the furnace and flue were demolished in 1952. It is one of six surviving in Australia, and one of two in Sydney.
|
Vanderfield and Reid
|
Large timber yard on waterfront land leased from the Maritime Services Board.[210][215][216]
|
Until c.1970
|
Now part of Blackwattle Bay Park. The restored house Bellevue (now a cafe) was once part of Vanderfield & Reid's timber yard.[217][218]
|
Glebe Point
|
Stride's Yard
|
Breaking yard located on the foreshore and Leichhardt St, Glebe, founded by Sylvester 'Jim' Stride and operated as a family business. In 1937, the business bought more land and expanded the site. The harbour ferries Curl Curl and Dee Why were scrapped there, as was the 'sixty-miler' SS Bellambi. The size of ship that could be broken up there was limited by the opening width of the Glebe Island Bridge.[219][220][216]
|
c.1919—1985
|
The yard's crane was conserved as a public artwork, in 2010, and still stands in the portion of the site that is now part of Blackwattle Bay Park.[221][222]
|
Harbour Lighterage Limited
|
This company split from the remnants of Sydney Ferries Limited in 1951.[223] It had a base on Rozelle Bay, from where it operated a fleet of small tugs and lighters. The fleet was sold at auction in 1990.[224][215][216]
|
—1990
|
Most of its site is covered by the Bridgewater apartments, built in 1996, except for a small strip of public land along the waterfront. A winch, from its former slipway, and its (now shortened) wharf remain at its former site. The wharf is privately-owned.[225]
|
Streetley Industries, National Plywood, Sydney Sawmilling, and Standen Brothers.
|
Land owned by the Maritime Services Board was leased for use as timber yards.[210]
|
Until c.1970
|
Now public open space; Bicentennial Park (Glebe) and Federal Park were added to the existing Jubilee Park (Glebe) to create a large area of parkland.
|
Independent Oil Industries Limited / Purr Pull Oil Industries Limited
|
'Purr Pull' petrol import, storage and distribution facility, and from around 1957 a chemical manufacture and blending facility, located on waterfront land at 27-45 Federal Road, Glebe.[226][227][228] Its abandoned site was still there in 1969.[229]
|
1932 until at least 1957
|
Site now part of Federal Park,
|
Rozelle Bay
|
Rozelle Tram Depot
|
Public transport (Electric Trams)
|
1904—1958
|
Repurposed as a retail complex, 'Tramsheds' in 2016.[230]
|
Five yards on Rozelle Bay
All there in 1939
|
Timber yards
|
|
|
Rozelle Bay/ Annandale
|
Beale Piano (possibly one of the above yards)
|
Timber wharf for nearby piano factory[231]
|
c.1902—c. 1975
|
|
Rozelle /
White Bay
|
White Bay Power Station
|
Coal-fuelled electrical power station, operated by New South Wales Government Railways, from 1933, by NSW Department of Railways, and from 1953 by Electricity Commission of New South Wales.
|
1913—1983
|
Stood unused, until around 2021, when a remediation began. Reopened as a venue for community and cultural activities in 2024,[232]
|
Balmain Coal Loader
|
Coal ship-loader mainly used for coal brought to the site by rail.
|
1935—1991
|
Yet to be redeveloped. Part of the Bays Precinct, it will be site of The Bays metro station, on the Sydney Metro West, due to open in 2032.
|
Balmain /
White Bay
|
Lever Brothers
|
Soap and detergent factory, known colloquially as 'The Sunlight Factory.'[233]
|
1895—1988
|
Residential housing ('Watervale', 'Dockside' and 'Somerset Mews' apartments), with some remnant buildings.
|
David Drake Limited
|
Shipyard in the area of Balmain known as 'Bald Rock'.[163][164]
|
1889—1934
|
|
Poole & Steel Limited
|
Shipyard at the foreshore end of Stephen Street.[234] During the Second World War, the yard constructed seven Bathurst-class corvettes and one tugboat for the Royal Australian Navy.
|
c. 1902—
c. 1961
|
The site was taken over by Swift's Chemicals, by 1967.[235]
|
John Booth
|
Steam-operated sawmill and timber yard, located on the foreshore east of Booth Street. It provided timber for shipbuilding and housing. Destroyed by fire in 1874, it was rebuilt in 1875–76.[236][237][238]
|
1854—1902
|
The site was later used as wharves. Booth Street is named after John Booth.
|
White Bay Cruise Terminal
|
Terminal for cruise liners. Supplements Overseas Passenger Terminal but can only accept liners that can fit under Sydney Harbour Bridge.
|
2013—now
|
Still operating.
|
Balmain / Cameron Cove /
Johnstone Bay
|
Anderson's Jubilee Floating Dry Dock
|
Ship repair floating dry-dock. It was originally known as the 'Victoria Jubilee' but subsequently just known as the 'Jubilee' floating dry dock. It was designed by its owner James Anderson.[239][240][241][242][243] The floating dock was working, until at least 1902,[244] and possibly later.
The business relocated to Long Nose Point Birchgrove, as Jubllee Engineering Company, in the 1930s.[245]
|
1887—1930s
|
MSB depot (see below), some parkland and open water.
The nearby street Jubilee Place, is named after the Jubilee dry-dock.
|
Maritime Services Board
|
Depot
|
1930s—c.2004
|
Water Police (see below)
|
NSW Police Marine Area Command, also known as the 'Water Police'
|
Police boat depot and wharf. The Water Police date from 1789 and earlier has been located at Watson's Bay, Garden Island, Goat Island and Cockatoo Island.[246][247][245]
|
2004—now
|
Still operating
|
Morrison & Sinclair
|
Shipyard that constructed ferries, island trading vessels, pontoons, lighters, and yachts.[234][248] It moved to Longnose Point in 1923.
|
1890s—1923
|
|
Balmain East / Peacock Point
|
Fenwick & Co Boat Store
|
Shipwrights yard, operated first by John Bell, and the Fenwick family after 1883.[249]
|
c.1840—c.1994
|
Heritage-listed building (2-8 Weston Street) and also open space that is now part of Iloura Reserve.
|
John Graham /
Graham's Dock
|
Small floating dock that was moored near the end of Darling Street, where there was also a shipyard.[250][251][252]
|
c.1882—c.1887
at least
|
|
Peverley
|
Wharf and shipbuilding yard created by cutting away solid rock.[253][254] It was put up for a mortgagee sale twice; once in 1869[255] and again in 1873.[256]
|
|
Yard taken over by Henry Beattie (see below), possibly after a mortgagee sale in 1873.
|
Henry Beattie
|
Beattie's shipyard was located between Darling Street and Peacock Point.[257][254][258]
|
c.1873—
|
Peacock Point Reserve
|
Balmain East / Waterview Bay
|
Waterview Wharf Workshops
|
Maritime industrial site.
Formerly operated by Adelaide Steamship Company.[259]
|
c.1900—now
|
Still operating
|
Balmain / Waterview Bay
|
Svitzer Australia, formerly Adelaide Steamship.
|
Tug boat depot and wharf; marine services.[260]
|
—now
|
Still operating
|
Colgate-Palmolive
|
Soap, toothpaste, and shampoo factory[261][262]
|
1922—1994
|
Remaining building at 22-23 Colgate Ave, Balmain [261] Site now housing.
|
Sydney Slipway and Engineering Company
|
Slipway and engineering workshop.[263] It was a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Adelaide Steamship Company.[264] The company entered voluntary liquidation in October 2003.[265]
|
c.1959[266] and still there in 1972[263]
|
|
Balmain Shipyard
|
Public Transport (Ferries)
|
1850s—now
|
Operated by Transdev Sydney Ferries
|
Captain T. S. Rowntree
|
Patent slip. Rowntree was a partner, with T. S. Mort, in the subsequent dry-dock on the site, from the start of its construction in 1854 to around 1860.[267]
|
c. 1852—1854
|
Mort's Waterview Dock (see below)
Rowntree St, Birchgrove is named after Captain Thomas Rowntree.
|
Mort's Waterview Dock / 'Mort's Dock & Engineering Works'
|
Ship repair dock and some shipbuilding. By 1897, on the site of 18 acres, it employed around 1000 men, and it included a dry dock, two 'patent slips' and a smaller slip (slipways), engineering workshops (including a boiler shop, machining shop, erecting shop, and joinery shop), an iron foundry, and a sawmill, As well as serving the dockyard, the foundry made products such as cast-iron baths and building columns. The works also made mining and other machinery, and it fabricated parts for bridges.[268][269]
|
1855—1959
|
The company went into liquidation in 1959. Part of the site was used as the ANL terminal (see below). Container storage site from 1963 to 1975, then residential housing and parkland.
|
Birchgrove / Mort Bay
|
Australian National Line
|
Terminal and wharf for MS Empress of Australia on Sydney-Hobart / Bell Bay / Devonport route.
|
1965—1972
|
Terminal was in Yeend Street
|
Thomas. S. Rowntree & Company
|
Floating dock in Mort's Bay.[270]
|
c.1888
|
Open water,
|
Birchgrove /
Ballast Point
|
Texaco, later Caltex
|
Fuel depot, manufacturing and packaging facility.[271]
|
1928—c.1990
|
Ballast Point Park (urban park and public open space)[272]
|
Birchgrove / Snails Bay
|
Nicholson Brothers
|
Ferry and launch mooring depot.[248] Closed when the ferry company was bought by Stannard Marine in 1967.
|
—1967
|
|
Fountain's Boatshed
|
Family-owned boat repair business on the foreshore at 5 Wharf Road.
|
1960—now
|
Still operating
|
Birchgrove / Longnose Point
|
Jubilee Engineering Co.
|
Boilermaking and ship repair workshop. It carried out repairs on R.W. Miller ships and other R.W.Miller equipment. It was located on the foreshore at 113 Louisa St. It had relocated from Cameron's Cove, Balmain East in the 1930s. Wound up c.1990.
|
1930s—1990
|
Two very large houses and a small foreshore park, Yerroulbin Reserve.
|
Morrison & Sinclair
|
Shipyard that made ferries and yachts.[248]
|
1923—1970
|
Yurulbin Park, which contains some remnants of the old shipyard.
|
Birchgrove / Longnose Point
|
Storey & Keers
|
Ship repairers was located on the Parramatta River side of Lousa Road. Company still operates at White Bay and Port Kembla.[273][248]
|
|
|
Birchgrove
|
Balmain Colliery
|
Colliery and coal wharf.[274] It was the only coal mine within inner-Sydney and is still the deepest in Australia at approximately 800 m.
|
1897—1945
|
Residential housing, Hopetoun Quays'[275]
|
Rozelle /
Iron Cove side
|
Elliot Bros. / Australian Fluorine Chemicals /
Monsanto Chemicals
|
Chemical plant.[276][277]
This site also provided the last large vehicle access and wharf for transport to and from nearby Cockatoo Island.
|
c. 1880s—c.1990s
|
Residential Housing, 'Balmain Cove'.[278]
|
Electric Light and Power Supply Corporation / later ECNSW / Balmain Power Station
|
Coal-fired electrical power station that also generated some of its heat energy from incinerating garbage.[278] EL&PSC was nationalised in 1956, and the power station assets became owned and operated by ECNSW.
|
1909—1976
|
The old power station pumphouse building remains on the site. Part of the old site is now occupied by 'Balmain Shores' apartment complex and part by Bridgewater Park, public open space. There is a public walk along the foreshore from King George Park (west of Iron Cove Bridge) to 'Balmain Shores' apartments on the former Monsanto site.[278]
|
Drummoyne /
Iron Cove
|
Perdriau Brothers, then
Dunlop, after 1929
|
Rubber and tyre factory.[279]
|
1900—1977
|
Retail outlets (Birkenhead Point)
|
Drummoyne
|
Henderson Slip Company
|
Slipway and marine refit and repair business in St Georges Crescent, Drummoyne.[280][281] (Later operated by Bailey and Jorgensen.[282])
|
1930s
|
|
Lars Halvorsen Sons
|
Boat builders
|
1924 only
|
Business relocated to larger premises at Neutral Bay.
|
Chiswick
|
Lysaght Bros & Co., later BHP / Sydney Wire Mill
|
Wire mill and wire netting factory.[283][284]
|
1884—1998
|
Residential housing developed by Meriton,[285] and a foreshore park known as Wire Mill Reserve.
|
Abbottsford / Fig Tree Bay
|
Nestlé
|
Chocolate factory, in a large garden setting on the foreshore of Fig Tree Bay, with a wharf. When opened, it was the largest chocolate factory in the Southern Hemisphere.[286][287][288][289]
|
1917—1991
|
Residential housing, 'Abbotsford Cove'.[290]
|
Abbotsford / Hen & Chicken Bay
|
Commonwealth of Australia
|
Animal quarantine station on 2.38 hectare site.[17][291]
|
1917—1980
|
A public reserve known as Quarantine Reserve, which contains many of the old quarantine station buildings.[17]
|
Concord / Hen & Chicken Bay
|
Farleigh, Nettheim & Co.
|
Tannery adjacent to a former swampy area.[292][293]
|
1876—before 1970
|
Concord High School[294]
|
Concord /
Exile Bay
|
Bushells
|
Tea and coffee manufacture[295]
|
1958—now
|
Still operating, although there is a plan to close the factory.
|
Walters, Middleton and Eades / (later)
Tanner & Middleton[296]
|
Timber yard and wharves.
|
before WWI—?
|
Residential housing, 'The Estuary' built c.1993.[297]
|
Austral Bronze Crane Copper[296]
|
Brass foundry, copper and aluminium rolling plant.
|
1930—
|
Residential housing.
|
Cabarita
|
Wunderlich
|
Building material for ceilings, including asbestos cement made using asbestos from the company's mines at Barraba and Beaconsfield.[298][299] The plant was located on the promontory, adjacent to what is now called Prince Edward Park.
|
1917-1950s
|
Southern Can / Containers Limited (See below)
|
Containers Limited (originally Southern Can)
|
Manufacturing cans for food and drink packaging[298]
|
1950s—1982
|
Land sold to neighbour Wellcome Australia.[298] Later became part of 'Cape Cabarita'.[300] (See below)
|
Wellcome Australia
|
Veterinary and horticultural products.
|
1919—?
|
Apartment and townhouse housing with residents-only open space and recreational facilities ('Cape Cabarita').[300]
|
Dulux Paints (originally 'BALM', British Australian Lead Manufacturers, until 1960)
|
Paint factory (lead paints)[301] it stood on land fronting Kendall Bay, near Cabarita Park.
|
1921—1990s
|
Redeveloped as housing, 'Kendall Inlet'.[302]
|
Mortlake / Breakfast Point / Kendall Bay
|
Australian Gas Light Company
|
Gasworks and coal unloading wharf.[303]
|
1886—1990s
|
Residential housing (Breakfast Point)
|
Mortlake / Green Point
|
River Quays Marina
|
Moorings, repair facility, and slipway. The marina's site was the original location of the first Palace Hotel (1886).
|
?—c.1995
|
Buildings and wharves are still there, but it is no longer operating.
|
Transport for NSW / Mortlake Ferry
|
Cable ferry linking Mortlake to Putney. The last vehicular ferry operating across the Parramatta River or Sydney Harbour.[304][305]
|
1928—now
|
Still operating
|
Allen Taylor and Company
|
Timber yard.[306]
|
?—1942
|
Green Point Naval Boatyard
(see below)
|
Concrete Constructions / Green Point Naval Boatyard
|
Site used to assemble prefabricated naval launches and other vessels.[306]
|
1942—1950s
|
Part of the area is Wangal Centenary Bushland Reserve, part is now apartments, with a wharf. In the reserve, there is a plaque commemorating the boatyard.[306]
|
Rhodes
|
NSW State Sawmill
|
Sawmill[307]
|
1900—?
|
H. McKenzie (see below)
|
H. McKenzie
|
Timber merchants and joiners[307]
|
Until 1969
|
|
Tulloch Limited / Phoenix Ironworks
|
Railway rolling stock maker.[308][307]
|
1913—1974
|
Commercial buildings (Rhodes Corporate Park)
|
Philips Industries
|
Site made Malvern Star and Speedwell bicycles.[308][307] Philips entered the bicycle business through its purchase of Electronic Industries, which had purchased the brands Malvern Star (in 1958) and Speedwell (in 1965).[309]
|
c.1970—c.1980
|
|
Various
|
Ironworks and, in World War II, ship building, on Bray's Bay.
|
1914—1985
|
Public park with industrial remnants
|
NSW Main Roads Department / Ryde Ferry
|
Cable vehicular ferry, linking Concord Road, Rhodes and Church Street, Ryde.[310]
|
1840s—1935
|
Replaced by Ryde Bridge in 1935.
|
John Darling Mills,
then Allied Mills from 1960
|
Grain milling and stock-feed manufacture.[307]
|
c.1919
|
Redeveloped as high density housing.
|
Timbrol later taken over by Union Carbide
|
Chemical plant (This facility was between John Darling Mills and Hoskins/CSR.)[311]
|
1928—1985
|
Redeveloped as high density housing.
Land contaminated with chemicals and contamination of the bay sediments.
|
C&G Hoskins
|
Cast-iron pipe factory[307] The works stood near the Rhodes railway station.[312]
|
1911—1930
|
Pipe plant moved to Port Kembla, with site reused by CSR Chemicals (see below).
|
CSR Chemicals later ICI
|
Chemical plant[313]
|
1935—1997
|
Redeveloped as high density housing.
|
Lewis Berger & Sons
and later briefly Orica
|
Paint factory and wharf.[307][308][314][315]
|
c. 1916—1987
|
Rhodes Waterside Shopping Centre, offices and apartments, and a foreshore park, known as Lewis Berger Park, that contains a war memorial, in the form of a sundial, commemorating ex-servicemen from the former factory.
|
Homebush Bay / Haslams Creek
|
Radio 2SM
|
Transmitter site and tower, also used from c.1967 until October 2020 by 2CH, which was earlier at Ermington,
Also now used by 2UE.
|
c.1931—now
|
Still in use.
|
Radio 2UE
|
Transmitter site and tower. The first site was at Lilli Pilli on Port Hacking and opened in 1925[316]
|
c.1942—?[317]
|
Original site no longer used.[318] (See Radio 2SM)
Now a BMX track.
|
Radio 2KY, later known as Sky Sports Radio
|
Transmitter site and two towers.
Same facility also used by 2GB since 2015.
|
c.1925—now
|
Still in use.
|
Homebush Bay / southern end
|
(Unknown)
|
Ship-breakers’ yard
|
c.1972
|
Partially disassembled hulks of four ships left in Homebush Bay.
|
State Brickworks
|
Quarrying and brickmaking,[319][320]
with wharf (to send bricks to Blackwattle Bay). The brickworks was serviced by a platform on the former Abbatoirs branch railway line.[321][322]
|
1910—1988
|
Olympic Park and wetland for Golden Bell Frog habitat.[199]
|
Homebush Bay / Wentworth Point
|
Ralph Symonds Limited
|
Plywood factory, a unique, architect-designed, very large, timber structure, which was itself noteworthy.[323][324]
|
1959—c1980
|
Only a part of the building still standing and in use as industrial building. Other part of site redeveloped as housing and Marina Square shopping centre.
|
de Havilland Marine (Large Craft)
|
Marine vessel building[324]
|
Until 1982
|
Redeveloped as housing
|
Radio 2GB
|
Transmitter and tower;[324] the site was chosen because moist ground provides a good earth connection and stronger signal.[325]
|
c.1926—2015
|
Site is now Wentworth Point Park. (2GB's tower was demolished in September 2015. 2GB now shares the site of the 2KY tower.)[325]
|
Homebush Bay /
west of Wentworth Point
|
Saleyards
|
Livestock saleyard, where livestock were sold by auction.[326] In 1968, the saleyard operations were relocated to this site from Flemington, making way for the new fresh produce markets. It was serviced by a loop line from the Abattoirs branch railway line.[321]
|
1968—1988
|
Sydney Olympic Stadium is on the old saleyards.
|
State Abattoirs
|
Government-owned abattoir and saleyards[327][319] that was serviced by a branch railway line.[321]
|
1913—1988
|
Part of the old Abattoirs branch railway route was reused as the Olympic Park railway line.
|
Royal Australian Navy
|
Newington Armament Depot
|
1897—1997
|
Armament transfer station and Athletes’
Village for 2000 Olympic Games.
|
Clyde / Duck River
|
John Fell & Co.
|
Oil refinery for processing crude shale oil from Newnes to produce petrol for motor cars.[78] By the time that the refinery opened, crude oil production at Newnes had ceased, and the refinery processed imported conventional crude oil instead.
|
1923—1927
|
Sold to Shell Oil
|
Clyde Refinery, Shell Oil
|
Oil refinery
|
1925—2013
|
Shell Oil - import and distribution terminal
|
Redbank Wharf
|
Deep-water wharf and terminus of a privately owned steam tram line from Parramatta.[328]
|
c.1883—1943
|
|
Camelia / Sandown
|
Australian Kerosene Oil and Mineral Company
|
Oil refinery making 'Southern Cross' kerosene, axle grease, soap and candles. The crude shale oil was made at Joadja and came from there by rail, via Mittagong.[329][330][331]
|
1887—1894
|
Originally part of the Elizabeth Farm estate. Plans are in place for the foreshore industrial area of Camellia to be redeveloped.[332]
|
The Graziers’ Meat Export Company
|
Meatworks consisting of slaughterhouse, freezing rooms and canning works—all in one large building—and a wharf.[1][333]
The company changed its name to the Sandown Meat Company in 1897.[334]
|
c.1897
|
(as above)
|
Sandown Meat Company
|
Abattoir, probably an expansion of the above meatworks. It was destroyed by fire in May 1923. The coroner returning an open finding on the cause of the fire, and commented that the meat works was grossly over-insured.[335][336][329][337]
|
1910—1923
|
In 1925, the site was purchased by Ford.[338]
|
Ford
|
The old meatworks site was the location of a short-lived Ford car assembly plant.[339][340]
|
1925—1931
|
The Ford factory closed in 1931, and all operations went to Victoria.[341] Ford later recommenced assembly at a site on Parramatta Road, Homebush West.[342]
Ford sold the land to Shell in 1929.[343]
|
Australian Cream Tartar Company
|
Chemical factory (Potassium bitartrate), after 1939, also producing other chemicals (citric acid, tartaric acid and Rochelle Salts). Site of a platform (Cream of Tartar Works), on Sandown railway line.[329][344]
|
1926—
|
The food technology division became part of AB Mauri and continued to manufacture at the site in 2015.[344]
|
Goodyear Tyres
|
Tyre factory and site of a platform (Goodyear), on Sandown railway line. The factory was sometimes called the 'Granville' plant, although it was on the Parramatta River foreshore.[329][345][346]
|
1927—c.1977
|
|
Camellia / Clyde
|
James Hardie
|
Asbestos and asbestos cement factory and site of a platform (Hardies) and siding on the Sandown railway line.[329][347]
|
1919—1996
|
|
Parramatta
|
Parramatta Gas Company
|
Gasworks[348]
|
1873—1891
|
Queens Wharf Reserve, Parramatta
|