Hurstville Central
Hurstville Central (formerly known as Hurstville Super Centre) is a shopping centre in the suburb of Hurstville in the St George area of Sydney and is located above Hurstville railway station and features a Coles supermarket and around 39 speciality stores.[1]
Ormonde Parade entrance to Hurstville Central | |
Location | Hurstville, New South Wales, Australia |
---|---|
Coordinates | 33°58′02″S 151°06′10″E |
Address | 225 Forest Rd, Hurstville NSW 2220 |
Opening date | 13 September 1965 |
Management | Cerno Group |
Owner | Cerno Group |
No. of stores and services | 40 |
No. of anchor tenants | 1 |
Total retail floor area | 15,211 m2 (163,730 sq ft) |
No. of floors | 2 |
Parking | 231 |
Public transit access | Hurstville railway station |
Website | hurstvillecentral |
Transport
The Eastern Suburbs and Illawara Line offer frequent train services to Hurstville station.
Hurstville Central has bus connections to the Sydney CBD, Inner West, St George, Sutherland Shire, as well as local surrounding suburbs. It is served by Punchbowl Bus Company, Transit Systems Sydney and Transdev NSW services. Majority of its bus services located on Ormonde Parade and Forest Road in front of the centre.
Hurstville Central has car park with 231 spaces.
History
Hurstville railway station opened in 1884 on the terminus of the Illawarra line from Redfern. The train station was an open air type train station until Hurstville Super Centre opened in 1965.
In 1956, a cake shop owner at Wynyard railway station lodged an application with Hurstville Council to build a shopping centre above Hurstville Railway Station. The cake shop owner was inspired by the way shops sat above Wynyard's train line. So he proposed a five-storey development above Hurstville Station. Kogarah Council, which had control over the Ormonde Parade side of the train station, approved the plan. Construction started on the site in 1957 with the centre originally to be called Bowes Super Centre. The construction came to a halt by that year since the opening of the Top Ryde Shopping Centre. The plan changed to the centre to 5 storeys and then above. In 1961, the project, now known as the Hurstville Super Centre, projected a completion date of late 1962. The opening date was set to 1965 after objections with the former Hurstville Mayor Gordon Hill and the former Federal Transport Minister John McMahon.
The first stage of the centre officially opened on 13 September 1965 by NSW Premier Robert Askin with an estimated 8,000 people lined onto Forest Road and crowded into the centre. However rival centre Roselands officially opened on 13 October 1965, just a month later.[2] Since the opening, customers were promised a lot more in the future than the fifty shops and rooftop carpark. The original plans from the early 1960s included extra parking, "Prestige" shopping level above the existing shopping centre, offices and six levels of apartments. In the 1970s there was hope that it would proceed as per original plans. However the development was never built further than stage one. With the purchase of Miranda Fair (now Westfield Miranda) by the Westfield Group and the opening of nearby Westfield Hurstville in 1987 saw the centre fall into a gradual decline. During the 1990s the centre lost many stores with many vacant store spaces left including Franklins (which had replaced Coles) closed. By the mid-2000s the centre was desolate with large areas vacant and the structure itself in a bad state. However, during this time there have been several ownership changes with the centre purchased and owned by Cerno Group.[3]
In 2007 Hurstville Super Centre underwent a redevelopment, costing $15 million.[4] During this refurbishment, the interior was rebuilt and included a Coles supermarket and an upgraded concourse with many new a stores as well. The redevelopment was completed in 2008 and the centre was renamed Hurstville Central.[5]
There have previously been plans to build several residential towers above the station and the centre but these plans have been shelved over concerns about the integrity of overhead supports in the event of a derailment.[6][7]
References
- "Cerno Projects | Hurstville Central | Learn More". Cerno. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- "Hurstville Super Centre | Past/Lives". pastlivesofthenearfuture.com. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
- Trembath, Murray (29 September 2017). "Hurstville's version of pie in the sky". St George & Sutherland Shire Leader. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
- "HURSTVILLE SUPER CENTRE Project in Hurstville, NSW – Cordell Connect". cordellconnect.com.au. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
- "Fab Sydney Flashbacks". fabsydneyflashbacks.blogspot.com. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- "On track – railway views drawing developers' gaze – National – smh.com.au". 21 September 2003. Archived from the original on 21 September 2003. Retrieved 7 November 2017.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
- "Safety risk stops rail apartments – National – www.smh.com.au". 10 December 2004. Archived from the original on 10 December 2004. Retrieved 7 November 2017.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hurstville Central. |