Bridge Street, Sydney

Bridge Street
New South Wales
City buildings line a street
Bridge Street looking east in August 2014
General information
Type Street
Length 0.5 km (0.3 mi)
Major junctions
West end George Street
East end Macquarie Street
Location(s)
Suburb(s) Sydney

Bridge Street is a street in the CBD of Sydney, Australia. It runs east-west between George Street and Macquarie Street. It is in the local government area of the City of Sydney and the postcode is 2000. The street is 500 metres long.[1] It derived its name from a small bridge that used to cross the Tank Stream in the early days of the colony.[2]

History

Many years before Bridge Street was named, it was the site of Sydney's first Government House and was the abode of first Governor of New South Wales, Captain Arthur Phillip. After establishing the site of the settlement, a substantial "temporary" government house was located on the corner of what is now Bridge St and Phillip St in Sydney. It was built under the direction of James Bloodsworth, a convict builder responsible for the construction of most of the colony's buildings between 1788 and 1800.

Bridge Street, view east from near George Street c. 1900
View east along the middle section of Bridge Street, with the Department of Lands building on the right

This building, the first 'permanent' building in Sydney, was completed by 1789 using English bricks, native stone and a quantity of convict baked sandstock bricks from the Sydney region. After the initial completion the house was of two stories in height, contained six rooms and was the hub of the colony for 56 years. Eight successive governors complained of the living conditions within, each making improvements by adding their own extension. It was here on 4 June 1789, that Governor Phillip and his guests celebrated the birthday of King George III. In 1845 the entire complex was demolished to allow access and extend the street to Macquarie Street. The foundations of the house were exposed by archaeologists in 1983.[3] The site is now occupied by the Museum of Sydney, corner of Phillip and Bridge Street.[4]

In March 1899, workmen installing a telegraph tunnel discovered a copper plate wedged between two stones. It was later found that it was the foundation stone of the first Government House that was laid 15 May 1788. The plate is now displayed at the Museum of Sydney.[5]

Heritage buildings

Bridge Street has a number of significant buildings and sites. The following are listed on the Register of the National Estate.[6]

Exchange Corner (the location of the Sydney Stock Exchange) on Bridge Street, with Department of Lands building on the right and Macquarie Place on the left, c. 1900
Macquarie Place in the 1920s

See also

Australian Roads portal

References

  1. Gregory's Sydney Street Directory (2002), Map A
  2. Sydney Architecture, John Haskell (UNSW Press) 1997, p.29
  3. Historic Houses Trust of NSW, retrieved 2009-10-07
  4. "The Governor of NSW: Government House". Parliament of New South Wales. NSW Government. Retrieved 10 December 2010.
  5. Sharpe, Alan (2000). Picrtorial History City of Sydney. Alexandria, New South Wales: Kingsclear Books. p. 36. ISBN 0-908272-63-4.
  6. The Heritage of Australia, Macmillan Publishers (1981), pp. 2/94,104,105
  7. Sydney Architecture, p.29

External links

Route map: Bing / Google

Media related to Bridge Street, Sydney at Wikimedia Commons

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