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Work on Sydney's Woollahra Station kicked off this weekend

Preliminary ground work to bring the "ghost station" in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs to life has begun, with the station slated to open by 2029

Winnie Stubbs
Written by
Winnie Stubbs
Travel and Hotels Editor, APAC
Woollahra train station
Photograph: Supplied | NSW Government
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Late last year, the NSW Government confirmed that they’d be converting Woollahra’s “ghost platforms” (a partially built train station along Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs line) into an operational train station, and would be building 10,000 new homes in the area. Despite some pushback, the first steps toward Woollahra Station – the city’s first new train station in more than a decade – are officially underway.

Taking advantage of a planned shutdown on the T4 Eastern Suburbs Line over the past weekend, Transport for NSW crews accessed the site that’s been sitting quietly beneath Woollahra since the 1970s, carrying out essential ground and structural investigations ahead of future construction.

For context, the project won’t involve the creation of a whole new station – it will be a finalisation of the half-built foundations laid (and then abandoned) in the 1970s. The adjoining rezoning project will see the creation of thousands of affordable homes close to the CBD, a housing project that Planning Minister Paul Scully promises is “helping progress the rebalancing of housing growth.”

render of new station in Sydney's eastern suburbs
Photograph: Supplied | NSW Government



According to the NSW Government, the project is a strategic reboot for a suburb, which has been growing backwards over the past few decades. While Greater Sydney has experienced population growth of 74 per cent over the past 50 years, the population of Woollahra has declined by 11 per cent – mostly the result of limited (and very expensive) housing. Housing approvals in Woollahra lag behind almost every other LGA, and the area’s tightly held streets have long resisted new density.

The new station will anchor a broader, state-led rezoning that aims to rebalance where Sydney grows, creating homes close to transport, parks, jobs and essential services. Affordable housing requirements will be baked into the process, which is expected to take around two years .

Unsurprisingly, not all residents are in support of the plans, but the NSW Government is resolute in the benefit that this new crop of well-located affordable housing will have on Sydney, with Planning Minister Paul Scully explaining that “every corner of the state needs to do their part” to address the state’s housing crisis.

Now the preliminary work has begun, official construction is slated to begin in 2027 (pending planning approval), and the station is expected to open by 2029.

You can learn more about the new (or new-ish) station and the associated developments over here

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