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Sydney in five places

BBC History UK

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July 2025

Australia's largest and oldest city was founded on land used for tens of millennia by indigenous peoples. LAILA ELLMOOS explores five sites revealing its long history

Sydney in five places

1 Paddington Reservoir Gardens

Water world

Water is, of course, hugely important to the history of Sydney – and not just because of the harbour. Securing a reliable supply of water has always been a concern, as it is in most cities. And in the mid-19th century, a reservoir was built in the suburb of Paddington, constructed in typically decorative Victorian style with beautiful ironbark timber posts, vaulted brick arches and cast-iron beams.

In 1899, alternative water-supply and storage facilities were developed nearby, and the structure was no longer used as a reservoir. Over the following decades Paddington Reservoir was used for other kinds of storage, then it was the site of a service station until its roof collapsed in 1990.

A decade or so later, some forward-thinking architects came forward and designed what is now a public park, opening in 2009. It's effectively a lovely two-level sunken garden that, with its columns and arches soaring among the greenery, has been compared to a combination of the Baths of Caracalla in Rome and the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.

2 South Head

Guiding lights

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