Balfour Street Park
History
The area was originally overgrown and weed infested land not being put to any use, owned by the State Rail Authority. However, in 2011 local residents with cooperation from North Sydney Council under the Streets Alive program, which allows the community to create and maintain public gardens on land owned by State Government authorities, were able to gain public access and permission to create a park. It was formally opened on 19 June 2011 by the Lord Mayor.
Design
The initial design of Balfour Street Park was done by Sue Barnsley Design, aiming to mediate the two differing scales of the large scale adjacent Central Park development and the smaller scale residential nature of the site. JILA retained this conceptual design and sought to expand upon it through the incorporation of the richness of the materials and intimate detail which relates back to the human scale. By closing Balfour Street between O’Connor and Wellington Streets, the park is able to offer more open space for local residents, and provide an essential pedestrian and cyclist connection to Broadway, improving local traffic management.
Features
The dominant material in the design of the pocket park is bricks, to connect to the materiality of the surrounding buildings. The bricks are laid on two different axes with one direction facing the drainage channel and the other facing towards the grass area. A brick swale with arching antenna lighting acts as the focal point of the park during the day and at night, in addition to providing a drainage point. The brick swale also incorporates protruding bricks which detain any rubbish and slow down the water flow. Furthermore, the site references the area’s built history and character through the paving materials, including trachyte recycled from local kerbing.
Flora and fauna
Balfour Street Park has a variety of native species of planting including NSW Christmas Bush, Banksia, Bottlebrush, Port Jackson cypress, Lillypilly, Tea tree, Eucalyptus and Grevillea. Native planting along the border of the park were selected in order to screen the railway line and attract native birds.
Gallery
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The brick swale feature which slows water flow and captures any rubbish
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Central Park in background
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Brick swale vegetation
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Brick paving
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Fixed concrete benches
See also
References
- ^ MacGowen, Tempe (1 May 2012). "Balfour Street Pocket Park". ArchitectureAu. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
- ^ "Balfour Street Park Upgrade". North Sydney Council. Archived from the original on 7 September 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
- ^ "Balfour Street park completed". Central Park Sydney. June 2010. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
- ^ Tempe, Macgowan (February 2012). "Balfour Street Pocket Park". Landscape Architecture Australia (133): 46–48. ISSN 1833-4814.
- ^ "New park to provide gateway". www.sydneymedia.com.au. City of Sydney. 10 June 2010. Retrieved 17 September 2015.
- ^ Irving, Robert; Powell, Ron; Irving, Noel (2014). Sydney' hard rock story: the cultural heritage of trachyte. Leura, NSW: Heritage Publishing. p. 148. ISBN 9781875891160.