This review of environmental factors proposes the adaptive reuse of 6 existing buildings within the Gap Bluff Precinct and South Head, Camp Cove and Green Point Precinct, located in Sydney Harbour National Park. Public exhibition of document was held from 20 August to 10 November 2015.
This review of environmental factors has been prepared to support the ongoing operation of the North Head Quarantine Station, Manly, for cultural tourism purposes.
This revised review of environmental factors proposes the adaptive reuse of 6 existing buildings within the Gap Bluff Precinct and South Head, Camp Cove and Green Point Precinct, located in Sydney Harbour National Park.
Review of environmental factorsSydney Harbour National Park
This document is the pest management strategy for the Metro North East Region which covers the part of Sydney that lies between Botany Bay in the north and Wolli Creek in the south, Broken Bay in the north-east, and Wisemans Ferry in the north-west.
The Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH) has prepared a draft master plan for the Middle Head and Georges Head precincts of Sydney Harbour National Park.
The site of these historic buildings covers a large area of the headland at Middle Head, in Sydney Harbour. The structures were built between 1870 and 1945 to support the defence of Sydney Harbour. Many of the buildings were demolished before the site was made part of Sydney Harbour National Park in 1980.
South Head forms the southern edge of the entrance to Sydney Harbour. Most of the area has been a national park since 1977, with Gap Bluff added in 1982. The site has rich natural and cultural heritage values, including at least 11 Aboriginal sites.
Nielsen Park is a 20-hectare waterfront reserve in Vaucluse, a harbourside suburb of Sydney, that was incorporated into Sydney Harbour National Park in 1968. The park has regional and local significance because of its rich and diverse cultural, social, aesthetic and natural values. These values include Aboriginal sites, remnant bush, and a range of buildings and structures including the Victorian gothic villa, Greycliffe House.
Goat Island is of national and state heritage significance for its exceptional ensemble of built, natural and archaeological features that represent three important historical periods within one place: Aboriginal (pre-1830), colonial (1830-1900), and maritime (1901-1993). The island retains its isolation from the city and surrounding foreshore development.