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Chinatown, Sydney

Chinatown (Chinese: 悉尼唐人街; Cantonese Yale: Sīknèih Tòhngyàhn'gāai; pinyin: Xīní Tángrénjiē) is an urban enclave situated in the southern part of the Sydney Central Business District, in New South Wales, Australia. It comprises the majority of the Haymarket suburb, between Central station and Darling Harbour. It is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney, and is Australia's largest Chinatown.[2]

Chinatown
唐人街 (Chinese)
SydneyNew South Wales
A Chinese paifang at the intersection of Factory Street and Dixon Street
Map
Population22,218 (2018)[1]
 • Density44,000/km2 (115,000/sq mi)
Postcode(s)2000
Area0.5 km2 (0.2 sq mi)
LGA(s)City of Sydney
State electorate(s)Sydney
Federal division(s)Sydney
Localities around Chinatown:
Ultimo Sydney CBD Sydney CBD
Ultimo Chinatown Sydney CBD
Haymarket Haymarket Haymarket
Sydney Chinatown
Chinese悉尼唐人街
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXīní Tángrénjiē
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSīknèih Tòhngyàhn'gāai
JyutpingSik1nei4 Tong4jan4gaai1
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese雪梨華埠
Simplified Chinese雪梨华埠
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXuělí Huábù
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSyutlèih Wàhbouh
JyutpingSyut3lei4 Waa4bou6

Sydney, and the colony of New South Wales, experienced Chinese migration as early as 1828. The first group of Chinese labourers from Amoy (modern day Xiamen) embarked for New South Wales in 1848. With the discovery of gold in 1851 Chinese immigration increased, and by 1855 the number of Chinese immigrants reached around 17,000.[3] The Chinese population had traditionally been represented by those who came from Southern China (i.e. provinces such as Guangdong and Fujian), due to the majority of colonial ports being located in the southern coast of China.[4]

History

 
Chinese immigrants in Sydney at the Pageant of Nations, Sydney Town Hall, 1938.

One of the many nationalities to arrive in Australia during the Gold Rush years of the 1850s were the Chinese, and large groups stayed on after the Gold Rush itself ended. They settled largely in their own communities, working in locations across Sydney, with many of these Chinese immigrants becoming market gardeners on the city's fringe.[5] By 1861 there were some 13,000 Chinese living in New South Wales, and during this time the Chinatown was in The Rocks district, also known as the 'Chinese Quarter'.[6] Anti-immigration sentiment was rife during the 1880s, and a Royal Commission into "Alleged Chinese Gambling and Immorality" began in 1892, due to the number of opium dens and brothels that were found in the area, similar to Melbourne's Chinatown. This attitude of negativity towards the Chinese had settled down by the time of Federation in 1901. By the 1920s, Sydney's Chinatown migrated over to Campbell Street, in the vicinity of the popular Capitol Theatre.


Since 2019, Dixon Street and other intersecting streets are completely vehicle-free every Friday from 4pm, in order to host the Friday night markets. Different stalls selling Asian street food, desserts, and confectionery line the streets and alleyways, and the markets can become extremely busy.[7]

Location

Traditional boundaries

Officially, Chinatown does not have clearly defined borders, due to its continuous growth. The traditional core of the Haymarket Chinatown has been centred around Dixon Street, a pedestrian street mall with many Chinese restaurants, and with a paifang (a traditional Chinese gateway) at each end. At the eastern side, running parallel with Dixon Street, are Sussex Street and George Street, Sydney city's main thoroughfare. Other streets and lanes within Sydney's Chinatown include Factory Street, Goulburn Street, Little Hay Street, Kimber Lane and Thomas Street.

At the eastern end of Chinatown, at the corner of George Street and Hay Street, there is a sculpture made from a dead tree trunk; created by artist Lin Li in 1999 and named Golden Water Mouth.[8] Its designer believed that it would bring good fortune to the Chinese community.

Recent expansion

The current location of modern day Chinatown is actually the third known area to have been considered a Chinatown.[where?] When Sydney's produce market moved from what became the site of the Queen Victoria Building to the Belmore Markets, the Haymarket and Surry Hills areas became the focus for Sydney's Chinese citizens. By the 1920s Chinatown began to consolidate at its current location.[5]

 
The Peak Apartments building on top of the Market City shopping centre.

On Hay Street, the construction of The Peak Apartments, a residential skyscraper, in 1996 and the newly renovated Market City shopping complex built over the Paddy's Market further consolidated Chinatown. Market City contains food courts with chain restaurants (such as Haidilao), an 800+ seat Dim Sum Restaurant (The Eight Modern Chinese Restaurant), boutique shops, City Amusements (a large indoor entertainment complex), and the Haymarket Paddy's Markets, a Wednesday-to-Sunday produce and flea market.[9] Likewise, the completion of Darling Square in late 2017 adjacent to Market City added multiple new apartment complexes and a plethora of new facilities and restaurants that fully integrated Chinatown into the urban core of Sydney.[10]

Unlike the Chinatowns in some other countries, Sydney's Chinatown has been relatively free of crime and hygiene issues. However, since there are many skyscrapers in Sydney, there are some concerns within the Chinese community about the building height restrictions imposed by the image-conscious local government authorities.

Suburbification

There are also satellite Chinatowns that have emerged in the past two decades in several Sydney suburbs such as Cabramatta, Ashfield, Hurstville, Eastwood, Campsie, Parramatta, Chatswood, Burwood, Flemington and Kingsford. Each of these suburbs are increasingly diverse in that people from specific regions in China settle together in one suburb, traditionally known as an ethnic enclave. For example, Ashfield is known as 'little Shanghai'[11] whilst Hurstville has a high concentration of people from Hong Kong.[12] However, Sydney's Chinatown still remains both a social and cultural centre for the Chinese Australian community in Sydney as it continues to expand.[13]

Demographics

 
Chinese New Year parade

According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, in 2016 the Chinatown and Haymarket area included a significant population of Chinese (31.9%), Thai (18.3%), Indonesian (5.6%), English (5.1%) and Korean (4.8%) population. The most spoken languages at home apart from English were Thai (20.4%), Mandarin (20.3%), Indonesian (10.2%), Cantonese (5.1%), and Korean (4.8%).[14] Furthermore, there is a significant student population from Asia, due to the close proximity of educational institutions such as the University of Technology Sydney, Technical and Further Education (TAFE NSW), and the University of Sydney. As of 2016, 25.9% of the residents in Chinatown were studying at university or TAFE[15] and 33.4% of individuals in the Haymarket area had a attained a bachelor's degree or above.

As a centrally located Chinatown (that is adjacent to, and being gradually absorbed by the growing central business district), there are many white collar workers. Out of the 65,950 workers in the surrounding area in 2017, 18% worked in finance & financial services, 17% in the government, and 13.6% in professional & business services.[16] The median weekly household income in 2016 was $1,696, slightly above the national average of $1,659 in 2019.[17]

Chinese Garden of Friendship

Sydney is the sister city of Guangzhou in China,[18] and as a gift to Sydney during the Australian Bicentenary in 1988, the Chinese Garden of Friendship (traditional Chinese: 誼園; simplified Chinese: 谊园; pinyin: yìyuán; Cantonese Yale: yihyùhn) was constructed west of Chinatown in the Darling Harbour precinct. The relationship between Sydney and Guangzhou (previously romanized as Canton), the capital of Guangdong province, is particularly strong because of trade and migration since the earliest days of colonisation. The agreement stipulated Guangdong would provide the design of the garden and key building materials, furniture and artworks that are intrinsic to the classic garden typology, while New South Wales would manage and fund its construction through the Darling Harbour Authority. It is one of the few public traditional Chinese gardens outside of China and is a horticultural expression of a private garden and can also be classified as a scholar's or classical garden.[19] The gardens were added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 5 October 2018.[20] The garden hosts activities such as lessons on its history and design philosophy, landscape tours, school visits, wedding functions, koi fish feeding, among others.[21]

Bilingual street signs

There are many bilingual street signs across Chinatown, denoting the name of streets, lanes, and roads in both English and Chinese. Some of the names are based on their Cantonese pronunciation (e.g. Hay Street; 禧街 which is pronounced "Hēi Gāai" in Cantonese, but "Xǐ Jiē" in Mandarin") whilst others are based on their Mandarin pronunciation (e.g. Liverpool Street; 利物浦街 which is pronounced "Lìwùpǔ Jiē" in Mandarin, but "Léihmáhtpóu Gāai" in Cantonese).

Some of these signs are accompanied by their official City of Sydney street signs. On the bottom of each of these signs, it reads, "Welcome to Chinatown" and "歡迎光臨華埠".

Gallery

Cultural depictions

See also

References

  1. ^ "Profiling the Sydney community".
  2. ^ "Chinatown and Haymarket". Sydney.com. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  3. ^ "Chinese Migration Stories". www.records.nsw.gov.au. 22 December 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Chinese Heritage of Australian Federation Project". arrow.latrobe.edu.au. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  5. ^ a b Sharpe, Alan (2000). City of Sydney: Pictorial History. Kingsclear Books. ISBN 9-780-98718408-5.
  6. ^ deborahw (21 February 2014). "Sydney's Chinese Community in The Rocks". Sydney Living Museums. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  7. ^ "Chinatown Night Market | Dixon Street Plaza | Shopping in Sydney". Time Out Sydney. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  8. ^ "Golden Water Mouth". cityartsydney.com.au (City of Sydney website). Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  9. ^ "Market City Sydney | Best Shopping in Chinatown & Haymarket". Market City. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  10. ^ Williams, Sue (16 April 2019). "Darling Square: Sydney's new $3.4 billion neighbourhood takes shape". Commercial Real Estate. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  11. ^ "Business booms in 'little Shanghai'". The Sydney Morning Herald. 17 June 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  12. ^ "In the neighbourhood: Hurtsville". Food. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  13. ^ "Eastern promise spreads to the suburbs". The Sydney Morning Herald. 6 September 2002.
  14. ^ "2016 Census QuickStats: Haymarket". quickstats.censusdata.abs.gov.au. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  15. ^ "Chinatown and CBD South - City of Sydney". www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  16. ^ "Chinatown and CBD South - City of Sydney". www.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  17. ^ Statistics, c=AU; o=Commonwealth of Australia; ou=Australian Bureau of (20 February 2020). "Media Release - Moderate growth in average earnings (Media Release)". www.abs.gov.au. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  18. ^ "Sister cities: City of Sydney". 22 February 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
  19. ^ . Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority. Archived from the original on 2 June 2013. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  20. ^ "Chinese Garden of Friendship | NSW Environment, Energy and Science". www.environment.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  21. ^ "Chinese Garden of Friendship". darlingharbour.com. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  22. ^ Davd Bowie dead at 69: The songwriter's time in Australia 14 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine Daily Telegraph 12 January 2016
  23. ^ "Filming Location Matching "Chinese Garden of Friendship, Darling Harbour, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia" (Sorted by Popularity Ascending)". IMDb. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  24. ^ The Wolverine (2013) - IMDb, retrieved 7 April 2020

External links

Further reading

Coordinates: 33°52′43.61″S 151°12′14.69″E / 33.8787806°S 151.2040806°E / -33.8787806; 151.2040806

chinatown, sydney, chinatown, chinese, 悉尼唐人街, cantonese, yale, sīknèih, tòhngyàhn, gāai, pinyin, xīní, tángrénjiē, urban, enclave, situated, southern, part, sydney, central, business, district, south, wales, australia, comprises, majority, haymarket, suburb, b. Chinatown Chinese 悉尼唐人街 Cantonese Yale Sikneih Tohngyahn gaai pinyin Xini Tangrenjie is an urban enclave situated in the southern part of the Sydney Central Business District in New South Wales Australia It comprises the majority of the Haymarket suburb between Central station and Darling Harbour It is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney and is Australia s largest Chinatown 2 Chinatown 唐人街 Chinese Sydney New South WalesA Chinese paifang at the intersection of Factory Street and Dixon StreetMapPopulation22 218 2018 1 Density44 000 km2 115 000 sq mi Postcode s 2000Area0 5 km2 0 2 sq mi LGA s City of SydneyState electorate s SydneyFederal division s SydneyLocalities around Chinatown Ultimo Sydney CBD Sydney CBDUltimo Chinatown Sydney CBDHaymarket Haymarket HaymarketSydney ChinatownChinese悉尼唐人街TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinXini TangrenjieYue CantoneseYale RomanizationSikneih Tohngyahn gaaiJyutpingSik1nei4 Tong4jan4gaai1Alternative Chinese nameTraditional Chinese雪梨華埠Simplified Chinese雪梨华埠TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinXueli HuabuYue CantoneseYale RomanizationSyutleih WahbouhJyutpingSyut3lei4 Waa4bou6Sydney and the colony of New South Wales experienced Chinese migration as early as 1828 The first group of Chinese labourers from Amoy modern day Xiamen embarked for New South Wales in 1848 With the discovery of gold in 1851 Chinese immigration increased and by 1855 the number of Chinese immigrants reached around 17 000 3 The Chinese population had traditionally been represented by those who came from Southern China i e provinces such as Guangdong and Fujian due to the majority of colonial ports being located in the southern coast of China 4 Contents 1 History 2 Location 2 1 Traditional boundaries 2 2 Recent expansion 2 3 Suburbification 3 Demographics 4 Chinese Garden of Friendship 5 Bilingual street signs 6 Gallery 7 Cultural depictions 8 See also 9 References 10 External links 11 Further readingHistory EditFurther information History of Sydney and History of Chinese Australians Chinese immigrants in Sydney at the Pageant of Nations Sydney Town Hall 1938 One of the many nationalities to arrive in Australia during the Gold Rush years of the 1850s were the Chinese and large groups stayed on after the Gold Rush itself ended They settled largely in their own communities working in locations across Sydney with many of these Chinese immigrants becoming market gardeners on the city s fringe 5 By 1861 there were some 13 000 Chinese living in New South Wales and during this time the Chinatown was in The Rocks district also known as the Chinese Quarter 6 Anti immigration sentiment was rife during the 1880s and a Royal Commission into Alleged Chinese Gambling and Immorality began in 1892 due to the number of opium dens and brothels that were found in the area similar to Melbourne s Chinatown This attitude of negativity towards the Chinese had settled down by the time of Federation in 1901 By the 1920s Sydney s Chinatown migrated over to Campbell Street in the vicinity of the popular Capitol Theatre Since 2019 Dixon Street and other intersecting streets are completely vehicle free every Friday from 4pm in order to host the Friday night markets Different stalls selling Asian street food desserts and confectionery line the streets and alleyways and the markets can become extremely busy 7 Location EditTraditional boundaries Edit Officially Chinatown does not have clearly defined borders due to its continuous growth The traditional core of the Haymarket Chinatown has been centred around Dixon Street a pedestrian street mall with many Chinese restaurants and with a paifang a traditional Chinese gateway at each end At the eastern side running parallel with Dixon Street are Sussex Street and George Street Sydney city s main thoroughfare Other streets and lanes within Sydney s Chinatown include Factory Street Goulburn Street Little Hay Street Kimber Lane and Thomas Street At the eastern end of Chinatown at the corner of George Street and Hay Street there is a sculpture made from a dead tree trunk created by artist Lin Li in 1999 and named Golden Water Mouth 8 Its designer believed that it would bring good fortune to the Chinese community Recent expansion EditThe current location of modern day Chinatown is actually the third known area to have been considered a Chinatown where When Sydney s produce market moved from what became the site of the Queen Victoria Building to the Belmore Markets the Haymarket and Surry Hills areas became the focus for Sydney s Chinese citizens By the 1920s Chinatown began to consolidate at its current location 5 The Peak Apartments building on top of the Market City shopping centre On Hay Street the construction of The Peak Apartments a residential skyscraper in 1996 and the newly renovated Market City shopping complex built over the Paddy s Market further consolidated Chinatown Market City contains food courts with chain restaurants such as Haidilao an 800 seat Dim Sum Restaurant The Eight Modern Chinese Restaurant boutique shops City Amusements a large indoor entertainment complex and the Haymarket Paddy s Markets a Wednesday to Sunday produce and flea market 9 Likewise the completion of Darling Square in late 2017 adjacent to Market City added multiple new apartment complexes and a plethora of new facilities and restaurants that fully integrated Chinatown into the urban core of Sydney 10 Unlike the Chinatowns in some other countries Sydney s Chinatown has been relatively free of crime and hygiene issues However since there are many skyscrapers in Sydney there are some concerns within the Chinese community about the building height restrictions imposed by the image conscious local government authorities Suburbification Edit There are also satellite Chinatowns that have emerged in the past two decades in several Sydney suburbs such as Cabramatta Ashfield Hurstville Eastwood Campsie Parramatta Chatswood Burwood Flemington and Kingsford Each of these suburbs are increasingly diverse in that people from specific regions in China settle together in one suburb traditionally known as an ethnic enclave For example Ashfield is known as little Shanghai 11 whilst Hurstville has a high concentration of people from Hong Kong 12 However Sydney s Chinatown still remains both a social and cultural centre for the Chinese Australian community in Sydney as it continues to expand 13 Demographics Edit Chinese New Year parade According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics in 2016 the Chinatown and Haymarket area included a significant population of Chinese 31 9 Thai 18 3 Indonesian 5 6 English 5 1 and Korean 4 8 population The most spoken languages at home apart from English were Thai 20 4 Mandarin 20 3 Indonesian 10 2 Cantonese 5 1 and Korean 4 8 14 Furthermore there is a significant student population from Asia due to the close proximity of educational institutions such as the University of Technology Sydney Technical and Further Education TAFE NSW and the University of Sydney As of 2016 25 9 of the residents in Chinatown were studying at university or TAFE 15 and 33 4 of individuals in the Haymarket area had a attained a bachelor s degree or above As a centrally located Chinatown that is adjacent to and being gradually absorbed by the growing central business district there are many white collar workers Out of the 65 950 workers in the surrounding area in 2017 18 worked in finance amp financial services 17 in the government and 13 6 in professional amp business services 16 The median weekly household income in 2016 was 1 696 slightly above the national average of 1 659 in 2019 17 Chinese Garden of Friendship Edit Chinese Garden of Friendship Sydney is the sister city of Guangzhou in China 18 and as a gift to Sydney during the Australian Bicentenary in 1988 the Chinese Garden of Friendship traditional Chinese 誼園 simplified Chinese 谊园 pinyin yiyuan Cantonese Yale yihyuhn was constructed west of Chinatown in the Darling Harbour precinct The relationship between Sydney and Guangzhou previously romanized as Canton the capital of Guangdong province is particularly strong because of trade and migration since the earliest days of colonisation The agreement stipulated Guangdong would provide the design of the garden and key building materials furniture and artworks that are intrinsic to the classic garden typology while New South Wales would manage and fund its construction through the Darling Harbour Authority It is one of the few public traditional Chinese gardens outside of China and is a horticultural expression of a private garden and can also be classified as a scholar s or classical garden 19 The gardens were added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 5 October 2018 20 The garden hosts activities such as lessons on its history and design philosophy landscape tours school visits wedding functions koi fish feeding among others 21 Bilingual street signs EditThere are many bilingual street signs across Chinatown denoting the name of streets lanes and roads in both English and Chinese Some of the names are based on their Cantonese pronunciation e g Hay Street 禧街 which is pronounced Hei Gaai in Cantonese but Xǐ Jie in Mandarin whilst others are based on their Mandarin pronunciation e g Liverpool Street 利物浦街 which is pronounced Liwupǔ Jie in Mandarin but Leihmahtpou Gaai in Cantonese Some of these signs are accompanied by their official City of Sydney street signs On the bottom of each of these signs it reads Welcome to Chinatown and 歡迎光臨華埠 Dixon Street 德信街 Cantonese Dakseun Gaai Mandarin Dexin Jie Factory Street 發多利街 Cantonese Faatdōleih Gaai Mandarin Faduōli Jie Goulburn Street 高賓街 Cantonese Gōuban Gaai Mandarin Gaobin Jie Hay Street 禧街 Cantonese Hei Gaai Mandarin Xǐ Jie Kimber Lane 金貝里 Cantonese Gambui Leih Mandarin Jinbei Lǐ Little Hay Street 小禧街 Cantonese Siuhei Gaai Mandarin Xiǎoxǐ Jie Liverpool Street 利物浦街 Cantonese Leihmahtpou Gaai Mandarin Liwupǔ Jie Sussex Street 莎瑟街 Cantonese Sasat Gaai Mandarin Shase Jie Thomas Lane 湯馬士里 Cantonese Tōngmahsih Leih Mandarin Tangmǎshi Lǐ Thomas Street 湯馬士街 Cantonese Tōngmahsih Gaai Mandarin Tangmǎshi Jie Ultimo Road 歐廸模道 Cantonese Audihkmouh Douh Mandarin Ōudimo Dao Older sign for Ultimo Road 歐田磨路 Cantonese Autihnmoh Louh Mandarin Ōutianmo Lu Gallery Edit Dixon House 80 Dixon Street Friday Night Markets in Chinatown Entrance to Chinatown via Haymarket at night Darling Square has extended Chinatown towards Darling Harbour Haymarket 2013 The Sydney office of the Kuomintang The Chinese Garden of Friendship Corner store in Chinatown Lunar New Year celebrations Lunar New Year celebrationsCultural depictions EditSydney s Chinatown is the setting and film location of the music video for David Bowie s 1983 single China Girl 22 Parts of Sydney Chinatown appear in the 1999 film Two Hands A scene for Dulcea s compound in 20th Century Fox s 1995 superhero film Mighty Morphin Power Rangers The Movie 23 Appeared in The Wolverine in October 2012 24 See also EditChinatowns in Australia Chinese Australians History of Chinese Australians Yiu Ming Temple heritage listed Chinese temple at 16 22 Retreat Street Alexandria City of Sydney Sze Yup Temple heritage listed Chinese temple at Victoria Road in the inner western Sydney suburb of Glebe City of Sydney Australia China relations Asian Australians Australians in ChinaReferences Edit Profiling the Sydney community Chinatown and Haymarket Sydney com Retrieved 6 June 2013 Chinese Migration Stories www records nsw gov au 22 December 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2020 Chinese Heritage of Australian Federation Project arrow latrobe edu au Retrieved 7 April 2020 a b Sharpe Alan 2000 City of Sydney Pictorial History Kingsclear Books ISBN 9 780 98718408 5 deborahw 21 February 2014 Sydney s Chinese Community in The Rocks Sydney Living Museums Retrieved 7 April 2020 Chinatown Night Market Dixon Street Plaza Shopping in Sydney Time Out Sydney Retrieved 7 April 2020 Golden Water Mouth cityartsydney com au City of Sydney website Retrieved 24 April 2020 Market City Sydney Best Shopping in Chinatown amp Haymarket Market City Retrieved 7 April 2020 Williams Sue 16 April 2019 Darling Square Sydney s new 3 4 billion neighbourhood takes shape Commercial Real Estate Retrieved 7 April 2020 Business booms in little Shanghai The Sydney Morning Herald 17 June 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2020 In the neighbourhood Hurtsville Food Retrieved 7 April 2020 Eastern promise spreads to the suburbs The Sydney Morning Herald 6 September 2002 2016 Census QuickStats Haymarket quickstats censusdata abs gov au Retrieved 7 April 2020 Chinatown and CBD South City of Sydney www cityofsydney nsw gov au Retrieved 7 April 2020 Chinatown and CBD South City of Sydney www cityofsydney nsw gov au Retrieved 7 April 2020 Statistics c AU o Commonwealth of Australia ou Australian Bureau of 20 February 2020 Media Release Moderate growth in average earnings Media Release www abs gov au Retrieved 7 April 2020 Sister cities City of Sydney 22 February 2019 Retrieved 23 February 2019 Chinese Garden of Friendship Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority Archived from the original on 2 June 2013 Retrieved 6 June 2013 Chinese Garden of Friendship NSW Environment Energy and Science www environment nsw gov au Retrieved 7 April 2020 Chinese Garden of Friendship darlingharbour com Retrieved 7 April 2020 Davd Bowie dead at 69 The songwriter s time in Australia Archived 14 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine Daily Telegraph 12 January 2016 Filming Location Matching Chinese Garden of Friendship Darling Harbour Sydney New South Wales Australia Sorted by Popularity Ascending IMDb Retrieved 7 April 2020 The Wolverine 2013 IMDb retrieved 7 April 2020External links EditShirley Fitzgerald 2008 Chinatown Dictionary of Sydney Retrieved 26 September 2015 CC By SA SYDNEY com Chinatown and HaymarketFurther reading Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Sydney City South Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chinatown Sydney Anderson Kay et al 2019 Chinatown Unbound Rowman amp Littlefeld London Fitzgerald Shirley 1997 Red Tape Gold Scissors The story of Sydney s Chinese Paperback State Library of New South Wales Press in association with The City of Sydney pp 206 pages ISBN 0 7310 6607 3 Richards D Manning 2012 Destiny in Sydney An epic novel of convicts Aborigines and Chinese embroiled in the birth of Sydney Australia First book in Sydney series Washington DC Aries Books ISBN 978 0 9845410 0 3 Coordinates 33 52 43 61 S 151 12 14 69 E 33 8787806 S 151 2040806 E 33 8787806 151 2040806 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinatown Sydney amp oldid 1138749666, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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