Love the binoculars Paul. Makes perfect sense. And yes that Maccas was a classic meeting spot in the 1980s. Also a late night haunt for a feed on the way home from the pub.
Thanks Matt, Glad you like the Binocular part! That reminds me of a certain Maccas that I went to close to Victoria station after a few drinks in the pub with my London Transport mates on a Friday night!
The concourses through to the platforms definitely look very similar to the design of the core section of the Elizabeth line. I wonder if foster and partners were involved in that design as well?
Yes there are some similarities for sure! Foster & Partners weren't involved in the designs of the cavern stations within Central London, but they did design Canary Wharf Station. Also John McAslan and Partners who designed Bond Street, also designed our new Waterloo Station!
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! Yes I find it fascinating to discover what was there before, and its wonderful that Google Streetview lets you go back in time, as this would be tricky to do otherwise!
Thank you so much for this - so nicely presented and easy to understand! Excited to hear also that it’s looking to be opening mid-year rather than end of year 🤞🏼 As a Hills resident the Metro has been life-changing and it just keeps getting better and better.,
Yes absolutely! And it will be wonderful to be able to go direct to the City by metro I believe the off-peak frequency will improve when the extension opens too!
Thank you Paul. This is a far more useful video explanation for commuters than the endless back-patting TforNSW videos that contains no information for busy commuters at all.
Glad you enjoyed it! Yes the TforNSW tend to lack the narration and content, so I've had feedback that many TforNSW and Sydney Metro employees watch my videos!
Good to see that this station isn't as deep as the other city metro stations, with only 2 escalators to get down to platform level instead of 3. I think this is because it had to be shallower to fit above the Cross City Tunnel. I quite like the architecture on the inside; it's cool that all the new underground Sydney Metro stations have such a different look. The layout with the diagonal passageways from each entrance to each platform is quite interesting; looks easy to navigate but could potentially take some time to walk along. I wonder why this station has less escalator capacity than Martin Place or Central; it seems like it'd need more because of its location.
Yeah, I'm loving the new Metro architecture and their individual personalities. I recall Paul saying it was deliberate so people could tell the new stations apart from one another. I bet people will complain about the walk between the two platforms if they need to change.
Hi @exploringsydneysrailways, Yes, I hadn't thought about the Cross City Tunnel, but that is probably why it is closer to the surface. It's probably a little smaller than Martin Place and Central, but as there are no direct interchanges, I reckon it should be fine.
Yes, that's right @kazwilson425. It does make it easier to recognise the station as you arrive at the station from a train. People shouldn't need to change platforms at Gadigal, unless they've got on a train in the wrong direction!
Yes, I do plan to cover what was there before for other Sydney Metro stations in the future. I have already done this for Martin Place, and also quite a few of the Sydney Metro West stations, as I was able to film what was there myself before it was demolished!
That is so interesting. I work at BDO, and we were the first company to get a spot in parkline place. It will be exciting to see what it offers. I’ve heard it will open sometime Q4 2024, but still a good change in the commercial real estate market of Sydney. Thank you again for such amazing videos!
That's awesome! I'd love to see inside Parkline place when it opens. Hope you'll be on a high floor! I'm sure the views and facilities will be amazing!
Great, coherent video that lets us have an amazing understanding of the new stations in Sydney. I love how Martin place but especially Gadigal station have such cool and unique layouts and designs. I absolutely love it!
Why isn't this connected to Town Hall station, and it's vast underground shopping area in the Galleries, QVB and towards Pitt St Mall etc. and 580 Geroge to the south. That would've been awesome for commuters getting around in the rain.. If they relocated the JB hifi in the galleries, that could've've facilitated a walk way to the new station?
There is an article somewhere from one the designers saying they purposely did not want to connect the metro to town hall (even just the walkways) to maintain the Metro as an independent line, ensuring reliability if and when the trains network gets impacted.
@@Hamish395 Ok, the Metro wants to be independent from trains, sure. (That explains the separate logos from trains and being self driving etc.) but isn't the whole point of public transport to be interconnected? E.g. bus stops at ferry wharfs and train stations etc? They even share the same platforms at Chatswood too (I know they converted a train line to metro, but still) considering the ease of connecting it, it seems stupid. I wonder what their excuse is going to be for not connecting Martin Place Metro to the Hunter St Metro. They're separate lines, but still Metro...
I am pretty sure Paul has completed a video showing the ability to walk from Martin Place through to Hunter Street Metro station and then to Wynyard. In regards to connecting Town Hall station to Gadigal you would think it would be a pretty easy job to connect Galleries to the escalator landing in the Metro Station. They will not want 1000’s of commuters alighting at either station and having to go to the surface streets and cross roads. They may also be waiting for the Sydney City council to redevelop the Town Hall. Square. With buildings south of Park Street being demolished (Town Hall Woolworths) there will be opportunities to build tunnels and retail stores underneath Town Hall square and Park Street.
Gadigal will reduce Congestion of Town Hall Station. The Reason for That since Town Hall is the Busiest Station in Sydney Over Central Station. Town Hall is the Most Confiusing Station.
Thanks Paul. These stations are very well done, especially compared with Melbourne “metro”. The only thing that would be handy is a connection into the pedestrian tunnels that go under Town Hall, QVB, etc.
Yes they certainly are Anthony! I reckon the Melbourne Metro Tunnel stations will be pretty good too. Hopefully they'll do some community open day events at the new stations prior to them opening. Yes an underground connection under Pitt Street and into Town Hall would be wonderful, but sadly its not part of this project.
Let's wait until both Melbourne and Sydney metro are open and operating and then evaluate. Hard to properly judge them while still under construction. The Sydney stations are certainly looking good so far, I'll give you that.
Great video! I used to work in there mixed commercial building briefly, but also worked in the area. We spent countless Friday nights at the Windsor Hotel, which became the Old Windsor and the New Windsor Hotel…
Thanks, Paul for a great run-down on the new Gadigal station. The name is kind of growing on me. Better than Pitt St, as you said it would have been a bit off seeing Pitt St didn't cover it all. I was looking forward to your return. Currently working on my combo of Dulwich Hill L1.
Glad you enjoyed it Geoff. I was a bit worried, when it was first announced that Pitt Street station was likely to get an aboriginal name, but I was very happy when they decided on "Gadigal".
@@TransportVlog Hi, Paul, just came rough here, again, it seems for a second time. All looked new to me but oh well. I can hear you but can you slow down just a tad in the speech, please. Last time I probably did it with just subtitles. See you Sunday.
I briefly worked in the Community Relations Commission for NSW (now Multicultural NSW) in the 175 Castlereagh St building way back in 2006. Can't say that I am sad to see it knocked down.
I think originally, there was going to be an entrance on Pitt Street, and it may still be possible to get to Pitt Street via the station plaza, but its not very clear on the plans.
Great video! And thanks for the walk down memory lane, I had totally forgotten about the Maccas on that corner! Not sad it’s gone, that was a filthy street corner 😅😂 I’m loving the modernizing of our city - except for that ugly new pink building above Gadigal South 🙈 Thanks for the great work, looking forward to future updates :)
Thanks Josie, glad you enjoyed it! Yes it's so easy to forget the buildings that used to be there! Hopefully you'll get used to the new pink one over time!
Great video - I particularly appreciated the little 'look back' segment at the end, it's nice to be able to see what used to be there. I can't help thinking the tunnel artwork on that intermediate level wall is TfNSW trying to set a trap for Wile E Coyote...
Thanks!, and glad you enjoyed seeing what used to be there! Possibly! Hopefully, Gadigal Station will have a community open day, and I can find out more about the artwork then!
Paul have you seen the news in London about the Elizabeth Line having at some of the stations 'goast' passengers on the wall where the seating is at platforms?The wall surfaces there are not wearing well as passe gers are leaving marks on the wall when they've been leaning against it. At the moment trials of new surfaces in those spots are being done using a pattern design. Hope the new Sydney Metro stops fare better.
No I hadn't heard about that Nigel. I am going to London in a few months time, so will see if I can leave a permanent marking on one of the walls! Yes hopefully this won't happen on Sydney Metro!
Thank you for the update. You mentioned that "the apartment (for rent) building will be opened in June which is around the opening of the Sydney Metro line" which means that the Sydney Metro line (Chatswood-Sydenham) will be operational in June 2024 or later?
The official timeframe is "middle of 2024", and it all depends on how well the testing goes over the next few months! Indi Sydney could open before or after the metro opens.
The new buildings are looking fabulous, especially the pastel colored building in Bathurst Street. While I have many fond memories from the Hungry Jack's and MacDonalds, none of the old buildings were particularly inspiring, and the new towers plus the stations are great replacements. I live in this area, and so these are my neighborhood. BTW, since I live in a one owner, built to rent 18 story tower, I dispute the claim that that building is the first built to rent tower. Maybe the first in very recent years, but not the first.
Glad you like the new buildings! My understanding is that it's the first build to rent building in the Sydney CBD area, but as you're a local, you probably have more accurate information than I do. I did notice a built to rent building in Mascot recently.
@@TransportVlog My building was built in 1980, however, the first strata titled building in Sydney is Blues Point Tower from 1962, and all buildings before that time would have been single owner, and therefore rented out. The first high rise apartment tower in the CBD, the Astor, in Macquarie Street (which is around 12+ stories) was originally owned by John O'Brien who paid 11,900 pounds in 1920 to build it, and it was opened in 1923 by the Premier. The first tennants were said to include prominent newspaper tycoons and wool brokers. However, Kingsclere in Kings Cross is older (1912), but outside the CBD, and not as tall as the Astor, however it should be pointed out that all those 12 to 15 story apartment towers built in the 1930's apartment building boom, in Kings Cross, and a lesser extent in the CBD were all single owner buildings built to rent. All of those early towers had single ownership because it was not legal to own individual apartments at that time The first tower in the Sydney CBD that reached 50 meters (14 stories) was Chulwalla Chamers in 1914, and although a commercial building, and not apartments, all units were rented out and with a single owner. As a bit of fascinating trivia, the fire brigade of the time said that it was 'suicidal' to build towers of that height because they believed it was impossible to fight fires at that height. It appears they learned to adapt eventually :) It may well be, that strata titles had become the majority form of building development by the 1970's, but my building, in 1980, at the edge of the CBD (near Hyde Park) demonstrates that single ownership did exist for some time afterward. I quite believe that this is the first build to rent building during the current appartment tower boom of the last 30 years, but whoever told you that this is the first of all time has a very limited understanding of history, and doesn't know that while towers were being built prior to 1962, strata title did not exist before then. In fact, it could be argued that the non-existance of strata titling was limiting the number of towers being built, and that 1962 marked the beginning of a significant acceleration in tower construction purely because strata title made it easier to sell parts of buildings, rather than the entire building, and the larger the building was, the greater the problem. Strata title was revolutionary in that sense, and all possible because of the new law in NSW, the Conveyancing (Strata Titles) Act of 1961. Ownership of individual apartments was not legal prior to that change of law.
Great video Paul. Your videos are very informative, and the mix of video, pictures and drawings helps build a 3-D picture of how the station is constructed and how people and trains will move inside. Do you know if transfers will be free between Town Hall and Gadigal station? A little surprised there is no underground walkway to join the 2, but maybe it was impossible to build.
I’d like to know regarding no underway as well. In particular, on the north end, the galleries underground shopping centre (linked to Town Hall) ends where Hungry Jacks is on the same corner as the metro station access! I believe the underground JB HI FI (part of the Galleries) is under that Hungry Jacks. If that was not there, a walkway from there to Gadigal would be less than 10 metres!
Hi @jdillon8360, thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! It wouldn't have been possible without the Sydney Metro animated videos, so it was wonderful to be able to use those. Great question, and I'm not sure of the answer. However, most people will change between Train and Metro at Central rather than Town Hall. Its much quicker at Central. Just up one long escalator to the metro concourse, and into Central Walk and up another escalator to the Sydney Trains suburban platforms, and that's probably the reason for the lack of an underground walkway between Town Hall and Gadigal.
Hi @danielcohen7824, I'm not sure of the reason for not including an underground subway, but I'll try and find out if it was considered in the planning stages. Although Central station is better for Train / Metro interchanges, having an underground link into the Galleries would have been nice.
@@TransportVlog Thanks for the response Paul. Yes, the Sydney Metro videos were great but your editing and clear explanations help a lot too. Especially for this Melburnian who isn't all that familiar with Sydney's public transport. That's probably why I hadn't thought of the obvious connection at Central. Let's hope they at least build in some kind of free transfer in the Opal system so that those who accidentally get out at Gadigal can re-enter the system at Town Hall or vice-versa. I'm sure I wouldn't be the only one. I believe the London Underground provides lots of free transfers between stations that are close but not directly connected.
Hi Paul. Any idea why the exit from Charmers St entrance onto Randle Lane is always closed now. They only opened it for a week or two when the entrance was completed?
Hi Murray, no I don't know the reason for that. It leads directly to Randle Lane which has no footpaths, so that may have something to do with it. Maybe there are plans to turn Randle lane into a pedestrian shared zone. These are just my ideas and guesses!
Thanks for the video Paul. Have you spoken with engineers about the metro tunnels and the cross city road tunnel? I'm guessing the road tunnels are under the metro. I think that would be an interesting video
Hi Paul, thanks for another interesting video. Gadigal Station had me wondering until you explained it here. For a minute, I though an extra station was being added. Gadigal Station looks quite good there. Incidentally, how do bus commuters travel directly to Circular Quay these days? George Street only has light rail, Castlereagh Street is one way against heading in that direction, Pitt Street is blocked by a mall and I think Elizabeth Street connects directly to the under harbour tunnel. Passengers could leave the bus in Pitt Street and walk to George Street, but that doesn't seem to be the easiest way to get to Circular Quay. Gadigal will be the first station built in Pitt Street as far as I know. I think I remember passing the Windsor Hotel many years ago. The name of the place sounds familiar for some reason. Maybe some of my work colleagues spent time there. Not sure. Anyway, take care and all the best. Rob in Melbourne Australia.
Thanks. I was wondering how the buses got through these days. I used to catch the 423 bus occasionally into the city from Marrickville and that used to go to circular Quay via Pitt Street. However, I believe now that they all terminate in Pitt Street just before the mall.
@@RGC198 that must’ve been a really long time ago? I’ve been in the CBD for nearly 20 years and buses coming from inner west don’t travel down Pitt St, they go up to Elizabeth after passing Central station.
Actually, I am thinking back to the 1960's and 1970's. When buses head up Elizabeth Street, they could follow the former tram route to get to Circular Quay. I have just looked up my old 423 bus route, which used to run from Earlwood to Circular Quay. Now it runs from Kingsgrove to Martin Place. Both bus routes go through Marrickville and Newtown, but the destinations at either end seem to be completely different.
Hi Rob, Glad you enjoyed it. As @JosieCote mentioned, the buses tend to go via Elizabeth Street these days and do a loop around Circular Quay with bus stops now to the east of the Light Rail terminus.
Yet another great video Paul! Another good reason not to call it Pitt Street Station is because “Pitt” means something rude in Swedish (think male anatomy) and I’m getting bored with my Swedish friends pointing it out and snickering… brings a whole new meaning to “Pittwater” or the shop “Cupcakes in Pitt”…😊
Yes, I used to work in the Castlereagh office building. It was uninspiring, and it was for the public service. Sad-dish it's gone, but yeah not really....
Yes, it seems like so many typical commercial buildings of the time! A few others have gone to make way for Hunter Street Station, but I'm sure many more still remain!
Yes it they built something under Park Street, that would link to existing passageways that go all the way to the Museum northern entrance. If you haven't done that, its worth checking out, Probably easier to do from the Museum end.
Absolutely.. And I prefer Gadigal to the other name thrown up - Saunders (after a Greek/Indigenous army Captain )... If City of Sydney ever completes it's building acquisition program for a new square it can become Gadigal Square.
But in comparison to Gadigal, in which Gadigal country encompasses a huge chunk of Sydney (way more square kilometres than just 2.5km) and could be located anywhere within Inner suburban Sydney (could be near Kingsford, or Artarmon or Summer Hill etc). So no, Pitt Street IS a way more accurate telling of the stations geography. It tells you you’re at the heart of the street, at the heart of the CBD.
Passengers travelling from the south will change at Central, where the combination of the North South concourse and Central Walk provides a faster and easier connection than would be possible by linking Town Hall and Gadigal Stations with a pedestrian walkway. Passengers coming from the north have a cross-platform interchange at Chatswood, and Martin Place provides an interchange from the Eastern Suburbs. A pedestrian link from Gadigal into the Galleries and QVB would be good, but I don't think it would be used by many people from transfers.
I'm sure you're not the only one Chris. I'm sure I'd been to it a couple of times! Bankstown station is worth a look now. They are starting to build the second platform!
Yeah, some of the buildings were interesting, at least from the outside. That office building, not so much. Not a lot of space in the Sydney CBD to fit Metro Stations in though, given the existing infrastructure, new infrastructure (2 Metro lines coming into the city) and topography. They could have put the stations deeper, but that would make entry/exit and transfer less appealing.
Who said anything about being a nimby?... Wanting to protect heritage doesn't make me a nimby. I just find it frustrating that there are some really shocking buildings that are of no historical significance and offer nothing to the streetscape in that area that I wish had gone instead.@@ToBAYT
They certainly don't seem to have been one of a kind, although I do agree they were beautiful compared to the new structures. It's pretty major progress for transit in Sydney, though, I think it's worthwhile in the long run!
There will be one at the Gadigal South entrance on Bathurst Street. And levels 2 and 3 above Gadigal North will have lots of cafes, restaurants and shops.
Calling it Gadigal is stupid, an area that encompasses a massive chunk of Sydney it makes for a vague reference as to where the station actually is. It could be in Petersham. Pitt St is at least more geographically correct & is less vague. I get the virtue signalling but it makes no sense. Would have been better to call the whole thing the Gadigal line, that would actually make sense & then leave the station with a name that is more geographically specific. It's like calling it the "Sydney" station, it's silly. Also, given the station is one block from Townhall they should have had a tunnel connecting the station concourses to encourage people to transfer from Trains network to Metro network.
Hi Adam, yes it would have been wonderful to see a tunnel into the Galleries and the QVB. However, Central has been designed to be the key interchange between Train and Metro, rather than Town Hall / Gadigal, and to me, this seems like the right decision.
@@rileyeyeyy yea, I do. It was initially slated to be named Ambarvale but they changed it for some reason, probably because there was barely anything there apart from Macarther Square shopping centre. It used to be called the East hills line as many stations fit within East Hills electorate. Kinda funny though isn’t it, you’ve detected the slightest hint of someone pushing back against woke symbolism & felt the need to defend it by seeking out an obscure example to justify it. This symbolism just for the sake of it needs to stop & we need to use common sense. We should acknowledge indigenous culture but not in a nonsensical manner that makes no sense & is devoid of any meaning. I’m guessing you probably didn’t celebrate Aussie day last week.
@@TransportVlog Sorry but it’s not the right decision. It’s simply a case of appeasing minority groups purely for political tokenism. It’s been happening across this country and the western world for years and people are getting now fed up with this virtue signalling identity politics, and they have every right to. We live in a democracy after all.
What’s funny is we just had a referendum and the vast majority of Australians voted against woke identity politics, and then immediately after that we get this station name change (without the people’s say on it). They are way out of touch with mainstream Australia.
Ahh the virtual signalling station. Let’s name it something that has absolutely nothing to identify the location. Hilarious you say Pitt St wasn’t really a great name. Neither is something that no one identify us the area with.
When the name was announced, it was reported in Time Out - and the stream of racist comments on their Facebook page led them to shut the comments section down. All over a name! 'It's wokeness gone mad!' This is the sort of behaviour that's now been emboldened.
I don’t blame those comments, people have every right to criticise the name change that happened without the people having their say on it. That’s how democracy works
@@Coastal603 Why would this name be objectionable? And who exactly are 'the people' in this case - a small but loud bunch of bigots? I should have added that comments supporting the name had far more likes.
Just reporting the facts, and that includes the name change. It may not be to everyone's liking, but the important thing is that we're getting 3 new CBD stations and that's got to be a good thing!
Worst station name ever. Should’ve kept it as Pitt street station, as Pitt street is iconic and more geographic correct as to where the station is! Changing it to “Gadigal” is nothing but woke pandering and laziness. It’s basically like calling the station “Sydney” but in a different language. I will always call it Pitt Street! Sick of this woke rubbish.
And the Greenland Centre across Pitt which has lots of reds and pinks. While it's not my choice of colour, I quite like having a splash of colour in the city.
Hi @alimfuzzy, its going to stay pink, and as @MachineInput mentioned, it's to allow the Edinburgh Castle Hotel to blend in with this whole development.
Change it back to Pitt Street Mall - or ‘City Station’ as it’s right in the middle of corporate Sydney, I wish they’d stop the woke reinvention of our country. Gadigal south gadigal north gadigal, none of the nomenclature makes sense if you have a variety of entrances without putting its congruous street or road with it .. the powers that be really know how to, by stealth, not only ruin culture, back nonsense of things.. I bet in future people will get out as per building they’ll pass-thru.
@@kuyans3889 naming it Gadigal makes for a vague reference as to where the station is actually located, as it’s an area that encompasses a huge chunk of Sydney. At least Pitt Street is more geographically correct and less vague. Calling it Gadigal station is like calling it “Sydney Station”, it’s silly.
@@Coastal603 Pitt street is really not a suitable name, it's a really long street. Gadigal is not the same as calling it Sydney Station, people already call Central "Sydney Central", it would just be confusing and unspecific. Since there are two exits we would have to call it Park and Bathurst or something, which I don't think is the worst name. Fundamentally though, I just believe that Gadigal is a good name as there no other stations in the CBD area with indigenous names, to name this station anything else is just the complete erasure of Aboriginal history on a core part of the Sydney railway network. It's also just nice to have a name that's a bit different. People will learn where it is, it's not that hard. I don't think it's silly.
@@kuyans3889 People can already learn where they are at Barangaroo reserve, which teaches all kinds of aboriginal history there, and what makes you think naming the station anything other than Gadigal is erasing history??
I would have preferred 'Pitt St'. Are we now going to pander back to the stone age? Bathurst St. also sounds fine to me, at least I know where I am going then. All this name changing stuff is infuriating and I'm afraid is symptomatic of decisions being made for minorities. Sorry to be so sceptical. I enjoyed the video form Paul as usual, but this name change info triggered me off along with emerging facts about our regional trains now being made to substandard finishes in Spain, when we can make our own here. Corruption is a world wide globalist pandemic and Australia is not immune.
Its a bit sad to see a couple of the old buildings that have gone to make way. I guess they were nothing special inside. Great vid. Makes a lot of sense.
Great explanation Paul! Really keen to see this one open, and finally offer commuters an alternative to the yucky, dark and humid Town Hall station.
Agreed! Town Hall station is so old, inadequate and yucky indeed 🙈🙈 any opportunity to avoid it will be welcome! 😅
If only there was a way to give it a bit of a glowup and make it a bit less tight and confusing..
Thanks Sharath, yes it will provide a superb alternative to getting lost in Town Hall Station!
It’s called Pitt street station
To be honest there’s not much that can be done about town hall station just because of its location
Love the binoculars Paul. Makes perfect sense. And yes that Maccas was a classic meeting spot in the 1980s. Also a late night haunt for a feed on the way home from the pub.
Thanks Matt, Glad you like the Binocular part! That reminds me of a certain Maccas that I went to close to Victoria station after a few drinks in the pub with my London Transport mates on a Friday night!
The concourses through to the platforms definitely look very similar to the design of the core section of the Elizabeth line. I wonder if foster and partners were involved in that design as well?
Yes there are some similarities for sure! Foster & Partners weren't involved in the designs of the cavern stations within Central London, but they did design Canary Wharf Station. Also John McAslan and Partners who designed Bond Street, also designed our new Waterloo Station!
Another wonderfully informative video Paul! I loved the addition of the history of the site. I am looking forward to using the station.
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! Yes I find it fascinating to discover what was there before, and its wonderful that Google Streetview lets you go back in time, as this would be tricky to do otherwise!
Thank you so much for this - so nicely presented and easy to understand! Excited to hear also that it’s looking to be opening mid-year rather than end of year 🤞🏼
As a Hills resident the Metro has been life-changing and it just keeps getting better and better.,
Yes absolutely! And it will be wonderful to be able to go direct to the City by metro I believe the off-peak frequency will improve when the extension opens too!
2:26 That looks a bit dangerous. Someone's going to come down those escalators and Wile E Coyote themselves into that mural!
Thank you Paul. This is a far more useful video explanation for commuters than the endless back-patting TforNSW videos that contains no information for busy commuters at all.
Glad you enjoyed it! Yes the TforNSW tend to lack the narration and content, so I've had feedback that many TforNSW and Sydney Metro employees watch my videos!
Love the little historic twist, great video again Paul!
Yes, I do like to cover what was there before!
Good to see that this station isn't as deep as the other city metro stations, with only 2 escalators to get down to platform level instead of 3. I think this is because it had to be shallower to fit above the Cross City Tunnel. I quite like the architecture on the inside; it's cool that all the new underground Sydney Metro stations have such a different look. The layout with the diagonal passageways from each entrance to each platform is quite interesting; looks easy to navigate but could potentially take some time to walk along. I wonder why this station has less escalator capacity than Martin Place or Central; it seems like it'd need more because of its location.
Yeah, I'm loving the new Metro architecture and their individual personalities. I recall Paul saying it was deliberate so people could tell the new stations apart from one another.
I bet people will complain about the walk between the two platforms if they need to change.
Hi @exploringsydneysrailways, Yes, I hadn't thought about the Cross City Tunnel, but that is probably why it is closer to the surface. It's probably a little smaller than Martin Place and Central, but as there are no direct interchanges, I reckon it should be fine.
Yes, that's right @kazwilson425. It does make it easier to recognise the station as you arrive at the station from a train. People shouldn't need to change platforms at Gadigal, unless they've got on a train in the wrong direction!
Love the building histories at the end. Maybe a whole new line of content?
Yes, I do plan to cover what was there before for other Sydney Metro stations in the future. I have already done this for Martin Place, and also quite a few of the Sydney Metro West stations, as I was able to film what was there myself before it was demolished!
That is so interesting. I work at BDO, and we were the first company to get a spot in parkline place. It will be exciting to see what it offers. I’ve heard it will open sometime Q4 2024, but still a good change in the commercial real estate market of Sydney.
Thank you again for such amazing videos!
That's awesome! I'd love to see inside Parkline place when it opens. Hope you'll be on a high floor! I'm sure the views and facilities will be amazing!
@@TransportVlog I hope that as well! But from the newsletters we’ve received i think we are somewhere in the middle.
Great, coherent video that lets us have an amazing understanding of the new stations in Sydney. I love how Martin place but especially Gadigal station have such cool and unique layouts and designs. I absolutely love it!
Thanks! Glad it helped you make sense of these new stations! I'm looking forward to seeing them for real.
It's all to look Good alertness syndrome
Why isn't this connected to Town Hall station, and it's vast underground shopping area in the Galleries, QVB and towards Pitt St Mall etc. and 580 Geroge to the south.
That would've been awesome for commuters getting around in the rain..
If they relocated the JB hifi in the galleries, that could've've facilitated a walk way to the new station?
Yes, I was expecting an underground connection to Town Hall too. Missed opportunity there. Great Video Paul. Thanks for doing these
There is an article somewhere from one the designers saying they purposely did not want to connect the metro to town hall (even just the walkways) to maintain the Metro as an independent line, ensuring reliability if and when the trains network gets impacted.
@@Hamish395i mean they could’ve still connected it to the galeries since its beside it
@@Hamish395 Ok, the Metro wants to be independent from trains, sure.
(That explains the separate logos from trains and being self driving etc.)
but isn't the whole point of public transport to be interconnected?
E.g. bus stops at ferry wharfs and train stations etc?
They even share the same platforms at Chatswood too
(I know they converted a train line to metro, but still) considering the ease of connecting it, it seems stupid.
I wonder what their excuse is going to be for not connecting Martin Place Metro to the Hunter St Metro.
They're separate lines, but still Metro...
I am pretty sure Paul has completed a video showing the ability to walk from Martin Place through to Hunter Street Metro station and then to Wynyard.
In regards to connecting Town Hall station to Gadigal you would think it would be a pretty easy job to connect Galleries to the escalator landing in the Metro Station. They will not want 1000’s of commuters alighting at either station and having to go to the surface streets and cross roads.
They may also be waiting for the Sydney City council to redevelop the Town Hall. Square. With buildings south of Park Street being demolished (Town Hall Woolworths) there will be opportunities to build tunnels and retail stores underneath Town Hall square and Park Street.
Gadigal will reduce Congestion of Town Hall Station. The Reason for That since Town Hall is the Busiest Station in Sydney Over Central Station. Town Hall is the Most Confiusing Station.
and narrow platforms! Good points.
Yes that's right Ethan. This station will certainly provide an attractive alternative to Town Hall!
Informative and to the point….as usual Paul….well done!
Thanks - glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks Paul. These stations are very well done, especially compared with Melbourne “metro”. The only thing that would be handy is a connection into the pedestrian tunnels that go under Town Hall, QVB, etc.
Yes they certainly are Anthony! I reckon the Melbourne Metro Tunnel stations will be pretty good too. Hopefully they'll do some community open day events at the new stations prior to them opening. Yes an underground connection under Pitt Street and into Town Hall would be wonderful, but sadly its not part of this project.
Let's wait until both Melbourne and Sydney metro are open and operating and then evaluate. Hard to properly judge them while still under construction. The Sydney stations are certainly looking good so far, I'll give you that.
Great summary Paul; getting to the exciting end of the Metro project now!
Thanks Paul, glad you enjoyed it! Yes it's getting very exciting now!
Ripper! I'm looking forward to watching this shortly
Thank you for the update. I am looking forward to the opening of the new Metro stations.
You're very welcome. Its not long now!
More great infrastructure designed and built by the Liberal Party for NSW Residents and Taxpayers. Thank you Gladys and team.
Great video! I used to work in there mixed commercial building briefly, but also worked in the area. We spent countless Friday nights at the Windsor Hotel, which became the Old Windsor and the New Windsor Hotel…
Thanks! I'm sure the nights in the Windsor Hotel were probably more memorable than the commercial building!
I did indeed work in Druids house, and was dissapointed to see it knocked down last I visited
Yes. It makes me so sad they tore down the facades of the old buildings. Sydney is losing its eclectic history. 😢
Thanks, Paul for a great run-down on the new Gadigal station. The name is kind of growing on me. Better than Pitt St, as you said it would have been a bit off seeing Pitt St didn't cover it all. I was looking forward to your return. Currently working on my combo of Dulwich Hill L1.
Glad you enjoyed it Geoff. I was a bit worried, when it was first announced that Pitt Street station was likely to get an aboriginal name, but I was very happy when they decided on "Gadigal".
Yes the virtual signalling station that doesn’t identify the location. Handy for visitors.
@@xr6lad Some of the Parramatta light rail stations are even worse!
@@TransportVlog Hi, Paul, just came rough here, again, it seems for a second time. All looked new to me but oh well. I can hear you but can you slow down just a tad in the speech, please. Last time I probably did it with just subtitles. See you Sunday.
I briefly worked in the Community Relations Commission for NSW (now Multicultural NSW) in the 175 Castlereagh St building way back in 2006. Can't say that I am sad to see it knocked down.
I think originally, there was going to be an entrance on Pitt Street, and it may still be possible to get to Pitt Street via the station plaza, but its not very clear on the plans.
Great video! And thanks for the walk down memory lane, I had totally forgotten about the Maccas on that corner! Not sad it’s gone, that was a filthy street corner 😅😂 I’m loving the modernizing of our city - except for that ugly new pink building above Gadigal South 🙈 Thanks for the great work, looking forward to future updates :)
Thanks Josie, glad you enjoyed it! Yes it's so easy to forget the buildings that used to be there! Hopefully you'll get used to the new pink one over time!
thanks for a coherent and engaging commentary Paul - i feel i will know where I’m going when Gadigal opens. And I really admire the name.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it. Yes one of the reasons for doing the explained videos was to help people navigate the new stations when they open.
Another great video Paul - can't wait to come up and check it out!
Glad you enjoyed it! - Yes me too! It's going to be wonderful to see this for real!
Great video - I particularly appreciated the little 'look back' segment at the end, it's nice to be able to see what used to be there. I can't help thinking the tunnel artwork on that intermediate level wall is TfNSW trying to set a trap for Wile E Coyote...
Thanks!, and glad you enjoyed seeing what used to be there! Possibly! Hopefully, Gadigal Station will have a community open day, and I can find out more about the artwork then!
Paul, you excelled yourself with this video. Thanks.
You're very welcome John! Thanks for your lovely feedback.
Paul have you seen the news in London about the Elizabeth Line having at some of the stations 'goast' passengers on the wall where the seating is at platforms?The wall surfaces there are not wearing well as passe gers are leaving marks on the wall when they've been leaning against it. At the moment trials of new surfaces in those spots are being done using a pattern design. Hope the new Sydney Metro stops fare better.
No I hadn't heard about that Nigel. I am going to London in a few months time, so will see if I can leave a permanent marking on one of the walls! Yes hopefully this won't happen on Sydney Metro!
I hope this build-to-rent building starts a trend in the Sydney CBD and elsewhere in the city.
Yes me too. Hope to see more of these.
Thanks Paul good information and great video.
You're very welcome Jason
i love galadriel station
Thank you for the update.
You mentioned that "the apartment (for rent) building will be opened in June which is around the opening of the Sydney Metro line" which means that the Sydney Metro line (Chatswood-Sydenham) will be operational in June 2024 or later?
'June or July' has been mentioned a lot.
The official timeframe is "middle of 2024", and it all depends on how well the testing goes over the next few months! Indi Sydney could open before or after the metro opens.
Great video mate. Thanks for your effort
Thanks - you're very welcome.
Great, informative and detailed background on new station
Thanks Ray, glad you enjoyed it.
Reminds me very much of the Elizabeth line stations in London
Yes there are some similarities for sure!
The new buildings are looking fabulous, especially the pastel colored building in Bathurst Street. While I have many fond memories from the Hungry Jack's and MacDonalds, none of the old buildings were particularly inspiring, and the new towers plus the stations are great replacements. I live in this area, and so these are my neighborhood. BTW, since I live in a one owner, built to rent 18 story tower, I dispute the claim that that building is the first built to rent tower. Maybe the first in very recent years, but not the first.
Glad you like the new buildings! My understanding is that it's the first build to rent building in the Sydney CBD area, but as you're a local, you probably have more accurate information than I do. I did notice a built to rent building in Mascot recently.
@@TransportVlog My building was built in 1980, however, the first strata titled building in Sydney is Blues Point Tower from 1962, and all buildings before that time would have been single owner, and therefore rented out.
The first high rise apartment tower in the CBD, the Astor, in Macquarie Street (which is around 12+ stories) was originally owned by John O'Brien who paid 11,900 pounds in 1920 to build it, and it was opened in 1923 by the Premier. The first tennants were said to include prominent newspaper tycoons and wool brokers. However, Kingsclere in Kings Cross is older (1912), but outside the CBD, and not as tall as the Astor, however it should be pointed out that all those 12 to 15 story apartment towers built in the 1930's apartment building boom, in Kings Cross, and a lesser extent in the CBD were all single owner buildings built to rent. All of those early towers had single ownership because it was not legal to own individual apartments at that time
The first tower in the Sydney CBD that reached 50 meters (14 stories) was Chulwalla Chamers in 1914, and although a commercial building, and not apartments, all units were rented out and with a single owner. As a bit of fascinating trivia, the fire brigade of the time said that it was 'suicidal' to build towers of that height because they believed it was impossible to fight fires at that height. It appears they learned to adapt eventually :)
It may well be, that strata titles had become the majority form of building development by the 1970's, but my building, in 1980, at the edge of the CBD (near Hyde Park) demonstrates that single ownership did exist for some time afterward.
I quite believe that this is the first build to rent building during the current appartment tower boom of the last 30 years, but whoever told you that this is the first of all time has a very limited understanding of history, and doesn't know that while towers were being built prior to 1962, strata title did not exist before then.
In fact, it could be argued that the non-existance of strata titling was limiting the number of towers being built, and that 1962 marked the beginning of a significant acceleration in tower construction purely because strata title made it easier to sell parts of buildings, rather than the entire building, and the larger the building was, the greater the problem. Strata title was revolutionary in that sense, and all possible because of the new law in NSW, the Conveyancing (Strata Titles) Act of 1961. Ownership of individual apartments was not legal prior to that change of law.
Thanks Paul! Appreciate your work.
You're very welcome Henry
Great video Paul. Your videos are very informative, and the mix of video, pictures and drawings helps build a 3-D picture of how the station is constructed and how people and trains will move inside. Do you know if transfers will be free between Town Hall and Gadigal station? A little surprised there is no underground walkway to join the 2, but maybe it was impossible to build.
I’d like to know regarding no underway as well. In particular, on the north end, the galleries underground shopping centre (linked to Town Hall) ends where Hungry Jacks is on the same corner as the metro station access! I believe the underground JB HI FI (part of the Galleries) is under that Hungry Jacks. If that was not there, a walkway from there to Gadigal would be less than 10 metres!
Hi @jdillon8360, thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! It wouldn't have been possible without the Sydney Metro animated videos, so it was wonderful to be able to use those. Great question, and I'm not sure of the answer. However, most people will change between Train and Metro at Central rather than Town Hall. Its much quicker at Central. Just up one long escalator to the metro concourse, and into Central Walk and up another escalator to the Sydney Trains suburban platforms, and that's probably the reason for the lack of an underground walkway between Town Hall and Gadigal.
Hi @danielcohen7824, I'm not sure of the reason for not including an underground subway, but I'll try and find out if it was considered in the planning stages. Although Central station is better for Train / Metro interchanges, having an underground link into the Galleries would have been nice.
@@TransportVlog Thanks for the response Paul. Yes, the Sydney Metro videos were great but your editing and clear explanations help a lot too. Especially for this Melburnian who isn't all that familiar with Sydney's public transport. That's probably why I hadn't thought of the obvious connection at Central. Let's hope they at least build in some kind of free transfer in the Opal system so that those who accidentally get out at Gadigal can re-enter the system at Town Hall or vice-versa. I'm sure I wouldn't be the only one. I believe the London Underground provides lots of free transfers between stations that are close but not directly connected.
Hi Paul. Any idea why the exit from Charmers St entrance onto Randle Lane is always closed now. They only opened it for a week or two when the entrance was completed?
Hi Murray, no I don't know the reason for that. It leads directly to Randle Lane which has no footpaths, so that may have something to do with it. Maybe there are plans to turn Randle lane into a pedestrian shared zone. These are just my ideas and guesses!
Thanks for the video Paul.
Have you spoken with engineers about the metro tunnels and the cross city road tunnel?
I'm guessing the road tunnels are under the metro.
I think that would be an interesting video
Hi Peter, That would be a great question to ask. I'm fairly confident it goes below, but I'll try and find out.
Keep up the good work Paul!!
Thanks Ralph, will do!
excellent video as always, thanks paul!
You're very welcome, and thanks so much for the Super Thanks tip!
Thanks Paul... very informative :)
You're very welcome Lorraine
WELL DONE THANKS PAUL.🍺
You're very welcome Robert.
Hi Paul, thanks for another interesting video. Gadigal Station had me wondering until you explained it here. For a minute, I though an extra station was being added. Gadigal Station looks quite good there. Incidentally, how do bus commuters travel directly to Circular Quay these days? George Street only has light rail, Castlereagh Street is one way against heading in that direction, Pitt Street is blocked by a mall and I think Elizabeth Street connects directly to the under harbour tunnel. Passengers could leave the bus in Pitt Street and walk to George Street, but that doesn't seem to be the easiest way to get to Circular Quay. Gadigal will be the first station built in Pitt Street as far as I know. I think I remember passing the Windsor Hotel many years ago. The name of the place sounds familiar for some reason. Maybe some of my work colleagues spent time there. Not sure. Anyway, take care and all the best. Rob in Melbourne Australia.
Many of the buses that travel down Elizabeth St finish at Circular Quay.
Thanks. I was wondering how the buses got through these days. I used to catch the 423 bus occasionally into the city from Marrickville and that used to go to circular Quay via Pitt Street. However, I believe now that they all terminate in Pitt Street just before the mall.
@@RGC198 that must’ve been a really long time ago? I’ve been in the CBD for nearly 20 years and buses coming from inner west don’t travel down Pitt St, they go up to Elizabeth after passing Central station.
Actually, I am thinking back to the 1960's and 1970's. When buses head up Elizabeth Street, they could follow the former tram route to get to Circular Quay. I have just looked up my old 423 bus route, which used to run from Earlwood to Circular Quay. Now it runs from Kingsgrove to Martin Place. Both bus routes go through Marrickville and Newtown, but the destinations at either end seem to be completely different.
Hi Rob, Glad you enjoyed it. As @JosieCote mentioned, the buses tend to go via Elizabeth Street these days and do a loop around Circular Quay with bus stops now to the east of the Light Rail terminus.
There was a certain business in between hungry jacks and Macca's. It was a nice place to warm your hands. Iykyk
Humm! - I wonder what that might have been! 😉😜
Great video. I am very impressed with the design. And inspired by the new name. Can we expect Pitt St to become Gadigal St? We can hope.
Thanks Jack, glad you like the design! I think Pitt Street will probably always be Pitt Street, but perhaps a new street will get the Gadigal name!
Another great video Paul. Thanks.
You're very welcome Adam
I remember that hungry jacks and mc Donald's there were always a ton of drunken people and fights starting out there.
Yes I could imagine it would have been a little messy on a Friday and Saturday night!
Yet another great video Paul!
Another good reason not to call it Pitt Street Station is because “Pitt” means something rude in Swedish (think male anatomy) and I’m getting bored with my Swedish friends pointing it out and snickering… brings a whole new meaning to “Pittwater” or the shop “Cupcakes in Pitt”…😊
With that logic, they would have to change the street name of Pitt Street itself as well. 😂🤦♂️
That's funny! I didn't know that! I think Gadigal sounds nicer anyway!
@@Coastal603 - with that logic the joke is missed and we travel down many an unnecessary path for no reason… 🤦🏽♂️🤦🤦🏽♂️🤦
interesting that you cant access the northern entrance from Pitt Street. Wonder what the thinking was there
It may be possible to access Pitt Street via the station plaza, but it's not very clear on the plans.
Thank you so much Paul!
You're very welcome
Oh Paul darling, always coming out with such great informative videos. Give me a kiss darl.
Thanks! Glad you enjoy them! 😗
Get to the bottom of those escalators and it could almost be the Elizabeth Line!
Yes it does have some similarities for sure!
10/10 - top video
Thanks!
No ground floor retail space?
I think there might be space for one or two outlets, but I'm not quite sure.
@@TransportVlog There used to be a great kebab place on the ground floor. And a couple of okay boozers.
Yes, I used to work in the Castlereagh office building. It was uninspiring, and it was for the public service. Sad-dish it's gone, but yeah not really....
Yes, it seems like so many typical commercial buildings of the time! A few others have gone to make way for Hunter Street Station, but I'm sure many more still remain!
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Good idea to name it Gadigal. Celebrate all the great infrastructure the local Aboriginal people designed and built.
They could have a walkway connecting Town Hall and Museum station
Yes it they built something under Park Street, that would link to existing passageways that go all the way to the Museum northern entrance. If you haven't done that, its worth checking out, Probably easier to do from the Museum end.
Acknowledges the Gadigal people that have a proud tradition using trains
They couldn’t even invent a wheel.
Also worth noting that Pitt Street is over 2.5km long, so not the best geographical name.
Absolutely..
And I prefer Gadigal to the other name thrown up - Saunders (after a Greek/Indigenous army Captain )...
If City of Sydney ever completes it's building acquisition program for a new square it can become Gadigal Square.
But in comparison to Gadigal, in which Gadigal country encompasses a huge chunk of Sydney (way more square kilometres than just 2.5km) and could be located anywhere within Inner suburban Sydney (could be near Kingsford, or Artarmon or Summer Hill etc). So no, Pitt Street IS a way more accurate telling of the stations geography. It tells you you’re at the heart of the street, at the heart of the CBD.
@@Coastal603 don't think of it as a geographical name 🙂
i wonder why don't they offer pedestrian walkway to townhall for transfers... is really dumb if they don't do it
Passengers travelling from the south will change at Central, where the combination of the North South concourse and Central Walk provides a faster and easier connection than would be possible by linking Town Hall and Gadigal Stations with a pedestrian walkway. Passengers coming from the north have a cross-platform interchange at Chatswood, and Martin Place provides an interchange from the Eastern Suburbs. A pedestrian link from Gadigal into the Galleries and QVB would be good, but I don't think it would be used by many people from transfers.
I have to that MacDonald probably a dozen times
I'm sure you're not the only one Chris. I'm sure I'd been to it a couple of times! Bankstown station is worth a look now. They are starting to build the second platform!
I was they today doing some filming they doing northern platform now have now started the Western end of station
Here's the problem with the name - where the **** is Gadigal?
Shame about the loss of heritage buildings when there are such hideous high-rise in that area...
Yeah, some of the buildings were interesting, at least from the outside. That office building, not so much. Not a lot of space in the Sydney CBD to fit Metro Stations in though, given the existing infrastructure, new infrastructure (2 Metro lines coming into the city) and topography. They could have put the stations deeper, but that would make entry/exit and transfer less appealing.
If ur a NIMBY, the city isn’t yours
Thanks @daveg2104, that's a great answer!
Who said anything about being a nimby?... Wanting to protect heritage doesn't make me a nimby. I just find it frustrating that there are some really shocking buildings that are of no historical significance and offer nothing to the streetscape in that area that I wish had gone instead.@@ToBAYT
They certainly don't seem to have been one of a kind, although I do agree they were beautiful compared to the new structures. It's pretty major progress for transit in Sydney, though, I think it's worthwhile in the long run!
How come there’s no retail shops in the metro stations. Wasted opportunities
There will be one at the Gadigal South entrance on Bathurst Street. And levels 2 and 3 above Gadigal North will have lots of cafes, restaurants and shops.
Calling it Gadigal is stupid, an area that encompasses a massive chunk of Sydney it makes for a vague reference as to where the station actually is. It could be in Petersham. Pitt St is at least more geographically correct & is less vague. I get the virtue signalling but it makes no sense. Would have been better to call the whole thing the Gadigal line, that would actually make sense & then leave the station with a name that is more geographically specific. It's like calling it the "Sydney" station, it's silly.
Also, given the station is one block from Townhall they should have had a tunnel connecting the station concourses to encourage people to transfer from Trains network to Metro network.
Agree
Hi Adam, yes it would have been wonderful to see a tunnel into the Galleries and the QVB. However, Central has been designed to be the key interchange between Train and Metro, rather than Town Hall / Gadigal, and to me, this seems like the right decision.
I’m guessing you feel the same way about macarthur?
@@rileyeyeyy yea, I do. It was initially slated to be named Ambarvale but they changed it for some reason, probably because there was barely anything there apart from Macarther Square shopping centre. It used to be called the East hills line as many stations fit within East Hills electorate.
Kinda funny though isn’t it, you’ve detected the slightest hint of someone pushing back against woke symbolism & felt the need to defend it by seeking out an obscure example to justify it. This symbolism just for the sake of it needs to stop & we need to use common sense. We should acknowledge indigenous culture but not in a nonsensical manner that makes no sense & is devoid of any meaning.
I’m guessing you probably didn’t celebrate Aussie day last week.
@@TransportVlog Sorry but it’s not the right decision. It’s simply a case of appeasing minority groups purely for political tokenism. It’s been happening across this country and the western world for years and people are getting now fed up with this virtue signalling identity politics, and they have every right to. We live in a democracy after all.
Surely they were better names to choose from. Then choosing a woke name.
What’s funny is we just had a referendum and the vast majority of Australians voted against woke identity politics, and then immediately after that we get this station name change (without the people’s say on it). They are way out of touch with mainstream Australia.
It's called,
Central Station Sydney.
That station is a kilometre south. I think your compass is wrong.
Why did they change the name?
I explained why in the first couple of minutes of this video
@@TransportVlog ok
They changed it purely for virtue signalling purposes and political point scoring.
very undignified quantity of seats on the platforms
What..Gadigal..garbage crap...and why..so a bunch of garbage high horse politicians look good.
Ahh the virtual signalling station. Let’s name it something that has absolutely nothing to identify the location. Hilarious you say Pitt St wasn’t really a great name. Neither is something that no one identify us the area with.
Wynyard station says hi.
@@JnooooooWynyard St and Wynyard Park say ‘Hi’ right back. Any such location round this station?
Wait till you find out about Southern Cross station
When the name was announced, it was reported in Time Out - and the stream of racist comments on their Facebook page led them to shut the comments section down. All over a name! 'It's wokeness gone mad!' This is the sort of behaviour that's now been emboldened.
That's interesting! - I wasn't aware of that!
I don’t blame those comments, people have every right to criticise the name change that happened without the people having their say on it. That’s how democracy works
@@Coastal603 Why would this name be objectionable? And who exactly are 'the people' in this case - a small but loud bunch of bigots? I should have added that comments supporting the name had far more likes.
gadigal???? you go along with that nonsense??
Just reporting the facts, and that includes the name change. It may not be to everyone's liking, but the important thing is that we're getting 3 new CBD stations and that's got to be a good thing!
Why is the naming of that station nonsense?
@@JnooooooCause it's woke pc marxist garbagw
What does 'woke' mean?
@@jacobjgleggy1854 exactly!
Worst station name ever. Should’ve kept it as Pitt street station, as Pitt street is iconic and more geographic correct as to where the station is! Changing it to “Gadigal” is nothing but woke pandering and laziness. It’s basically like calling the station “Sydney” but in a different language. I will always call it Pitt Street! Sick of this woke rubbish.
Pitt St is a long street so doesn't really work for a station name.
How do you define woke? You can be sure you're using the term incorrectly.
I hope they paint the outside. It's pretty ugly in pink.
I imagine its to be sympathetic to the Edinburgh hotel, note how the north station also fits with the heritage buildings
And the Greenland Centre across Pitt which has lots of reds and pinks.
While it's not my choice of colour, I quite like having a splash of colour in the city.
Hi @alimfuzzy, its going to stay pink, and as @MachineInput mentioned, it's to allow the Edinburgh Castle Hotel to blend in with this whole development.
Yes absolutely @mark123655. Its good to have a colourful CBD!
Change it back to Pitt Street Mall - or ‘City Station’ as it’s right in the middle of corporate Sydney, I wish they’d stop the woke reinvention of our country. Gadigal south gadigal north gadigal, none of the nomenclature makes sense if you have a variety of entrances without putting its congruous street or road with it .. the powers that be really know how to, by stealth, not only ruin culture, back nonsense of things.. I bet in future people will get out as per building they’ll pass-thru.
I agree, I wish people would call out this nonsense.
it's on Gadigal country cope and seeth. City Station is a lifeless and miserable name.
@@kuyans3889 naming it Gadigal makes for a vague reference as to where the station is actually located, as it’s an area that encompasses a huge chunk of Sydney. At least Pitt Street is more geographically correct and less vague. Calling it Gadigal station is like calling it “Sydney Station”, it’s silly.
@@Coastal603 Pitt street is really not a suitable name, it's a really long street. Gadigal is not the same as calling it Sydney Station, people already call Central "Sydney Central", it would just be confusing and unspecific. Since there are two exits we would have to call it Park and Bathurst or something, which I don't think is the worst name.
Fundamentally though, I just believe that Gadigal is a good name as there no other stations in the CBD area with indigenous names, to name this station anything else is just the complete erasure of Aboriginal history on a core part of the Sydney railway network. It's also just nice to have a name that's a bit different. People will learn where it is, it's not that hard. I don't think it's silly.
@@kuyans3889 People can already learn where they are at Barangaroo reserve, which teaches all kinds of aboriginal history there, and what makes you think naming the station anything other than Gadigal is erasing history??
Should have called it Pitt street, it’s makes no sense
I personally don't like the binocular platform design idea
As I mentioned in the video, cut and cover is always the best option, but not always possible, especially in the CBD.
I would have preferred 'Pitt St'. Are we now going to pander back to the stone age? Bathurst St. also sounds fine to me, at least I know where I am going then. All this name changing stuff is infuriating and I'm afraid is symptomatic of decisions being made for minorities. Sorry to be so sceptical. I enjoyed the video form Paul as usual, but this name change info triggered me off along with emerging facts about our regional trains now being made to substandard finishes in Spain, when we can make our own here. Corruption is a world wide globalist pandemic and Australia is not immune.
Glad you enjoy my videos. I'm going to reserve judgement on the CAF Civity regional trains until I've been on one.
@@TransportVlog Yes indeed, Keep up the great analyses!
Its a bit sad to see a couple of the old buildings that have gone to make way. I guess they were nothing special inside. Great vid. Makes a lot of sense.
Yes it is, but there are still many charming old buildings in Sydney. Glad you enjoyed this video.