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Pyrmont railway station

New South Wales rail transport stubsProposed Sydney Metro stationsRailway stations scheduled to open in 2032Use Australian English from September 2023
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Pyrmont railway station is an underground rapid transit station, to be built underneath the suburb of Pyrmont as part of the Sydney Metro West line. The station is under construction between Pyrmont Bridge Road and Union Street, and is scheduled to open alongside the rest of the line in 2032. Once opened, the station will provide access to the Darling Harbour precinct, with connections to light rail services to the CBD and Dulwich Hill, alongside ferry services to Circular Quay. In February 2024, preliminary concepts for over station development featuring a mix-used 31 story tower were released for public consultation.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Pyrmont railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Pyrmont railway station
Union Street, Sydney Pyrmont

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Wikipedia: Pyrmont railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -33.870017737594 ° E 151.19674161784 °
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Address

Jumbo Thai

Union Street 60
2009 Sydney, Pyrmont
New South Wales, Australia
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Nearby Places

Australian National Maritime Museum
Australian National Maritime Museum

The Australian National Maritime Museum (ANMM) is a federally operated maritime museum in Darling Harbour, Sydney. After considering the idea of establishing a maritime museum, the federal government announced that a national maritime museum would be constructed at Darling Harbour, tied into the New South Wales state government's redevelopment of the area for the Australian bicentenary in 1988. The museum building was designed by Philip Cox, and although an opening date of 1988 was initially set, construction delays, cost overruns, and disagreements between the state and federal governments over funding responsibility pushed the opening to 1991. One of six museums directly operated by the federal government, the ANMM is the only one located outside of the Australian Capital Territory. The museum is structured around seven main galleries, focusing on the discovery of Australia, the relationships between the Australian Aborigines and the water, travel to Australia by sea, the ocean as a resource, water-based relaxation and entertainment, the naval defence of the nation, and the relationship between the United States of America and Australia. The last gallery was funded by the United States government, and is the only national museum gallery in the world funded by a foreign nation. Four additional gallery spaces are used for temporary exhibits. Three museum ships – the HM Bark Endeavour Replica, the destroyer HMAS Vampire, and the submarine HMAS Onslow – are open to the public, while smaller historical vessels berthed outside can be viewed but not boarded.