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338 Pitt Street, Sydney

Proposed buildings and structures in Sydney
338 Pitt Street photomontage, St Marys Cathedral view
338 Pitt Street photomontage, St Marys Cathedral view

338 Pitt Street is a proposed skyscraper complex in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, consisting of twin 80 storey towers designed by FJCstudio and lowrise buildings designed by Aileen Sage Architects, Polly Harbison Design, and Trias Studio. The complex will include a 209-room 4.5 star hotel and 607 apartments, as well as ground level retail. The properties comprising the 6,000 m2 site were acquired by Han's Holding Group over a five-year period beginning in 2015, and the initial proposal, comprising twin towers linked by a skybridge and six low-rise podium buildings, gained approval from the City of Sydney in March 2021. The site and its development approvals were sold to Billbergia Group and Metrics Credit Partners in January 2025. The new owners lodged amended plans for approval by the City of Sydney in July 2025, removing the skybridge from the proposal and reducing the scale of the hotel and retail components, as well as modestly increasing the number of apartments and the height of the towers. Billbergia Group and Metrics intend to begin demolition of the existing buildings on the site in 2026.

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338 Pitt Street, Sydney
Pitt Street, Sydney Sydney

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Wikipedia: 338 Pitt Street, SydneyContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -33.876387 ° E 151.208151 °
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Pitt Street 338
2000 Sydney, Sydney
New South Wales, Australia
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338 Pitt Street photomontage, St Marys Cathedral view
338 Pitt Street photomontage, St Marys Cathedral view
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Nearby Places

The Metro Theatre
The Metro Theatre

The Metro Theatre (commonly the Metro) is a music venue located on George Street, in the city centre of Sydney, Australia. The venue was redeveloped, from two former cinemas, by property developer Leon Fink.The foyer of the Metro, designed by leading Australian stage designer Brian Thomson, features a lightweight plastic replica of the Art Deco crystal chandelier which once hung in Regent Theatre which formerly stood opposite the Metro in George Street. Acts who generally perform at the Metro usually are Heavy Metal music, indie-rock and alternative bands, often of international fame. It was the venue for the now-legendary Sydney concerts in 1995 by Jeff Buckley and a record seven sold out shows in a row over six days in 1996 by You Am I, among many others. It has two separate performance spaces inside the building, the Forum (often simply called the Metro) and the Transit Lounge (which, in January 2007, was re-launched and re-branded as the Lair). Up until 2007 it was not uncommon for both spaces to be used on the same night for different acts, with the larger of the two, the Forum, generally hosting the more famous act. Since the launch of the Lair the space has seldom been used for a public performance, as its primary function was to house MTV Australia's the Lair live music programme. For a brief period in the second half of 2006 the venue was known as the Century Theatre after it went into receivership and was acquired by Century Venues. It was changed back to the Metro Theatre by October 2006. On 16 September 2009 the Metro was rebranded as the Virgin Mobile Metro, after a sponsorship deal had been made. Dappled Cities Fly and the Seabellies both played at the launch night on 29 September 2009.