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Westfield Bondi Junction

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Shopping mall in New South Wales, Australia
Westfield Bondi Junction
Westfield Bondi Junction
LocationBondi Junction, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°53′31″S 151°15′04″E / 33.892°S 151.251°E / -33.892; 151.251
Address500 Oxford St, Bondi Junction NSW 2022
Opening date1934; 90 years ago (1934) (Grace Bros.)
1970; 54 years ago (1970) (Carousel Centre)
1976; 48 years ago (1976) (Bondi Junction Plaza)
August 2004; 20 years ago (August 2004) (Westfield Bondi Junction)
ManagementScentre Group
OwnerScentre Group
No. of stores and services331
No. of anchor tenants8
Total retail floor area{{convert|131,259|m2|abbr=on}
No. of floors7
Parking3,304 spaces
Public transit accessBondi Junction railway station
Websitewestfield.com.au/bondijunction/
The atrium, looking downwards
Interior of Westfield Bondi Junction (2018)

Westfield Bondi Junction is a large, upmarket shopping centre in the suburb of Bondi Junction in the Eastern Suburbs of Sydney.

Transport

The Eastern Suburbs Line offer frequent services to Bondi Junction station which is a short walk from the centre.

Eastgate Bondi Junction has bus connections to the Sydney CBD, Eastern Suburbs, Inner City, Inner West and St George, as well as local surrounding suburbs. It is served by State Transit. The majority of its bus services are located at the Bondi Junction station bus interchange as well as on Oxford Street outside the centre.

Westfield Bondi Junction has multi level car parks with 3,304 spaces.

History

Westfield Bondi Junction is built on land that was originally occupied Grace Bros, Carousel Centre.

The oldest of these was a Grace Bros. store opened in 1933 on the site of the former Hoyts Coronet picture theatre on Oxford Street. In 1957 the Grace Bros building was replaced by a large building designed by Morrow and Gordon, and with parking for 120 cars; the budget was £500,000, according to the Sydney Morning Herald. In the early 1970s the store's striking Modernist exterior was documented by prominent Sydney photographer Max Dupain. Grace Bros dominated shopping in the region until Bondi Junction Plaza was completed in 1976.

In the early 1970s, a shopping centre known as The Carousel was opened. This three-level centre featured Safeway supermarket (later Woolworths), around 50 stores and notably for the time, a food court. The centre was characterised by a large carousel in the middle atrium of the ground floor (which gave the centre its name).

With the promise of the Eastern Suburbs Railway, a larger shopping centre was built by AMP and the Uniting Church (who owned part of the site). This shopping centre, called Bondi Junction Plaza opened in 1976 and included a David Jones department store. In 1979, the first of two commercial office towers ("Plaza Tower I") was opened above the site. The second ("Plaza Tower II"), larger tower, opened in 1985. Both these towers are over 80 m in height. The construction of the shopping centre was a watershed, as Australia had no other commercial shopping projects of such scale during the 1970s.

The Public Transport Commission originally intended to construct a shopping complex around Bondi Junction railway station and link this to the Bondi Junction Plaza development by means of a tunnel. The tunnel was opposed by the local Chamber of Commerce and subsequently dropped together with the entire commercial development in 1976 when the railway was reassessed in a cost-cutting exercise.

In 1994 Westfield Group bought a controlling stake in Bondi Junction Plaza from AMP and renamed it Westfield Bondi Junction Plaza. In 2000, Westfield purchased the Carousel Centre and the remaining stake in Bondi Junction Plaza. They began planning a redevelopment of the shopping centre and the Grace Brothers site opposite. The first Development Application was lodged with the two councils in 1996 due to the site being located on the border of Waverley and Woollahra councils. The councils were unable to reach a joint conclusion between themselves and Westfield on the development. While they agreed in principle to the development, they variously objected to the scale of the project. In 1997 the Minister for Urban Affairs and Planning, Craig Knowles, approved the initial concept for a redeveloped shopping centre which was then dragged on into 1998 before the NSW government assumed planning control of the project. It was subsequently approved with minor modification. Westfield did not begin development immediately, in view of the then imminent 2000 Olympics.

In 2000 Westfield bought AMP's remaining stake in Bondi Junction Plaza and also purchased the adjacent Carousel centre (which, by the late 1980s, had already been linked in with the Plaza shopping centre, by a series of internal walkways). Plans were amended to incorporate this centre in the redevelopment, further delaying the project.

Following the purchase of the Carousel Centre in 2000, a new expanded scheme was submitted for approval. In 2001 the New South Wales Minister for Planning, Frank Sartor approved the development despite the two councils' objections. The scale of the development was the main reason for the delayed approval process.

This redevelopment known as the 'black label' included the demolition of the existing Grace Brothers store and redevelopment of Carousel and Bondi Juncton Plaza. Both Grace Bros and Woolworths have closed in preparation for this development whilst David Jones have continued to trade whilst undergoing a facelift which included its CBD version of its food hall which is the first to be established in a suburban store. This development included two levels of shops underground reaching 25 metres below as well as three levels of shops and four levels of parking above ground on both sides of Oxford Street. A 70-metre tunnel and a 12-metre wide 2 storey pedestrian bridge over Oxford Street. The development also included a two food courts one on level 3 known a the 'Terrace Food Court' and the other one on level 5 with a balcony overlooking the CBD and Eastern Suburbs.

The redevelopment opened in stages from November 2003 to August 2004 and has become one of the largest shopping complexes in the Sydney metropolitan area. The development featured David Jones, Grace Bros (rebranded to Myer in 2004), Target, Coles, Woolworths, Harvey Norman, JB Hi-Fi, Greater Union (which was renamed to Event Cinemas in 2010) and 458 retailers.

As of July 2014, this shopping centre is now under Scentre Group management.

Westfield Bondi Junction has been blamed for the downturn in trade in surrounding shopping hubs. The nearby Oxford Street, in Paddington is one example. Retail trade in that location dropped 30% in the four months after the opening of the shopping centre with other locations in Double Bay and Woollahra experiencing similar downturn in trade.

In August 2016, Swedish retailer H&M opened its store at the centre. The store opened on the former terrace food court.

Tenants

Westfield Bondi Junction has 131,259m² of floor space. The major retailers include David Jones, Myer, Target, Coles, Harris Farm Markets, Woolworths, H&M, Uniqlo, Zara, Harvey Norman, JB Hi-Fi, Rebel Sport, Freak VR and Event Cinemas

References

  1. "Westfield Bondi Junction". Scentre Group. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  2. "infolink.com.au". Westfield building landmark Bondi Junction. Retrieved 22 November 2006.
  3. "Westfield's 'black label' centre for Bondi Junction". The Sydney Morning Herald. 28 August 2002. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  4. "A jewel in the crown - Ragtrader". www.ragtrader.com.au. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  5. Somasundaram, Narayanan (20 June 2014). "Westfield Retail Shareholders Vote in Favor of Restructure". Bloomberg News.
  6. "Store wars". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 April 2005. Retrieved 22 November 2006.
  7. H&M confirms Bondi and Broadway launches
  8. "H&M confirms Bondi and Broadway launches - Inside Retail". Inside Retail. 28 July 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2017.

External links

Westfield shopping centres in Australia
ACT
Belconnen
Woden
NSW
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Sydney
Tuggerah
Warringah Mall
Qld
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Mt Gravatt (formerly Garden City)
Helensvale
North Lakes
SA
Marion
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Vic
Doncaster
Fountain Gate
Knox
Geelong
Plenty Valley
Southland
WA
Booragoon
Carousel
Innaloo
Whitford City
Scentre Group
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