Location | Eastgardens, New South Wales, Australia |
---|---|
Coordinates | 33°56′41″S 151°13′28″E / 33.94468056°S 151.2243639°E |
Address | 152 Bunnerong Road |
Opening date | 19 October 1987 |
Developer | Westfield Group |
Management | Scentre Group |
Owner | Scentre Group (50%) Terrace Tower Group (50%) |
No. of stores and services | 280 |
No. of anchor tenants | 8 |
Total retail floor area | 82,687 m2 (890,035 sq ft) |
No. of floors | 3 |
Parking | 3,148 spaces |
Website | www |
Westfield Eastgardens is a large shopping centre in the suburb of Eastgardens in the South-Eastern Suburbs of Sydney.[1]
Westfield Eastgardens has bus connections to the Sydney CBD, Eastern Suburbs,[2] as well as local surrounding suburbs. All services are operated by Transdev John Holland. Bus services operate from a bus interchange at the Bunnerong Road end of the shopping centre. There is no railway station at Eastgardens; the nearest station is located at Mascot.
Westfield Eastgardens also has multi level car park with 3,148 spaces.
Westfield Eastgardens was built on the site of the former Urban Transit Authority Pagewood bus depot. The depot closed in 1982 and was soon followed by the nearby Holden and WD & HO Wills factories. The closure of these two sites would result in job losses of around 1,000 people.[citation needed] In order to save jobs, the Government of New South Wales persuaded the Westfield Group to develop the site. The Government rezoned the site and added crown land in order to convince Westfield. In July 1982, three other commercial landlords whose own trade would be affected by the new shopping centre made a challenge to the Land & Environment Court. Following this the Government passed legislation that disallowed an appeal to be made to the Land & Environment Court. Significant public debate followed about the right of the New South Wales Government to overrule the legal process.[3]
Westfield Eastgardens opened on 19 October 1987 and was the largest shopping centre in Australia for a short period until Chadstone Shopping Centre in Melbourne was redeveloped. When the centre opened, it had David Jones, Super Kmart, Target, Franklins, a 6-screen Hoyts cinema as well as 150 other retailers.[4] The Super Kmart hypermarket combined a discount department store (Kmart) and supermarket (Coles)
Since its opening in 1987, the centre has been blamed for a downturn in trade in nearby Maroubra Junction as it was the main retail centre for the area since the opening of Stockland Mall Maroubra in 1981.[5]
In 2002, the centre was redeveloped and third level was added and featured a new Woolworths supermarket, Big W opened and the total amount of retailers rose to 290 with parking for 3,260 cars and the upgrade of Hoyts.[4] When the redevelopment completed, Westfield Eastgardens was the first shopping centre in New South Wales to house three discount department stores, Kmart, Target and Big W.[6]
On 23 September 2007, David Jones closed its store after 20 years of trade due to its proximity to the company's Westfield Bondi Junction and Elizabeth Street/Market Street stores. Myer took over David Jones' space after an extensive refurbishment and opened on 8 March 2008.[7][8][9] The opening of the store had marked the return of Myer-Grace Bros to southeastern Sydney since the closure of GoodBuys Clearance in Maroubra in 2002. This swap is similar to Bankstown Central and Westfield Burwood but in an opposite direction (David Jones replacing Myer).[10]
On 24 July 2012, Westfield Eastgardens suffered significant damage when part of the car park collapsed at around 07:00am. Around 500 people were evacuated from the building when a second-level steel beam that supported the car park roof broke. The entire shopping centre was closed off after a survey found the collapse may have caused structural damage in other areas of the building. The dislodgement of the beam caused a partial roof collapse near the food court entrance on the second level, bringing down a plant room, air conditioning units, a cool room, toilet facilities, exhaust fans and an electrical switchboard. Police set up an exclusion zone around the centre and redirected road traffic. The building was closed pending further investigation. The building reopened the following day for retail trade, although some areas in the food court remained closed. Repairs were underway to restore the collapsed sections of the building.[11][12]
In July 2013, Franklins was rebranded to Romeo's Supa IGA which operated until its closure in March 2015. The space vacated by IGA was taken over by Aldi which opened on 19 August 2015.[citation needed]
On 23 November 2013, a new dining precinct opened which included six new restaurants and was the final stage of the $45 million redevelopment following the centre's revitalised fashion and ambience offering which opened in June.[13]
In July 2018, Scentre Group acquired 50% stake of Westfield Eastgardens from Terrace Tower Group for $720 million.[14][15]
Westfield Eastgardens has 84,627m² of floor space. The major retailers include Aldi, Big W, Coles, Cotton On, Cotton On Body, Cotton On Kids, Factorie, Hoyts, JB Hi-Fi, JD Sports, Kmart, Myer, Rebel, Supré, Target, Typo and Woolworths.
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