Sydney’s laneways were abandoned to rats and garbage trucks. Now they’re being reclaimed for humans

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From the birdsong of Angel Place to the inspirational messages of Abercrombie Street, take a tour of Sydney’s top 10 laneways.

Looking up at the sky from Bridge lane.Audrey Richardson

Rowe Street was the closest thing to Paris in Sydney. With tearooms, fashion and art, the laneway linked Castlereagh and Pitt streets and was called the “primrose path of dalliance”.

Along with other dead-ends and alleys, including Robin Hood Lane, it was destroyed last century when the City of Sydney sold 20 laneways to developers wanting larger sites for projects such as Mark Foy’s – then the world’s largest department store – and later Australia Square.

The sales generated $57 million in revenue from the 1960s to the late 1980s, but locals complained of “gargantuan developments” destroying neighbourhoods.

Bridget Smyth, the City of Sydney’s architect and chief designer, who has a passion to revitalise the Sydney City laneway. She is pictured on Abercrombie Lane.
Bridget Smyth, the City of Sydney’s architect and chief designer, who has a passion to revitalise the Sydney City laneway. She is pictured on Abercrombie Lane.Renee Nowytarger

Now the City of Sydney is trying to bring back the spirit of what was lost. For the past 20 years, city architect and chief designer Bridget Smyth has been leading Lord Mayor Clover Moore’s program to pump blood through the arteries of the city’s heart by revitalising dozens of laneways, encouraging small bars and installing art underfoot, overhead and on scruffy walls.

1. Angel Place

Angel Place was where the city’s laneway renaissance began, Smyth said on a laneway tour.

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She says if you ask a Sydneysider how to turn an old city lane used by trucks delivering goods – and removing garbage and night soil in the past – into a hot spot to visit, they’ll likely say fairy lights.

Angel Place is bustling most nights. But when the city suggested turning it into a place for restaurants and bars, property owners were initially reluctant. The art changed it all.
Angel Place is bustling most nights. But when the city suggested turning it into a place for restaurants and bars, property owners were initially reluctant. The art changed it all.Wolter Peeters

They help, but not enough. Making a place for humans rather than cars takes years of negotiations between property owners, state government, and utilities and artists.

Sydney laneways through the years.
Sydney laneways through the years.City of Sydney

Art, though, was the “catalyst for transformation. Art changes everything.”

Angel Place was once in “disgraceful condition”. Pickpockets loved it.

The installation of Forgotten Songs, a public artwork by Michael Thomas Hill of empty bird cages that play the songs of birds that once lived in the CBD, was meant to be temporary.

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Developers were initially unhappy about the transformation because they had to pay for alterations, such as knocking doors through back walls to provide shops and bars. Once they saw Hill’s cages hanging above the bumpy lane, they saw its potential. They are now permanent.

2. Council place

Danish urban planner and architect Jan Gehl advised Moore to turn George Street into a boulevard with light rail, add more public squares, and create laneways and more intimate spaces.

It’s standing room only inside Cantina OK!
It’s standing room only inside Cantina OK!Dexter Kim

“A good city is like a good party – people stay longer than really necessary because they are enjoying themselves,” he said.

It is always a party in Council Lane. Other than its grungy character, the attraction is Cantina OK! – included in a list by theworlds50best.com.

The “almost literally hole-in-the-wall place is well worth a look”, reviewers say.

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There’s not much else in this lane other than grunge. That’s OK with Smyth: “You don’t want to scrub everything and make it new. It is not about making everything the same.”

Rowe Street was a bustling street full of coffee shops, fashion and art – a little taste of bohemian Paris that was much-loved by Sydneysiders before it was demolished in the early 1970s to make way for the MLC Centre (now 25 Martin Place).
Rowe Street was a bustling street full of coffee shops, fashion and art – a little taste of bohemian Paris that was much-loved by Sydneysiders before it was demolished in the early 1970s to make way for the MLC Centre (now 25 Martin Place).City of Sydney Archives
City of Sydney architect Bridget Smyth chats with Mitch Kruse at Cantina OK!
City of Sydney architect Bridget Smyth chats with Mitch Kruse at Cantina OK! Renee Nowytarger

The laneway revival was about adding a human quality “somewhere to sit, eat or drink, something wonderful to experience”.

Something surprising, too. Architect Sam Crawford gravitates to the less public alleys of any city to see the unvarnished face. In Sydney, “you are just as likely to encounter a rat as an illegally parked late model Range Rover”.

3. Kimber Lane

Kimber Lane in Chinatown was a dingy service lane. Now it is home to Jason Wing’s installation, In Between Two Worlds, which represents the artist’s Indigenous and Chinese background.

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Reviving these old alleys was a transition from “refuse to re-use”, said architect Philip Vivian, managing director of Bates Smart, an architectural practice integrating laneways into new projects.

Artist Jason Wing in Kimber Lane in Chinatown with his street artwork titled “In Between Two Worlds”.
Artist Jason Wing in Kimber Lane in Chinatown with his street artwork titled “In Between Two Worlds”.Dallas Kilponen

Vivian said the domination of cars had created the need for big streets and blocks. The challenge was how to take back the city, he said.

Smyth said there are plans for more restaurants in Kimber. “If the city thrives, the business community thrives,” Smyth said.

“Our plan was to address congestion, livability, and housing affordability. But the one big thing we heard really loudly was that people wanted a better city. They wanted a human city.”

4. Market Row

Running between Clarence and York streets, behind the QVB and near Town Hall, Market Row is not somewhere anyone, anywhere, would expect art.

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That’s the twist. In Through the Out Door by Callum Morton was designed to remind the public that cities are never fully known.

One of Callum Morton’s “In Through the Out Door” mosaics in Market Row, an inner-Sydney laneway near Town Hall.
One of Callum Morton’s “In Through the Out Door” mosaics in Market Row, an inner-Sydney laneway near Town Hall.Courtesy of Callum Morton
Callum Morton’s work “Through the Out Door” reimagines three rear doorways in city laneways on Market Row and Mullins Street, between Clarence and York streets. Through colour and pattern the artworks play with the experience of people walking in the city, probing their unconscious memory of places and spaces across and through its streets.
Callum Morton’s work “Through the Out Door” reimagines three rear doorways in city laneways on Market Row and Mullins Street, between Clarence and York streets. Through colour and pattern the artworks play with the experience of people walking in the city, probing their unconscious memory of places and spaces across and through its streets. City of Sydney

Morton said laneways were places to witness the “unadorned fabric of the city’s life” – fire escapes, the homeless, garbage bins, workers taking breaks, and seemingly outmoded retail outlets.

He didn’t want to change anything, but “make it more mysterious, revelatory and curious”.

5. Reiby Place

Look in your wallet to see a portrait of Mary Reibey (same woman, different spelling) on an Australian $20 note. This is her place.

Mary Reibey is pictured on Australia’s $20 note.
Mary Reibey is pictured on Australia’s $20 note.RBA
A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle, said Gloria Steinem. Her message is embodied in this feminist artwork by Dutch-American artist Lara Schnitger, (pictured) which surprises visitors to this otherwise grungy lane.
A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle, said Gloria Steinem. Her message is embodied in this feminist artwork by Dutch-American artist Lara Schnitger, (pictured) which surprises visitors to this otherwise grungy lane. Rhett Wyman

Patchwork of Light (2020) by Lara Schnitger, illuminates 10 feminist heroes in bright light boxes, including Reibey, a business owner who came to Australia as a convict.

The boxes include a fish on bicycle, a play on Gloria Steinem’s famous quote about how little a woman needs a man.

Schnitger said the work was an ode to what it took for women to succeed and make a change: “Iron will.”

Reiby Place was home to the Basement jazz club.
Reiby Place was home to the Basement jazz club. Scott Whitehair

This lane is studded with pit lids and manholes, which prompted Smyth to make a change.

When she came back to work after maternity leave in 2005, a former council chief executive offered her what could be called a pit sandwich (designing manhole covers). “It was utility hatch covers, bespoke design.”

It was a fad going on in the world, but she didn’t want to do it. She agreed, as long as she could do laneways too.

It was a good negotiation, the laneways flourished, the pit lids project didn’t proceed, and that baby boy is now studying architecture.

6. Underwood Street and 180 George Street

Redevelopment turned half of this site into public space, with a large public plaza sheltered by the artwork by Daniel Boyd and Ghanaian-British architect Sir David Adjaye.

It also includes a network of lanes providing new places to eat, including the famous laksa stop.

In Underwood Street, a 35-metre 200-year-old blackbutt tree is suspended, an installation by the large artwork by Michael McIntyre. It has also been home to other major installations, including the seven-metre bar.

The Seven Metre Bar, a previous installation in Underwood Lane, highlighted inaction on climate change.
The Seven Metre Bar, a previous installation in Underwood Lane, highlighted inaction on climate change.Tamara Dean

As it has elsewhere, the city gave developers extra floor space if they provided art-filled laneways offering food and retail.

7. Abercrombie Lane

To see how Sydney looked in its earliest days, walk down this narrow laneway that leads to Tankstream Way – named for the city’s earliest water supply – and Bridge Lane, home to Mr Wong restaurant.

Katy B Plummer’s work “We Are All Astonishingly Wise” has been temporarily removed and will return later this year. But some of her quotes on the walls of Abercrombie Lane remain.
Katy B Plummer’s work “We Are All Astonishingly Wise” has been temporarily removed and will return later this year. But some of her quotes on the walls of Abercrombie Lane remain. Steven Siewert

After Sydney was settled, the city grew like bacteria – organically – compared to the planned grid of Melbourne. It was a city of laneways and leftover spaces. Today there are only 110 lanes left in the CBD.

On Abercrombie Street, home to the Grumpy Baker and speakeasy-style bar Palmer & Co, art urges pedestrians: “Bring Your Optimistic Heart.”

“Always do, always,” said one pedestrian, patting his heart.

Another sign on Bridge Lane promises good luck just around the corner.

Good luck.
Good luck. Audrey Richardson
Abercrombie Street’s artwork has varied over the years. Bring our optimistic art says this quote. It was part of Katy B Plummer’s artwork “We Are All Astonishingly Wise”, which will return later this year.
Abercrombie Street’s artwork has varied over the years. Bring our optimistic art says this quote. It was part of Katy B Plummer’s artwork “We Are All Astonishingly Wise”, which will return later this year. Wolter Peeters
Plummer’s work, in which an interactive fortune-telling video installation on Abercrombie Lane features a pink furry ghost wearing a crown and snazzy green shoes. It has been temporarily removed.
Plummer’s work, in which an interactive fortune-telling video installation on Abercrombie Lane features a pink furry ghost wearing a crown and snazzy green shoes. It has been temporarily removed. Steven Siewert

8. Quay Quarter Laneways

The pedestrianised Loftus Street next to Quay Quarter laneways is the newest project.

Landscape architect Sacha Coles, the global design director of ASPECT Studios, said laneways provide a spot to watch the world go by.

“The biggest benefit is that people can walk and spill out, do what we’re doing right now,” Coles said as he sat in Quay Quarter near Circular Quay.

“And be a flâneur,” a person who watches the world go by.

Public spaces can be contested and tribal, Coles said. So he designed a “share way” of 10km/h that put everyone on an equal footing.

Sacha Coles, global design director of Aspect studios and laneway expert, in Loftus Lane.
Sacha Coles, global design director of Aspect studios and laneway expert, in Loftus Lane.Peter Rae
Art was installed through the Quay Quarter lanes.
Art was installed through the Quay Quarter lanes.Rhett Wyman, supplied

Smyth said the area, with new apartments above, was part of Moore’s push to bring people back to the city. “The minute you start getting mixed use, with apartments, the laneways become more relevant. If it’s just a city for workers and businesses, you get lumpy buildings.”

9. Temperance Lane

This lane defies its name. It is lit up with a huge neon sculpture by Newell Harry. Moore said laneways with small bars provide an alternative to the big venues with poker machines and sports screens. Many were less expensive to rent, too.

Barbara Flynn, a public art curatorial consultant, said Sydney had sought to create a city that looks like no other.

Grasshopper Bar in Sydney's Temperance Lane.
Grasshopper Bar in Sydney’s Temperance Lane.James Brickwood

“Every work of art commissioned is so particular to place that it couldn’t be anywhere else,” she said. It brought life to the “throwaway spaces”.

10. Bulletin Place

Public art curator Barbara Flynn looks down on one of more than 60 handcrafted bronze birds made by artist Tracey Emin. The work starts at Macquarie Place Park in the city.
Public art curator Barbara Flynn looks down on one of more than 60 handcrafted bronze birds made by artist Tracey Emin. The work starts at Macquarie Place Park in the city.Janie Barrett
A view of Penfold Place through the arch from Macquarie Place.
A view of Penfold Place through the arch from Macquarie Place. Audrey Richardson

Turned into pedestrian walkways in the 1980s, Bulletin Place became home to restaurants including winemaker Len Evans.

Detour through the city’s best arches from Pitt Street to Macquarie Place opposite Quay Quarter to see internationally recognised artist Tracey Emin’s installation of birds, The Distance of Your Heart.

Download one of the City’s apps, maps or go on a walk being held during the Heritage Festival until mid-May. 

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Julie PowerJulie Power is a senior reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via X or email.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: www.smh.com.au