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Darling Harbour in $1 billion revamp

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Exhibition Centre timelapse

Watch as the roof of the new Sydney Exhibition Centre in Darling Harbour is lifted into place. Vision ICC Sydney.

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Darling Harbour is to undergo a $1 billion facelift that will see the construction of a new 44-storey office tower, updated retail offerings and a Cockle Bay amphitheatre.

The co-owners of the site at Darling Park, GPT, AMP and Brookfield, will join forces to revitalise Cockle Bay Wharf, which spans the eastern side of Darling Harbour from the Pyrmont Bridge and south towards the Imax Sydney. The first of the three office towers opened in 1994, while the Cockle Bay restaurants followed in 1999.

The co-owners of Darling Park are set to undertake a $1 billion revamp of the precinct, which will see the construction ...

The co-owners of Darling Park are set to undertake a $1 billion revamp of the precinct, which will see the construction of 44-storey tower and new retail offerings.

But in the past three years the surrounding areas have changed with the construction of Barangaroo, Darling Quarter, the International Convention Centre and new Sofitel hotel, as well as the proposed redevelopment of the Imax theatre into a hotel called The Ribbon project and the former Entertainment Centre into the City of Sydney library and roof top bar.

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In time, Mirvac, the owner of Harbourside shopping centre, will undertake a revamp of the mall, as the final piece of the Cockle Bay upgrade.

GPT's wholesale office fund will co-ordinate the Darling Park project in the area that was the first to open at Cockle Bay in 1995. The main tenant is now the Commonwealth Bank, which may lose some of its views with the new tower.

The co-owners of Darling Park are set to undertake a $1 billion revamp of the precinct.

The co-owners of Darling Park are set to undertake a $1 billion revamp of the precinct.

Under the scheme, as well as the commercial space there will be more than a hectare of green public space terracing down to the harbour's edge, according to the consortium representative, Matthew Faddy.

"This is an important area for Sydney, completing the reinvention of Darling Harbour as a true entertainment precinct and reconnecting the CBD to the harbour's edge by utilising wasted space and building over the Western Distributor. We will be creating a new public green space in the city where people can eat, enjoy and relax," Mr Faddy said.

The master-planning process is well under way and there will be ongoing discussions with state and council authorities, existing tenants and neighbours.

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