Jump to content

Top Ryde City

Coordinates: 33°48′44″S 151°06′22″E / 33.812182°S 151.1060215°E / -33.812182; 151.1060215
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Top Ryde City
View of Top Ryde City from Devlin Street
Map
LocationRyde, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°48′44″S 151°06′22″E / 33.812182°S 151.1060215°E / -33.812182; 151.1060215
AddressCnr Devlin Street &, Blaxland Road
Opening date11 November 1957 (original)
20 August 2010 (current)
OwnerBlackstone
No. of stores and services276
Total retail floor area78,125 m2 (840,931 sq ft)
No. of floors6
Parking6,150
Websitewww.toprydecity.com.au

Top Ryde City, previously known as Top Ryde Shopping Centre, is a large shopping centre in Ryde, a suburb of Sydney, Australia. It is owned by Blackstone.

History

[edit]
La Strada section of Top Ryde City
The original Top Ryde Shopping Centre in 2006

The original Top Ryde Shopping Centre was opened on the current 3.5 hectare site on 14 November 1957 by the Premier of New South Wales Joe Cahill.[1] It was the first post-war major open-air shopping centre built in New South Wales[citation needed] and the second post war and open-air mall-type complex built in Australia after Chermside Drive-In Shopping Centre in Brisbane.[citation needed]

The centre was the dream of Peter Benjamin from the retailing family who opened A.J. Benjamin's in the suburb of Chatswood.[citation needed] Benjamin had travelled to the United States in 1953 where he visited about 20 shopping centres in the new American style and met up with friend Peter Yeoman who was completing postgraduate studies in Detroit on the subject of American shopping centres. Together they devised a design for such a shopping centre in Sydney. Yeoman came up with the idea of the apricot brick and the windowless building with vertical divisions, while Benjamin sketched the layout for retailing.[citation needed]

Top Ryde was anchored by Sydney-based A.J. Benjamin & Co department store, Franklins supermarket, a chain variety store and 45 other shops grouped around a pedestrian mall, with 400 parking spaces. The centre feature modern sculpture centre which was a focal point designed by artist Gordon Andrews, a personal friend of Peter Yeoman. Top Ryde was established with the motto "come as you are...shop in comfort" offering a new experience for the shopper who until this time would have needed to travel to Sydney or Parramatta to gain access to a major department store and such a wide range of variety shopping.[2]

In 1962, Top Ryde was sold to Lendlease who undertook expansion of the centre.[citation needed] Woolworths was opened in 1963 in addition to the expansion of the centre which also included a variety store, several speciality shops and another 200 car parking spaces. The A.J. Benjamin store closed and was taken over by Grace Bros in 1964. As regional shopping centres became the focus of community activities and associated recreational activities a Ten Pin Bowling Alley opened in the 1970s known as BowlAustralia's WondABowl- Top Ryde which was rebranded in 2003 to AMF Bowling.[citation needed]

The centre underwent refurbishment and redevelopment in 1986 and changed its name to Top Ryde Shopping Square. A new multi-storey carpark was constructed, along with new entrances, roofing of the mall area and a general upgrade. Venture then moved into the space vacated by Grace Bros.[3]

With the opening of Macquarie Centre in 1981 and the continual growth of centres such as Westfield Hornsby, Westfield Parramatta, Birkenhead Point Outlet Centre and most recently the opening Rhodes Shopping Centre in 2004 severely affected the retail trade of Top Ryde.[4][5] The centre lost a lot of stores including Target which closed around 2005–2006.

Towards the end of the centre's life, it was almost a dead mall featuring Woolworths, Franklins, a bowling alley and around 90 stores which were predominantly banks and service stores.[citation needed] The centre was situated over 2 floors. The lower level had direct access to the bottom carpark level and featured Woolworths and a small food court. It was connected to the upper level via a travelator. The upper level contained Franklins and access to Blaxland Road and Devlin Street, as well as access to bus services.[citation needed]

In July 2007, the centre was demolished, and shortly thereafter, construction began on redeveloping the site. The new centre was renamed to Top Ryde City after it was a chosen name from City of Ryde Council.[citation needed]

Big W store in Top Ryde City

Stage 1 was opened on 5 November 2009, consisting of around 115 stores including Woolworths, Big W, Dan Murphy's and JB Hi-Fi. This is on the Tucker Street side of the development. Other stages progressively opened throughout 2010, each stage next to the previous moving progressively towards Pope Street.[citation needed]

Stage 2 was completed and opened in March 2010 and included the opening of Aldi, Rebel Sport and 60 speciality stores. This also saw the first section of La Strada (fashion precinct) opened.[citation needed]

Stage 3 was completed which consisted of the Myer department store and additional fashion outlets within the La Strada opened on 4 August 2010.[citation needed]

Top Ryde City had its official opening on 20 August 2010 which was presided over by Prime Minister Julia Gillard.[6]

The final works which included Event Cinemas, a childcare centre, medical centre, Gymnasium, The new Ryde Library and The Ryde Planning and Business Centre all opened in February 2011.[7][8] There were plans for Strike Bowling to open in February 2011, but the plans were cancelled and the bowling alley never opened.

The southern pedestrian overpass opened in December 2009 and the northern pedestrian overpass was opened in August 2010.

The development of the project encountered a number of problems, including issues of worker safety in the surrounding roads[9] and a near fatal workplace accident.[10] In addition to this, the local Chamber of Commerce raised some concerns with the project managers about the movement of trucks near the site, although these seem to have been dealt with by the project managers with the termination of contracts with trucking companies.[11]

The original owners of Top Ryde City entered administration in 2011 with McGrathNicol appointed administrator.[12] Top Ryde was sold to Blackstone in November 2012.[13][14]

In 2014 property developer Crown Group Holdings completed the final apartments in its 653-apartment development, Top Ryde City Living. The seven-tower residential complex is home to more than 600 residents and positioned above Top Ryde City Shopping Centre with views to the Sydney Harbour Bridge, Blue Mountains and North Shore.[15][16]

The development was awarded the NSW President's award in 2014 by the Urban Development Institute of Australia.[17]

Recent development

[edit]
La Piazza section of Top Ryde City

On 5 May 2015, Myer has closed its Top Ryde store due to poor sales with many customers increasingly shopping at other Myer stores such as Parramatta, Chatswood, Macquarie Centre and Sydney.[18][19] The redevelopment began in June 2015 which saw many stores closed or relocated during the redevelopment including Freedom Furniture and Supa IGA which have both closed. This development consists of

  • A full line Kmart on the space previously occupied by Supa IGA (and Franklins prior to 2013) which opened on 16 June 2016
  • A full line Coles supermarket including a liquor store on the first floor of the space vacated by Myer which opened on 9 November 2016[20][21]
  • A new fresh food precinct and new stores opened on 9 November 2016
  • Harris Scarfe opened its first full line Sydney store on 22 July 2017 on the ground floor of the former Myer.[22][23] However, in January 2020 this store has permanently closed amongst the 20 other stores after Harris Scarfe has entered voluntary administration in December 2019.[24] This store was replaced by Supreme Furniture which opened on 1 August 2020. This was then replaced by Timezone and Zone Bowling on 21 November 2021.
  • TK Maxx has also opened its store on the same date as Harris Scarfe.[25]

Tenants

[edit]

Top Ryde City has 78,125m² of floor space.[26] The major retailers include Big W, Kmart, Aldi, Coles, Woolworths, TK Maxx, JB Hi-Fi, Rebel, Fitness First, Timezone & Zone Bowling and Event Cinemas.[27]

Transport

[edit]

Top Ryde has bus connections to the Sydney CBD, North Shore and Northern Suburbs, as well as local surrounding suburbs operated by Busways. The majority of bus services depart from Devlin Road in front of the shopping centre's main entrance and Blaxland Road. There is no railway station at Ryde, the nearest stations are located at Meadowbank and West Ryde.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Top Ryde Shopping Centre : 40 years 1957-1997". 23 September 1997. Retrieved 23 September 2017 – via Trove.
  2. ^ "THE SHOPPING MALL MUSEUM". Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  3. ^ "Top Ryde City | The Dictionary of Sydney". Dictionaryofsydney.org. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  4. ^ "History of Top Ryde City". City of Ryde. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  5. ^ "Official Faces of Top Ryde City". University of Technology, Sydney. Retrieved 8 October 2017.
  6. ^ "Revitalisation of Top Ryde City". Archived from the original on 27 March 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  7. ^ "February 2011 opening of stores". Ryde.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
  8. ^ "Top Ryde Shopping Centre". Peloton Constructions. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  9. ^ "Cumberland Newspapers | Northern District Times". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
  10. ^ "30-tonne collapse at shopping centre site". ABC Newsaccessdate=23 September 2017. 2 February 2009.
  11. ^ "Echo, March 2008" (PDF). March 2008. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 March 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
  12. ^ "Receivers called in as huge Top Ryde Shopping Centre runs up $700m debt six months after opening". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  13. ^ "Blackstone buys Top Ryde shopping centre for $341m". The Australian. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
  14. ^ "Blackstone pulls trigger on $700m Top Ryde retail centre". Australian Financial Review. 21 May 2018. Retrieved 23 September 2018.
  15. ^ Jonathan Chancellor, "Crown secures Top Ryde City Living sellout"" Property Observer, 17 November 2014
  16. ^ Development unit a key buy Northern District Times 26 November 2014 page 9
  17. ^ "Crown Group Awarded Industry's Top Design Award". Robbreport.com. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  18. ^ "Myer confirms exit from Top Ryde, abandons speciality store plans". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  19. ^ "Myer to exit Top Ryde City shopping centre as part of transformation plan". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
  20. ^ "Shopping centre's biggest expansion". Daily Telegraph. 5 August 2016. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  21. ^ "Top Ryde City Shopping Centre Level 1 Opening | i2C". www.i2c.com.au. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  22. ^ Brook, Benedict (1 October 2016). "Harris Scarfe announces ambitious expansion plans including first Sydney department store". News.com.au. Retrieved 9 August 2019.
  23. ^ "Retailer's first Sydney department store to open". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  24. ^ Cummins, Carolyn (11 December 2019). "Harris Scarfe department chain enters receivership in horror year for retailers". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  25. ^ "Discount giant TK Maxx is here". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  26. ^ Top Ryde Shopping Centre Ampac
  27. ^ Top Ryde City, Sydney JLL
[edit]

Media related to Top Ryde City at Wikimedia Commons