Whether it be the Prime Minister or a past player,just about everyone involved with South Sydney has a favourite Redfern Oval story.
The home traded from one investor to another,leaving a handful of interested first home buyers walking away empty-handed.
The more affordable end of the market has been better insulated in the downturn,as reduced borrowing power pushed more buyers to lower price points.
The state government is proposing a mix of private and social housing units,as community groups protest the sell-off of public land.
The City of Sydney wants the state government to build a long-vaunted pedestrian and bike path over the train tracks.
Redbird is the kind of smart,all-purpose package Sydneysiders will flock to,writes Callan Boys.
Homes in a string of sought-after neighbourhoods are trading at a discount to this time last year,although some suburbs have had sharper falls.
The NSW government is forging ahead with plans for more intensive development around transport hubs at Central Station,Redfern and Waterloo.
There are old classics,but Sydney needs a new wave of musicians who want to chronicle the city in song.
When the first women’s rugby league match was held in Sydney in front of 30,000 people in 1921,15-year-old Maggie Moloney from Redfern was an instant sensation.
The NSW government wants to reinvent an old Redfern industrial site into a hub for residents and creatives but the City of Sydney says the plan will diminish heritage.