Vision for Sydney as a city within a park

Greater Sydney parks will have added protection with new proposed legislation to expand and conserve our precious green spaces, and give communities a stronger voice, as part of a 50-year vision for our parklands.

In releasing a white paper on the new framework for public consultation, Minister for Planning and Public Spaces Rob Stokes said that legislative change could further strengthen protections for state-owned parklands.

"As the first NSW Minister for Public Spaces, I am driven by the once-in-a-generation opportunity to make parks and public spaces as important as the roads, trains and light rail that move our people around," Mr Stokes said.

"Parks are for everyone, no matter where you live, and we need to shift our way of managing individual parks to a model that benefits Greater Sydney as a whole.

"How we collectively run these parklands is crucial. The white paper proposes a new Greater Sydney Parklands Trust to act as a city-wide champion for existing and, excitingly, future parks.

"We need the right focus for community participation, governance, funding, and operating frameworks, along with strong and enduring funding streams, to deliver on the ambitions of our 50-Year vision for Sydney's parklands."

The Greater Sydney Parklands (GSP) is currently the umbrella agency for Sydney's most iconic parks - Centennial and Moore parks, Callan Park, Western Sydney Parklands, Fernhill Estate, and Parramatta Park which cover more than 6,000 hectares and are visited by more than 40 million people each year.

Mr Stokes said the white paper maps a pathway for Greater Sydney Parklands legislation that would strengthen protections for our most iconic parklands by unilaterally prohibiting their sale; introducing new limits on commercial activities; developing a sustainable funding model to last generations, and giving communities a stronger voice in their future. Since the GSP was established in July 2020, it has:

  • Released the Callan Park Landscape Structure Plan which included $14 million in works;
  • Exhibited a draft plan of management for Fernhill Estate;
  • Completed stages four and five at Bungarribee Park in Western
  • Sydney, creating greater access to community open space and parklands;
  • Regenerated native bushland in Centennial Park and launched the Indigenous art and cultural installation on the Gurawil Trail; and
  • Contributed a $4.5m upgrade to ES Marks Field.

Community and stakeholder feedback on the 50-Year Vision Discussion Paper, released last year, has contributed to the proposal set out in the white paper.

"We are being open and transparent about this process. The white paper will be on exhibition for six weeks and we are keen to hear what the community has to say," Mr Stokes said.

The white paper is on public exhibition until July 5. To find out more and provide feedback on the white paper, visit https://www.planningportal.nsw.gov.au/GSPwhitepaper and for the 50-year vision, https://www.planning.nsw.gov.au/GSPwhitepaper

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