Construction to commence on Penrith’s Gipps Street Recreation Precinct project
The official start of Penrith’s multi-million-dollar 32-hectare Gipps Street Recreation Precinct project was signalled by a sod turning by Penrith Mayor Tricia Hitchen and Penrith City Council General Manager Warwick Winn.
The milestone brings Council’s long-term strategy, to transform the former waste facility into a landmark sport and recreation destination for the community, a vital step closer to reality.
Every member of the community will find something at Gipps Street to help them enjoy outdoor pursuits, including multiple sports fields, full amenities, inclusive children’s area featuring water play, a dedicated Youth Precinct including a skate park and our City’s very first pump track. There will be outdoor gym equipment, an off-leash dog park, nature walks and shaded picnic areas with BBQs.
Penrith City Council is contributing $27.5 million toward the project, with a further $6.5 million being received from grants through partnering with the NSW Government. Council has been successful in attaining grant funding for the youth area through the Department of Planning’s Open Spaces Pilot Project ($500,000), while the Office of Sport will contribute to the amenity building through its Greater Cities Sports Facilities Fund ($1 million) and the multi-sport playing fields with LED lighting through its Multi-Sport Community Facility Fund ($5 million).
Mayor Hitchen said it was wonderful to see the long-held vision of Council and the community get underway noting “this facility is going to be something truly special for the people of Penrith and I can’t wait to see it delivered for our community.
“We are incredibly excited that the start of construction for this landmark destination can now commence. This site has been earmarked by Council for use as a recreation precinct since the 2000s and we can’t wait for our vision to reinvent Gipps Street to be realised.
The 32-hectare site at Gipps Street along South Creek was used as Council’s main waste facility from the mid-1950s to the mid-1980s which has undergone extensive remediation before it could be developed.
Penrith City Council recently awarded the construction tender to Glascott Landscape and Civil Pty Ltd who will undertake the remaining remediation, construction, landscaping, and installation work required at the Claremont Meadows site to bring the innovative Precinct design to life.
View the video below to experience what Gipps Street Recreation Precinct will be like when complete.
Council’s 2020 Sport and Recreation Strategy, which forms the 15-year road map for the future provision of sport, play, recreation and open space facilities across the City, helped create the vision for this important Penrith project.
Gipps Street Recreation Precinct is scheduled for completion by the end of 2023, to learn more, visit penrith.city/gippsstreet
Image top: Penrith Mayor Tricia Hitchen (centre) is joined by Council’s Director of City Services Brian Steffen (left), and Council’s General Manager Warwick Winn (right) for the sod turn event to mark the start of construction on the 32-hectare Gipps Street Recreation Precinct; image above: concept for Gipps Street Recreation Precinct
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