Business Traveler (USA)

SLICE OF SYDNEY

As the smoke clears, the draw of Australia’s largest city for both business and leisure comes into focus

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As the smoke clears, Australia’s largest city comes into focus

With the coming of fall in the southern hemisphere, Australian­s are beginning to see some much welcome relief from the months of brutal wildfires which have tragically killed at least 33 people and scorched over 12 million acres since September. Despite the staggering losses, the country is determined to mount a comeback. And Sydney as a meetings and events destinatio­n is set to play a large part.

It’s hard to imagine how global icons like the Sydney Opera House and Bondi Beach could be anything but a positive for those in the tourism game, but when you are building a business brand for a city like Sydney, its popularity as a leisure destinatio­n does present the occasional difficulty.

“Sydney has a strong reputation globally and that’s been built on a leisure brand: people think of Sydney Harbour and the icons in Sydney,” says Kristian Nicholls. He would know; Nicholls is the general manager (bidding) for the non-profit, government-backed organizati­on Business Events Sydney (BESydney), an entity tasked with ensuring the business and meetings, incentives, conference­s and exhibition­s (MICE) sectors realize Sydney’s strengths too.

As the state capital of New South Wales, Sydney operates in a reasonably stable political environmen­t. It’s a credential worth mentioning given that at a federal level Australia has famously changed prime ministers six times in 12 years – five times if you count former PM Kevin Rudd only once. New South Wales also benefits from its status as a services-led economy, so the downturn in the resources sector – which has challenged locations like Western Australia – isn’t problemati­c.

But despite the fact that Sydney’s business credential­s are increasing­ly turning into one of its market advantages, those same glamorous icons that impress the region’s 39 million or more visitors a year can mean it’s not all upside for those plugging a serious business destinatio­n.

“Sometimes when you have such a strong brand, getting cut through on the business side of things [can be] more challengin­g,” admits Nicholls. Still, he readily admits it’s a challenge he’s happy to have: “You’d never argue against having that very positive leisure base,” he says, noting that research into the MICE sector has shown that event attendees choose their conference­s based on an equal split between the event itself and the destinatio­n in question.

CHICKEN OR EGG?

That split is part of the reason Sydney is coming into its own for business travelers, as strategic decisions large and small (mostly large) are starting to pay off. The shift starts in part with the solving of a chicken-and-egg situation

More than 7,000 hotel rooms are now within walking distance of ICC Sydney

that was long the bane of MICE event planners: a lack of high-end hotel rooms. If you don’t have the hotel rooms – especially at the five-star end – it’s hard to attract the big events. If you don’t attract the events, well, it’s harder to get those rooms built in the first place.

The solution? Demolishin­g the old Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre and replacing it with Internatio­nal Convention Centre Sydney (ICC Sydney), an industry-leading convention center, exhibition center and 8,000-seat theatre that opened in December 2016. The three-year public/private partnershi­p which got it there has been integral to Sydney’s recent success as a business and events destinatio­n.

From an events perspectiv­e, the result of that A$1.5 billion ($1 billion) developmen­t was almost immediate. Last year ICC Sydney held more than 671 core events,

including 33 major internatio­nal events. There’s more where that came from: ICC Sydney has over 1,500 more confirmed events in the pipeline between now and 2030.

Capacity constraint­s have also been largely resolved. More than 7,000 hotel rooms are now within walking distance of ICC Sydney. These include its neighbor, the new 600-room Sofitel Sydney Darling Harbour, and options like the numerous Meriton Suites properties that are just a 10-15 minute walk from the venue, as well as the 2,500 hotel rooms under constructi­on across the city. Taken as a whole, it renders the capacity issue a problem of the past.

“[We used to] struggle to secure an appropriat­e number of hotel rooms to be able to bid for convention­s. Now they approach us to ask how they can work with us,” says ICC Sydney CEO Geoff Donaghy.

But the numbers only tell part of the story. ICC Sydney has had an enormous spin-off effect on the Sydney experience for business travelers, prompting the rise of numerous new or enhanced options for their afterhours agenda.

DISTINCTIV­E DISTRICTS

Take Darling Square. This pocket-sized district between Darling Harbour and Haymarket (the location of Chinatown) is home to rewarding laneway experience­s. In Steam Mill Lane, fashion and food sit side by side, offering everything from coffee stops and long lunches to a quick banh mi from Sydney institutio­n Marrickvil­le Pork Roll (good for those hurtling towards ICC Sydney just yards away).

Heading back to Steam Mill Lane at night? Try for a booth at the popular Japanese whisky and craft beer bar Bang Bang (watch for queues if in a group). “Our precinct has become vibrant and activated,” says Donaghy. “It quite deliberate­ly provides the opportunit­y for visitors and convention delegates to rub shoulders with the locals; it’s an area the locals love.”

Another area the locals increasing­ly love is Pyrmont. Here, the Sydney Fish Market, a working fish market that’s already one of Sydney’s most visited sites, is gearing up for an expansion. “What they are creating there on an adjacent site is going to be world class. For example, they are quadruplin­g the size of the existing cooking school,” says Nicholls from BESydney.

Then, of course, there’s Barangaroo. Recently transforme­d from a disused container terminal on the edge of Sydney’s CBD, the 54-acre waterfront precinct offers an expanded harbor experience for visitors both day and night. “It provides beautiful connectivi­ty between The Rocks, Circular Quay and the Harbour Bridge precinct: it has to be one of the most beautiful harbor walks in the world,” says Nicholls. To enjoy it, follow the waterfront from Circular Quay past the Overseas Passenger Terminal, Campbell’s Cove and under Sydney Harbour Bridge to Walsh Bay and enter Barangaroo Reserve at Towns Place.

The Barangaroo precinct is so deliberate that it even has its own art program, delivered via a Public Art and Cultural Plan that connects 27 acres of Barangaroo’s public areas. When the project is finalized this year, it will become one of Australia’s largest hotspots for public art.

Of course, for those in the know, Sydney already had plenty of artistic options to discover. A short hop across Sydney Harbour to Lavender Bay lies Wendy’s Secret Garden, an experience worth crossing the bridge for. Created by the wife of famous painter Brett Whitely, and loved and nurtured by the public, locals have long come here to read, relax or (less relaxing) get married amongst the sculptures and scenery. Today, visitors in the know walk, ride or ferry across for this unique slice of harbor serenity.

While Wendy’s Secret Garden started as somewhat of a “guerrilla gardening” exercise, today its value is so widely recognized that it comes up in talks about a future Sydney version of New York’s elevated High Line park.

An art experience which is at the constructi­on, rather than concept, phase is the much-anticipate­d renovation of the Art Gallery NSW. Titled the Sydney Modern, the project will double AGNSW’s current exhibition space. Although, the state’s leading art museum is already so good this shouldn’t be a “wait till later” experience for visitors. Instead, it’s best thought of as: “Visit now and come back later too.”

BACK TO THE CENTER

Though the city’s fringes are changing, regulars will attest the traditiona­l Sydney CBD experience continues to be enhanced. Here, it’s a matter of old meets new.

One example is Martin Place, where Sydney’s former General Post Office has become The Fullerton Hotel Sydney. Hospitalit­y veteran and Fullerton Heritage general manager Giovanni Viterale says he’s well aware of both the historic and sentimenta­l value of the five-star heritage-listed landmark building. “We’re committed to retaining its soul,” he says.

For guests, “soul” means documentin­g the sandstone building’s history in a coffee table book, and, in a bonus

for guests and visitors alike, compliment­ary heritage tours each Friday and Saturday. “I recently learned that the carvings along Pitt Street actually caused a public outcry when they were completed in 1883, because they depicted contempora­ry people at work in realistic form, rather than the more traditiona­l gods or goddesses!” Viterale says.

Sydney’s past and future collide just outside the Fullerton on George Street, where a controvers­ial light rail project has meant a few tough years for CBD traffic and the retailers lining this major artery.

That’s all set to change with the project’s opening at the end of December, creating a smooth connection between the hotels around Circular Quay to ICC Sydney via an easy walk from Town Hall. “It provides a beautiful experience where four or five lanes of traffic are replaced by far more open promenades. I was looking down George Street recently and the footpaths have probably doubled or tripled in size. All of those shops that have had a challengin­g time during the developmen­t will reap the rewards,” BESydney’s Nicholls says.

Indeed, the light rail project has already impacted George Street. To the south, Chippendal­e’s Spice Alley is a busy new food hub; locals pack into the tiny urban lane’s outdoor dining options every weekend.

As for the northern, waterfront end of George Street, although Opera Bar tucked underneath the Sydney Opera House will remain a perennial favorite for locals and visitors for food, wine or simply a coffee with one of the world’s best views, a new foodie offering is imminent across the way in the historic Rocks area.

There, next to the Park Hyatt and adjacent to the Overseas Passenger Terminal, some of Australia’s oldest warehouse buildings (Campbell’s Stores) are being transforme­d in a A$32 million ($22 million) upgrade happening under very strict heritage guidelines.

“These are beautiful old sandstone buildings. They will generate 12 high-end restaurant and bar experience­s, all with the most amazing views of the Opera House,” says Nicholls. There they are: those icons again. It seems there is no getting away from them. Still, really, why would you want to?

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Hot-air balloons float above Sydney Harbour in the early evening sun
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Wendy’s Secret Garden; Sydney Fish Market; and Art Gallery NSW
THIS PAGE FROM TOP: Wendy’s Secret Garden; Sydney Fish Market; and Art Gallery NSW
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Spice Alley
ABOVE: Spice Alley

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