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Concerts, weddings and a famous fruit bowl: How shopping centres changed western Sydney
Concerts, weddings and a famous fruit bowl: How shopping centres changed western Sydney

Sydney Morning Herald

time19-07-2025

  • Business
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Concerts, weddings and a famous fruit bowl: How shopping centres changed western Sydney

The occasion was so lavish, so monumental, so unabashedly American, that The Sydney Morning Herald published a 10-page special supplement to cover it. It was October 12, 1965, and western Sydney had just got its first major shopping centre: Roselands, a 'shopping-community centre' just south of Lakemba that was branded as a 'city-in-the-suburbs that has everything!' With a food court, a 'chandeliered hairdressing salon' and a revolutionary decked car park, the new Grace Bros development was the beginning of the west's love affair with gigantic malls. The glory of the new Roselands development soon led to the establishment of similar ventures, including Penrith Plaza, Westfield Parramatta, Bankstown Square and Stockland Merrylands. They brought much to suburbs that were rapidly growing and changing, and still are. Huge amounts of investment and property development took place in and around the centres. But the venues also brought something surprising: community and nostalgia. That strong connection to western Sydney's shopping centres is behind a public call-out from the under-construction Powerhouse Parramatta. The museum is asking the public to share photos, memorabilia and personal stories that 'capture the social and cultural spirit' of western Sydney's shopping malls from the 1970s to the early 2000s. The development of mega shopping centres across western Sydney has mirrored the story of transformation across the region, too. 'When they were introduced, they were marketed as bringing modernity and development to the western suburbs,' said Associate Professor Matthew Bailey, head of history and archaeology at Macquarie University, who has written a book about the history of shopping centres in Australia and is working with the museum on the exhibit.

Concerts, weddings and a famous fruit bowl: How shopping centres changed western Sydney
Concerts, weddings and a famous fruit bowl: How shopping centres changed western Sydney

The Age

time19-07-2025

  • Business
  • The Age

Concerts, weddings and a famous fruit bowl: How shopping centres changed western Sydney

The occasion was so lavish, so monumental, so unabashedly American, that The Sydney Morning Herald published a 10-page special supplement to cover it. It was October 12, 1965, and western Sydney had just got its first major shopping centre: Roselands, a 'shopping-community centre' just south of Lakemba that was branded as a 'city-in-the-suburbs that has everything!' With a food court, a 'chandeliered hairdressing salon' and a revolutionary decked car park, the new Grace Bros development was the beginning of the west's love affair with gigantic malls. The glory of the new Roselands development soon led to the establishment of similar ventures, including Penrith Plaza, Westfield Parramatta, Bankstown Square and Stockland Merrylands. They brought much to suburbs that were rapidly growing and changing, and still are. Huge amounts of investment and property development took place in and around the centres. But the venues also brought something surprising: community and nostalgia. That strong connection to western Sydney's shopping centres is behind a public call-out from the under-construction Powerhouse Parramatta. The museum is asking the public to share photos, memorabilia and personal stories that 'capture the social and cultural spirit' of western Sydney's shopping malls from the 1970s to the early 2000s. The development of mega shopping centres across western Sydney has mirrored the story of transformation across the region, too. 'When they were introduced, they were marketed as bringing modernity and development to the western suburbs,' said Associate Professor Matthew Bailey, head of history and archaeology at Macquarie University, who has written a book about the history of shopping centres in Australia and is working with the museum on the exhibit.

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