For visitors passing through Ashfield along Parramatta Road, Liverpool Road or the railway line, the three main landmarks that stand out are the tower of the old Peek Frean Biscuit factory (now
Bunnings Warehouse) on Parramatta Road,
Wests Leagues Club on Liverpool Road next to the railway line and the Ashfield water reservoir in Holden Street to the south of the town centre. The water tower was built in 1912 and provides the water supply for the surrounding areas.
Houses Ashfield Council produced a number of guides for heritage walks in the area, but these guides are not being printed anymore. Some of the important heritage buildings in Ashfield, from Ashfield Council's heritage guide, are found in the section below. The
Inner West Council does not currently have any guides for the Ashfield area although they do have heritage guides for
Balmain and
Leichhardt. the impressive tower of
Amesbury (built 1888) in Alt Street; nearby
Taringa in Taringa Street; and
Gorton in Henry Street, which was built in 1860 and since 1876 has been the Infants Home. On Lapish Avenue on the western end of town still stands a street scape of five Art Deco Sydney Bungalow styled semi-detached pairs and a block of units at each end that were designed and built during World War II as speculative housing the full history of the land has been meticulously research and documented. A number of these properties are listed on the
Register of the National Estate including Amesbury, Ashfield Castle, Buninyong, Glenore, Taringa and two unnamed
Gothic houses at 177-179 Norton Street. Also listed on the Register are Ashfield Park (see
Parks section), the police and fire station in Victoria Street, and the band
rotunda in Yeo Park.
Churches The first
church in Ashfield was
St. John the Baptist's Anglican Church in Alt Street. It was part of Elizabeth Underwood's 1838 subdivision that gave rise to the village of Ashfield and was reserved by her for the purpose of 'the erection of an Episcopalian Church'. Prior to then, Anglican church services had been held in her house. Work on St Johns began in 1840 and after the project was taken over by colonial architect
Edmund Blacket, it was
consecrated in 1845. It is the oldest surviving building in Ashfield. In 1842, neighbouring landowner Robert Campbell made an acre of land between Liverpool Road and Norton Street available for a
Methodist chapel and schoolhouse. In 1864, a larger building was erected on the site which still exists as the Ashfield
Uniting Church. It is also home of the Exodus Foundation providing 400 meals a day to the needy. The
Presbyterians did not build a local church until 1876, choosing a site on the corner of Liverpool Road and Knox Street. Prior to this they attended St David's in Haberfield. Although they later built a larger church on the same Knox Street site, the original church is located at the southwestern corner of the property, having been moved twice from its original location.
Catholic services began in the area in 1880 with the establishment of Bethlehem College. Services quickly outgrew the school's small chapel and in 1894, the
Vincentian Fathers started building a church in Bland Street, opposite Bethlehem. Designed by Catholic Architects Sheerin and Hennessy in a grand Romanesque style, St Vincents was completed in 1907. The
Baptists held their first service in the School of Arts building on the corner of Liverpool Road and Holden Street. After building a small church further down Holden Street in 1886, they returned to the School of Arts in 1903 which then became known as the Baptist Tabernacle. In 1937, they sold the building, which was knocked down and replaced with a cinema, and moved to their current site on the corner of Holden and Norton Streets. It is Gothic in style with a landmark tower, an impressive street facade and a sympathetically designed adjoining hall. The
Seventh-day Adventists have had a church in Ashfield for over 100 years. The church was first established from a series of camp meetings held in the area in the late 1890s. The current church is located on Charlotte Street.
Parks From the late 1870s, meetings were held in Ashfield in support of a new 106-acre reserve in the district for the enjoyment of locals at a time when housing subdivision was rapidly increasing.
Ashfield Park on Parramatta Road is one of the largest public parklands in inner west Sydney. It features large
phoenix palms, a war memorial, a children's playground with a statue of
Mary Poppins (in recognition of the author
PL Travers who lived nearby between 1918–1924), a monument to
International Mother Language Day built by former artist-in-residence Ian Marr and the
Bangladeshi community, a statue of
Philippines national hero
Jose Rizal, a sporting field and one of Sydney's oldest
bowling clubs. The park, which is just over 6 hectares in area, was proclaimed in 1885 when it was claimed at the time you could 'see all the way to Martin Place'. The area's major sporting ground is
Pratten Park, home of the Western Suburbs
grade cricket club in summer and used by the Canterbury District Soccer Football Association in winter. There are also tennis courts and a bowling club adjacent to the main oval. Thirning Villa, located within the park, is home to the Ashfield District Historical Society and an
artist in residence sponsored by the local council. The other sporting field in the area is at
Hammond Park on Frederick Street. It predates both Ashfield Park and Pratten Park having begun life in 1877 as a private cricket ground. In 1888, it was intended to be the setting for the first descent of a parachute from a
hot air balloon in Australia. Unfortunately, the parachutist (JT Williams) missed the mark and landed in
Homebush, roughly 4 km away. This park was also the site of an
ice skating rink in the late 1800s. The other parks of note in the area are
Yeo Park on the southern edge of the suburb and featuring a National Heritage listed band rotunda, and
Explorers Park on the corner of Parramatta Road and Liverpool Road, built to commemorate the point where many early British explorers began their journeys west and south. It also features engraved images from early indigenous people in Sydney.
Swimming pools The Ashfield Olympic Swimming Centre was first opened on 26 January 1963 by NSW Premier
Bob Heffron on Elizabeth Street, Ashfield. It had an outdoor 50 metre pool, a diving pool and tower (also used for water polo), children's pools and later a heated indoor 25 metre pool. The site is highly visible from trains passing on the western line immediately to the south. Due to ongoing dilapidation all pools and buildings were demolished in 2018 when the Inner West Council undertook a $44.7 million redevelopment of the site, reopening on 17 October 2020 as the Ashfield Aquatic Centre with five new pools. The outdoor 50 m pool is open all year round and heated in winter. The facility also includes a multipurpose outdoor pool with an adjustable/moveable floor (which can change its depth by 2.1 m), an outdoor children's pool, an indoor 25-metre multipurpose pool, an indoor baby/toddlers pool, health and fitness centre, sauna, steam and spa, crèche, café and retail space. ==Governance==