General landmarks include: • Kurraba Point Reserve, including Spains and Hodgson Lookouts with 1930s furniture and depression era work scheme elements such as the concrete fences and paving, and a large flat area which runs along the waterfront. • Two plaques commemorating the life of
Benjamin Boyd are on display at the corner of Ben Boyd Road and Kurraba Road, near the entrance to Kurraba Point. They are heritage listed, but from July 2020 North Sydney Council covered the plaques to protect them from being vandalized. • The Harbour Swimmers Club is based in Kurraba Point, with men and women taking to the harbour for a swim during the warm months of summer. This is normally associated with a harbour swimmers barbecue. There are 39 heritage-listed properties in Kurraba Point, and also a substantial Heritage Conservation Area. Significant homes include: •
Brent Knowle (31 Shellcove Road) is described in its Heritage listing as "a picturesque early 20th century gentleman's residence by the eminent Australian architect
Bertrand James Waterhouse. It is perhaps his most important early work." •
Gingie (176 Kurraba Road) is a picturesque Queen Anne style house which typifies the area's early development. •
Gundamaine (39 Shellcove Road) is a
Federation Queen Anne residence by the architects Spain and Rowe, with "an exceptionally strong visual streetscape element". •
Hollowforth (146 Kurraba Road) is described in its Heritage listing as "a dramatic and innovative architectural statement in the shingle style by one of the leading architects of the Federation era, E. Jeaffreson Jackson. Hollowforth joins with a number of Horbury Hunt's commissions to represent the finest examples of this style within the State." •
Honda (55 Shellcove Road) was the first house built in the area, and one of the first residential developments of the grant to Alfred Thrupp. It is one of the earliest surviving houses on Sydney's north shore. •
Kurraba House (2 Baden Rd) replaces an earlier home of the same name, which is thought to be the inspiration for the name "Kurraba Point". This house was most likely built in the 1850s when John Cooper began to offer 99-year leaseholds from Thrupps Grant. It has now been converted to flats, and has been Heritage listed. •
Nutcote, where the renowned Australian children's author and illustrator
May Gibbs lived, is now a visitable house museum on Kurraba Point. •
Once Upon A Time (115A Kurraba Road) is a four-storey building, now divided into three apartments, on a steeply terraced site beside the water at the Kurraba Road wharf. The building has parapets all round, and curved walls with curved windows. • 9 Shellcove Rd, home of prolific children's author Leslie Rees and writer Coralie Rees. ==Notable residents==