Aboriginal land Aboriginal people have been associated with the
Homebush Bay area for many thousands of years. When Europeans arrived in 1788, the Homebush Bay area formed part of the traditional lands of the
Wanngal clan. The lands of the Wanngal clan extended along the southern shore of the
Parramatta River between about
Leichhardt and
Auburn. The Wanngal clan would have had access rights to the resources of the Homebush Bay area, but would have routinely interacted with neighbouring clan groups. Shortly after the British colonisation of
Sydney several
smallpox epidemics ravaged the local Aboriginal population, leaving many of the clans seriously depleted. By way of adaptation, members of neighbouring clan groups are known to have joined to ensure their survival. Aboriginal people were still using the Homebush Bay area in the early 1800s even after their lands were granted to Europeans. Several encounters and conflicts between Europeans and Aboriginal people are documented for the Homebush Bay area throughout the 1790s, and in the early 1800s Aboriginal people (perhaps of the Wanngal clan) were working for and supplying fish to Europeans in the area. No references have yet been located which describe Aboriginal people living in the Homebush Bay area for the period after the 1810s; however, this is the subject of ongoing research through the Aboriginal History & Connections Program, a long-term program aimed at documenting Aboriginal connections to the Homebush Bay area before and after the arrival of Europeans launched by the Sydney Olympic Park Authority in April 2002. Today the Homebush Bay area is within the asserted traditional cultural boundary of the
Darug language group, of which the Wanngal clan is said to have belonged. The descendants of Darug
traditional owners of the Sydney area play a custodial role in the preservation of Aboriginal cultural heritage and are actively involved with archaeological and historical research in and around the Homebush Bay area. The area also falls within the administrative boundary of the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council which also plays a major role in the investigation and preservation of Aboriginal culture and heritage. The first European settler was Thomas Laycock (1756?-1809), who was granted 40 hectares between Parramatta Road and Homebush Bay in October 1794. He named his farm, Home Bush and ran sheep and cattle there. Laycock was Quartermaster of the
NSW Corps and also held other government positions.
D'Arcy Wentworth (c.1762-1827) purchased the 318 hectare holding from the Laycock family in January 1808. With additional grants Wentworth's holdings at Homebush Bay totalled 372 hectares by 1810. Wentworth established a horse stud and a private racetrack adjoining Parramatta Road and was influential among the early government officials and free settlers. He died at
Homebush on 7 July 1827. The village and later suburb of
Homebush, New South Wales was not part of the Home Bush Estate: the village was subdivided from Edward Powell's estate further south, and took its name from nearby
Homebush railway station, which in turn was named after the Home Bush Estate to its north. The Home Bush Estate was inherited by
William Wentworth (1790–1872), who continued in his father's tradition of controversial public service. With his neighbour
Gregory Blaxland, he was in the first exploration party to find a route through the
Blue Mountains. He expanded and developed his father's bequest of properties, becoming one of the colony's richest men by his death in 1872. The property was let to numerous tenants throughout William's ownership, while he lived at
Vaucluse House in Sydney. William, who was elected president of the
Sydney Turf Club in 1832, gave permission for the existing racetrack to be upgraded for public race meetings. The racetrack included grandstands, stables and spelling paddocks which stretched over the Sydney Olympic Park site. The property was inherited by William Wentworth's son, Fitzwilliam. The borough became a municipality in 1906, and was renamed the "Municipality of Lidcomb " in 1913. Addresses in the area were subsequently listed under the suburb of
Lidcombe and the area was sometimes referred to as "North Lidcombe" The cauldron is located in the Overflow, a park just west of the former main abattoir administration precinct and allee, on land which formed a car park for the abattoir. In 1910, part of the land initially resumed for the State Abattoir was used to build the State Brickworks. Thereafter, the abattoir and the brickworks became the two largest establishments in North Lidcombe. By 1923 the State Abattoir employed 1,600 people and had a killing capacity of 25,000 animals a week, making it one of the largest abattoirs in Australia. The abattoirs continued to expand during World War II and into the 1950s with works provided for the treatment of offal, refrigeration, the preparation of tallow, fertilizers, meat for export and canning of pet foods (Godden & Associates 1989: 21ff). By the 1970s the facilities required rebuilding and a decision was taken not to upgrade but to redevelop surplus land for industrial use. The State Abattoir officially closed on 10 June 1988 and the Homebush Abattoir Corporation wound up on 30 June 1992. Throughout the twentieth century, much of the current land of the site was reclaimed from the river and wetlands by landfill.
Regeneration , built in 1984 it is Olympic Park's oldest venue In the mid-1980s, an area bounded by Australia Avenue and what are now
Herb Elliott Avenue and
Sarah Durack Avenue was promoted as a 'technology park' called the Australia Centre. However, apart from a few relatively electronic businesses like
AWA Microelectronics,
BASF,
Philips and
Sanyo, the idea did not catch on and the technology park is now in
South Eveleigh. In any event, a decade later the entire area became the main cluster venue for the
2000 Summer Olympics. As part of the regeneration scheme for the area, North Lidcombe was renamed Homebush Bay in 1989, named after the bay to its north and east. Millennium Parklands was and is a project that matches the scale of the city, dealing with landscape as the system that sustains urban life, the Olmstedian "lungs" known these days as "
green infrastructure" a component of the urban condition rather than its native opposition.
Post-Olympics With the successful completion of the 2000 Olympics, Sydney Olympic Park has undergone a significant amount of development work to support its conversion to a multipurpose facility with a number of businesses re-locating to the area. Commercial developments now sit alongside sporting facilities with tenants in office buildings such as
Commonwealth Bank from September 2007. A five-star
Pullman hotel and a two-star
Formule 1 hotel were completed in mid-2008. The parklands have undergone redevelopment with Blaxland Riverside Park (formerly Blaxland Common) being transformed into an urban park along
Parramatta River. The Park opened on 3 March 2007. In addition the Wentworth Common area was upgraded with significant adventure playground facilities for children aged 8–13 years. The former
Auburn Council sought public comment on a proposal to rename the Homebush Bay area, to remove confusion with its namesake suburb
Homebush. The area encompassing Sydney Olympic Park, which made up most of the suburb of Homebush Bay, was given autonomy as a suburb, the waterfront residential area was renamed
Wentworth Point and the Carter Street industrial precinct was absorbed by the neighbouring suburb of
Lidcombe. Prior to the 2010s, Sydney Olympic Park was largely uninhabited. Together with
Rookwood and
Chullora to the south, it formed part of a string of uninhabited suburbs between
Inner West Sydney and
Greater Western Sydney. However, the suburb has seen substantial residential development in the 2010s. In the 2011 census, its population was only 65 people, but by the 2016 census five years later, this had grown dramatically to 1736. By 2021 this number had grown again to 4848. On 10 May 2021, a
COVID-19 mass vaccination hub opened in a commercial building in the suburb of Sydney Olympic Park. On 17 July 2023, the suburb boundary was amended with some area surrounding Wentworth Point becoming part of the latter. This included the "Jewel Residences" and the adjacent
Sydney Olympic Park ferry wharf on the northern side of Burroway Road, as well as the "Sanctuary" development area on the western side of Hill Road. Sydney Olympic Park Authority (SOPA), Master Plan 2050 replaces the previously approved Master Plan 2030. == Heritage listings ==