The construction of the Eastern Suburbs Railway was notoriously mired by lengthy delays and cuts. Plans for a station in Woollahra date back to 1915, when state parliament approved
plans drawn up by
John Bradfield to build the Eastern Suburbs Railway. Construction of the line did not commence at the time due to a lack of funds. When the Eastern Suburbs Line was under construction in the 1960s and 1970s, the plan was to locate a station in a closed off grass cutting backing onto the backyards of properties on four surrounding streets. It is believed that the cutting had, for many years, been owned and preserved by the then
NSW Department of Railways, as a future railway site. Unaware of that, local residents had been using the enclosed grassy cutting as a park. The area, surrounded by the high rocky escarpment that is Edgecliff Road, Woollahra, contained many trees and was a sanctuary for bird life. In the 1960s, local residents were upset to learn that the cutting would become a railway station, and the only above-ground station on the line. They lobbied the
Government of New South Wales vigorously in opposition to the station. In the meantime, construction work on the Eastern Suburbs line was slowing down due to various factors, including the cost blow-out of the project. With the
Edgecliff railway station buildings and tunnels built by 1969, and the line to
Bondi Junction railway station not scheduled to open until 1979, the residents of Woollahra had plenty of time to organise their opposition to the station. Despite the basic station infrastructure being constructed, the community campaign, as well as the cost factors surrounding the project, eventually led the Government to abandon the completion of the station. Furthermore, the Government and Railways Department (and then
RailCorp), taking into account that the rail lines were within about five metres of suburban backyards, went as far as to install silencing structures around the tracks, which created what is the quietest section of railway track in Australia, with trains gliding on by day and night, emitting only an eerie low hum as they pass through the cutting. On 24 August 2025, it was announced by the New South Wales government that Woollahra station would be completed and opened to the public in 2029. After premier
Chris Minns' plan to redevelop
Rosehill Racecourse fell through, he stated that the Woollahra development would "rebalance" the development of new housing in Sydney and reorient the focus from West to East. Construction is expected to start in 2027 and complete in 2029, at a cost of $200million. ==Current station infrastructure==