Westfield Hurstville


Westfield Hurstville is a shopping centre in the suburb of Hurstville in the St George area of Sydney.

Transport

The Eastern Suburbs and Illawara rail link offers frequent train services to Hurstville station located opposite the centre.
Westfield Hurstville has bus connections to the Riverwood, Bankstown, Beverly Hills, Lugarno, Kogarah, Kingsgrove, Burwood, Parramatta, as well as local surrounding suburbs. It is served by Punchbowl Bus Company, Transit Systems Sydney and Transdev NSW services. Majority of its bus services located in Forest Road in front of the railway station.
Westfield Hurstville also has multi level car parks with 2,745 spaces.

History

Westfield Hurstville officially opened on 9 October 1978 by then NSW Premier Neville Wran. The centre was first announced in 1975 with a cost of $30 million was hailed as "the start of a new and greater shopping era for St George". It was a joint venture between the council and Westfield.
The centre featured Coles New World, Waltons, Nock & Kirby, Spacetacular, McDonalds, Franklins and Best & Less. It was the first shopping centre in Australia to feature a quiet park on top of the centre. The park was known as Snowy Hill Park which was named after former alderman and mayor of Hurstville, Gordon William 'Snowy' Hill. Hill who served 19 years at the council, being elected mayor in 1962 and 1963. He died on 2 June 1978. The decision to name the park in recognition of Hill's services to the local community was made at a Special Hurstville Municipal Meeting shortly after his death. A pedestrian ramp from Croft's Avenue was constructed to allow pedestrian access to the park from street level. The park was officially opened by Mr Kevin Ryan MLA, former mayor of Hurstville, on 7 April 1979 and was popular for shoppers who wanted a quiet break from shopping. In 1987, the Waltons chain was sold by Alan Bond to the Cookes family in which the remaining stores split into Venture and Norman Ross.
Westfield Hurstville was redeveloped extended across Park Road towards The Avenue with a retail bridge linking both sides of the centre in the 1990s. Grace Bros, Kmart, Greater Union cinema and 125 speciality stores were added to the centre as part of the extension. The celebration of the opening of the redevelopment and the opening of Grace Bros was held on 10 April 1990. The opening of the store was popular with hundreds of locals queuing up to snap up a bargain which took one hour for the store to make $51,000 in sales. The Grace Bros store was originally planned to open in the Southside Plaza at Rockdale, but due to David Jones planning to open a Hurstville store, with a possible site near the current location of Hurstville Library on Queens Road, Grace Bros amended the plan and opened at Hurstville. Venture, which took over Norman Ross, relocated from its original space to the space next to Grace Bros. Snowy Hill park was later converted to the rooftop carpark. The Greater Union opened at the end of June which breathed life into what was a ghost town after 5pm. After the redevelopment of the centre, shops on Forest Road started to decline after the centre took trade away from the street and the plans for a pedestrian mall on Forest Road, to be known as Forest Road Mall or Hurstville Boulevard, were proposed.
In the early 1990s, Westfield Hurstville was a place for local youths to loiter especially in the cinemas and the food court area with many complaints from shoppers and tenants about teenagers harassing the public. A brawl took place in the food court on 13 May 1992, fortunately no one was injured and no property was damaged. To combat this a mini food court was proposed on the southern end of level 3. Ten retail stores were converted to food court outlets and seating for 32 people were added.
In the mid 1990s, many high-end stores and stores such as Brashs and Intencity closed. Intencity previously opened in 1995 and was the first in the chain to open on the space vacated by BBC Hardware and part of Waltons until it was taken over by Target in 1997. The Toys "R" Us store shrunk to become a one-level store with the bottom level of the store taken over by Rebel Sport which then was taken over by Aldi.
By 1998, Westfield Hurstville was beginning to experience a downturn in trade. Nearby Westfield Miranda had been expanded in recent years, Roselands was redeveloped in 1992 and Westfield Burwood was proposed for demolition to be replaced by a more modern shopping centre. The building was starting to age and many stores had closed. Franklins closed in 2001 and was taken over by Food For Less in 2002 and operated until November 2015 when Woolworths opened at the other end of the centre. Food For Less was taken over by Tong Li Supermarket and a medical centre. Grace Bros became sole department store until its closure in early 2015. Despite having many variety stores added, the centre was criticised from 2015 and onwards for lack of high-end retailers, department stores and having too many discount and cheap stores. It was also criticised for being run down and in need of redevelopment.

Recent development

In early 2015, Myer made a departure from the centre after deciding to not renew their lease and was followed by Toys "R" Us. On March 2015, the centre underwent a $100 million redevelopment which was completed by 18 November 2015. The centre celebrated the opening of the redevelopment on 19 November 2015. The redevelopment consists of:
Westfield Hurstville is expected to reach an average of $17 million in spending and can support a trade area of over 329,000 people.

Future

Apartments

Plans for six towers up to 20 storeys high and containing 1249 units could be built above the centre under a planning proposal before Georges River Council. The towers would be approximately 18 to 20 storeys above the existing centre from the top of the roof carpark and each tower would include 456 residential apartments, 793 mixed use units consisting of serviced apartments and student accommodation. There are also requests to increase the floor space of the development. If approved by the council, the planning proposal will go to the Department of Planning for Gateway before being put on exhibition for public comment. The plans are expected to be finalised by March 2018.

New department stores

A new major department store to replace the existing Target store and adjacent mini major at a cost $15.3 million was announced on 6 January 2018. There are also plans for two additional retail shops at the Rose Street entry to the centre and a relocated and expanded centre management office on the rooftop area on level five. This development was approved by Georges River Council on 21 June 2018. There were speculations that the new department store would be David Jones, however the company has declined to comment.
On July 2019, it was then announced that three new mini-majors would replace the previous Target store, including a Uniqlo on the right-hand side which opened on 19 September 2019, a TK Maxx on the left which opened on 12 September 2019, and another retailer in the middle, as well as a JD Sports, which opened on 10 October 2019 in the former adjacent mini major space.

Tenants

Westfield Hurstville has 62,044m² of floor space. The major retailers include Kmart, Big W, Aldi, Coles, Woolworths, Cotton On, Uniqlo, TK Maxx, JB Hi-Fi, Rebel Sport and Event Cinemas.

Incidents