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8 neighborhoods selected in this guide.

The Rocks is Sydney's oldest neighbourhood, a compact precinct of cobblestone lanes, convict-era sandstone warehouses, and colonial pubs huddled beneath the Harbour Bridge's southern approach. Weekend markets and walking tours bring its layered history to life.

Newtown is Sydney's most defiantly independent suburb — a corridor of vintage shops, Thai restaurants, street-art murals, independent bookshops and live-music venues stretching along King Street. The suburb's LGBTQ+ heritage, leftist politics and creative energy create an atmosphere unlike anywhere else in Sydney.

Newtown is Sydney's bohemian heartland, centred on the 2 km stretch of King Street running south from Newtown Station. It's a concentration of vintage shops, Thai restaurants, street art, craft beer pubs, and live music venues reflecting the area's creative, inclusive spirit.
Paddington is a suburb of narrow terrace-house-lined streets where upscale art galleries, fashion boutiques and design showrooms sit alongside neighbourhood pubs and family-run cafés. Oxford Street's Paddington Markets (Saturday) are the highlight — an open-air bazaar of emerging designers and artisan food.
Paddington is an elegant inner-eastern suburb defined by its continuous rows of Victorian-era terrace houses with ornate iron-lace balconies. Oxford Street's western end and the Saturday Paddington Markets draw art lovers and fashion shoppers.

Surry Hills is a gentrified inner-city village known for speciality coffee roasters, brunch spots, independent boutiques, and a thriving bar scene. The area's Victorian-era terraces and converted warehouses house some of Sydney's best restaurants and galleries.

Surry Hills is an inner-city village of Victorian terraces, laneway coffee roasters, independent wine bars and Crown Street boutiques. The suburb is the epicentre of Sydney's brunch culture — weekend mornings see queues outside café institutions.
Chippendale is a former industrial suburb that has reinvented itself as an arts-and-design precinct. The Central Park vertical garden — a towering wall of green designed by Jean Nouvel — is the neighbourhood's signature landmark.