8/342 Bourke Street, Surry Hills
LIGHT AND CHARM IN A TOP-FLOOR, ART DECO APARTMENT
This top-floor, art deco apartment offers an outstanding lifestyle opportunity or investment prospect in a prime central location. Filled with natural light and rich in character, it was originally built in the 1920s and retains its period charm with polished floors, high ceilings, and spacious interiors. The generous layout includes a large bedroom, a modern gas kitchen with quality stainless steel appliances and an updated bathroom with a bathtub and internal laundry connections.
Set within a boutique full-brick block of only 12 apartments, it offers a sense of exclusivity, security and privacy and has the potential to easily be converted back into a 2 bedroom apartment.
Located moments from Oxford Street, Crown Street, and Taylor Square, the apartment enjoys immediate access to shops, cafes, bars, and other amenities, while its exceptionally convenient address is an easy walk to the CBD. This is a rare opportunity to secure a home that blends historical elegance with modern convenience in one of the city's most vibrant precincts.
Top floor, art-deco period buildingLight-filled spaces with high ceilings, polished floors and spaces retaining the charm of the eraSecure and private with generous outdoor areasImmediate access to shops, cafes and other amenitiesEasy walking distance to the CBD, Paddington and Woolloomooloo Wharf precintCentral location for trains and buses throughout city and regional areasClose to expanding Arts district
Property Information
- Land area approx 57sqm
- Council Rates $266.75/quarter
- Water Rates $175.98/quarter
- Strata Admin Fund $2160/quarter


Surry Hills
Once the centre of Sydney's garment trade, the Surry Hills of today is a trendy and essentially gentrified inner city address with a distinct arty edge. Less than 1.5km from the CBD, it's home to many creative agencies and enterprises, renowned design stores and some top restaurants.
There are still some factory outlets closer to Central Station on the northern side of the suburb, although many of the warehouses have been reclaimed for conversion, given the high demand for residential accommodation throughout the area.
The main thoroughfare of Crown Street has been completely reinvented as a cosmopolitan restaurant and entertainment hub, with its eclectic eateries and revamped pubs such as The Clock, The White Horse and The Dolphin.
Cleveland Street, which separates the more upmarket eastern side of Surry Hills from the west, is renowned for its affordable ethnic cuisine. The Eastern Distributor road works gave the area a massive boost, blocking off the formerly high-traffic Bourke Street and transforming it to a quieter, leafy enclave lined with large Victorian terraces, groovy cafes and interesting specialty stores.
Increasingly a fashion mecca, Surry Hills has great vintage stores, especially at the Oxford Street end of Crown Street. With cafes every couple of paces, Surry Hills epitomises Sydney cafe culture. Do as the locals do, and plan to spend your day lazing in the sun at Shannon Reserve. Hit Maloneys Grocer (and/or Messina) beforehand to grab some treats for an afternoon picnic at the iconic park. Head to the park on the first Saturday of the month, and you'll be met with the beloved Surry Hills Markets where you can hunt down some fine, bohemian treasures.
The area's many galleries exhibit young local artists, but perhaps the most famous would have to be the Brett Whiteley Gallery on Raper Street, with its iconic oversized burnt matchsticks framing the entryway.
Surry Hills is surrounded by Central Station on its western edge and the Eastern Distributor on its east. Though there are also buses that run through the area, the suburb and its many cafes, shops, restaurants and bars are best explored on foot. The new CBD and South East Light Rail is transforming public transport in Sydney, providing high capacity, clean and reliable services. The L2 Randwick Line extends from Circular Quay along George Street to Central Station, through Surry Hills to Moore Park, then to Randwick and Kingsford via Anzac Parade and Alison Road. The L3 Kingsford Line also extends from Circular Quay, branching from Moore Park through Kensington to Kingsford.
Suburb Features
Education
- Bourke Street Public School
- Sydney Boys High School
- Sydney Girls High School
- University of Sydney
Recreation
- Belvoir St Theatre
- Brett Whiteley Studio
- Cork & Chroma
- Golden Age Cinema & Bar
- Moore Park Golf
- Prince Alfred Park Pool & Jensen's Tennis Centre
- Redfern Park
- Surry Hills Library
- Sydney Cricket and Sports Ground
- Eddie Ward Park
Restaurants
- A Tavola
- Arthur
- Bills
- Nomad
- Nour
- Poly
- The Dolphin Hotel
- The Winery