Woolloomooloo
Woolloomooloo is an inner-eastern harbourside suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, situated approximately 2 kilometres east of the Sydney central business district in the City of Sydney local government area.[1] The area occupies a horseshoe-shaped valley and bay that was originally a Gadigal Aboriginal camping ground, fishing site, and location for ceremonies, with the name derived from the local Eora language.[2][3] Following British colonization, it served initially as farmland and sites for elite colonial residences before developing into a densely populated working-class district in the 19th century, characterized by terraced housing, wharves, and naval facilities.[3] Key landmarks include the heritage-listed Finger Wharf, constructed in 1915 as a cargo and passenger terminal that later became a primary arrival point for post-World War II migrants, and the adjacent Garden Island, home to Royal Australian Navy operations including the HMAS Kuttabul depot during wartime.[4][5] The suburb's evolution reflects broader patterns of urban industrialization, military significance, and recent gentrification, with a 2021 population of 3,792 residents living at high density in a compact 0.37 square kilometres.[6][7]