Woman Almost Rented Surry Hills Townhouse With ‘Creepy’ History

Would you move into a house with a rather “creepy” history? A Sydney student was excited about renting this ‘super renovated’ townhouse on Kippax Street, Surry Hills … until she found out why it came so cheap.



A young woman shared on social media her experience in looking for a house to rent near the CBD. Under the handle @emdeebs, she captioned her post, “Why are the only houses that I can get haunted?“. 

In her video clip, she said that she found a nice three-bedroom house on Kippax Street in Surry Hills and was very impressed with it. The property which she described as “super renovated” was available for $900 a week. 

“All the bedrooms were of good size. Living and kitchen, good as well, and I was like, ‘Sweet!’.”

@emdeebs

why are the only houses that i can get haunted? seriously though if anyone is leaving a 3 bedroom in surry hills or paddo lmk xx #fyp #housetok #rentalproperty #rent #greenscreenvideo

♬ original sound – Deebs

It seemed like a perfect deal until she looked up the address on the internet and “accidentally” clicked on the news tab. And that was when things turned 180 degrees.

“…and I found out that a woman died in the house and I was like, ‘Okay, maybe this isn’t the one for me’,” she said.

The young woman further explained that the remains of the deceased woman weren’t discovered until after eight years.

“So, I think I’m going to remove my application,” she concluded.

What other users say

A few users who have viewed her post claimed to have lived in the said property but didn’t mention any ghostly experience.

“I lived here two years ago it was a shared house and I got her room!! I was shocked when I found out. Never heard from her so it’s safe,” one said.

“Omg I used to live here lmao. I was one of the first tenants,” another claimed.



Some, however, claimed to have had some eerie experiences whilst staying in the house.

“I lived there for 6 months! Stuff would disappear and reappear without reason. Now her name pops up on the weirdest occasions (tv/books/articles),” one said

“I lived there mid-2019. Natalie always played pranks on me,” another claimed.

But others are not at all bothered by its past.

“You’ll never get a house that nice for that price in Surry hills again. I’d go for it,” one user commented.  

Another seems to agree, saying, “Honestly, still a bargain by Sydney standards.” 

“I wouldn’t be too concerned I’m sure somebody has died in every house at some point in time,” reassures another.

There were also some who commented that the property’s history should have been disclosed to the prospective tenant since it was a “material fact”.

The “woman Sydney forgot”

Woman Almost Rented Surry Hills Townhouse with ‘Creepy’ History
Video Still Credit: Deebs (@emdeebs)  / TikTok

The property at 139 Kippax Street, Surry Hills has a rather horrifying past and made headlines years ago. It used to be the residence of Natalie Jean Wood who had laid dead in her home for almost eight years. 

It was not until 5 July 2011 when Ms Wood’s skeletal remains were discovered on her bedroom floor, just a month before her 87th birthday. She was presumed to have died sometime in February 2004. She was last seen on 30 December 2003 buying medicines at a local pharmacy.  

Ms Woods was said to be a bit “recluse” and would not just open her door to any person. She was dubbed as the “woman Sydney forgot” because nobody had tried to check on her well being from the time of her passing to the discovery of her skeletal remains.

The rundown Surry Hills townhouse underwent renovation after it was sold at an auction in 2016 for $1.1 million. It was last sold in 2020 for $1,650,000 million.

Surry Hills Precinct Hits the Market for $100 Million

A Surry Hills precinct, where Hotel Stellar and Soda Factory stand, has gone on the market with an asking price of $100 million.



The stretch of property, which spans 1,218 square metres., is located at 4 to 22 Wentworth Avenue.

This Surry Hills precinct has an existing development application for a 19-storey hotel with 202 luxury rooms as well as a new ground-floor restaurant and bar. 

Photo Credit: City of Sydney

Decision on the existing DA, however, has been deferred by the Central Sydney Planning Committee in 2019, pending an “amended planning proposal and draft development control plan to take into account the whole street block.”  

Realtors have described the location as “iconic” as its close to Sydney’s Hyde Park and the awaited completion of Sydney’s Silicon Valley, Tech Central. It’s also positioned within world-class transport links like the Museum station, the light rail system, bus services, and the new metro. 

“Despite the impacts of lockdowns, opportunities to enter the Sydney hotel market are extremely limited, whether through an existing asset, or new development,” JLL’s Andrew Langsford said in announcing the sale of the properties. “This location benefits from CBD corporate demand and draws on a range of cultural neighbourhood experiences through Surry Hills and will be highly sought by hotel operators, especially given the pipeline of exciting projects in the immediate precinct.”

The mixed-used site consists of five lots, acquired by Pongrass Properties over an eight-year period, is meant to be sold as a whole package. The original values of the lots were at $3.75 million (for 4 Wentworth Ave), $1.65 million (8 Wentworth Ave), $3,369,150 million (for 10-12 Wentworth Ave), $1.4 million (for 14 Wentworth Ave), and $3.9 million (for 16-22 Wentworth Ave).  



Tech Central in Surry Hills Nabs First 3 Major Tenants for The Quantum Terminal

Tech Central, Sydney’s version of Silicon Valley near Surry Hills, has secured three major tenants for The Quantum Terminal, dubbed as the precinct’s “first centralised collaboration space for researchers, developers, engineers, and entrepreneurs.”



Q-Ctrl, Quantum Brilliance, and the Sydney Quantum Academy are set to move into the world-class technology precinct, spanning 3,00 square metres of space of the former Central Station, which is expected to put NSW on the map as a global leader in innovation.

Q-Ctrl grabbed the headlines early this year for its development of a new computing process that reduces the errors from environmental “noise.” 

Quantum Brilliance is the leader in diamond quantum science research and one of a handful of companies around the world that can deliver quantum computing systems for clients.

Sydney Quantum Academy is a partnership involving four famous institutions: Macquarie University, UNSW Sydney, the University of Sydney, and the University of Technology Sydney.

Photo Credit: JLL
Photo Credit: JLL

“We are proud to be key partners of The Quantum Terminal and Tech Central and look forward to working closely with the NSW Government and key partners to bring this exciting, world-class innovation and technology precinct to life,” said Professor Mark Scott, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of the University of Sydney.

“We’ll be sharing the lessons we’ve learnt through our deep experience developing ground-breaking multi-disciplinary research, fostering innovation and supporting the commercialisation of successful start-ups.

“We strongly support the Government’s transport vision for the precinct as an activated, walkable and integrated innovation district where residents, visitors and workers can interact and linger in great places and public spaces.”



The NSW Government has invested in helping tenants of The Quantum Terminal. Beginning December 2021, startups and businesses may apply for rebates on rents and fit-outs for up to $600,000 a year.

Photo Credit: Tech Central

Divided within six Sydney neighbourhoods, including Surry Hills, Tech Central covers a total of 250,000-square metres of space that has been projected to create up to 25,000 new jobs once it’s completed. Premier Dominic Perrottet said that the hub will place NSW in a “pole position” as a global leader when it comes to technology. 

Apart from The Quantum Terminal, Tech Central will also open the Tech Central Scaleup Hub, which will be Stone & Chalk’s second site in Sydney, as well as the Atlassian headquarters, which will begin construction in the first half of 2022. 

Explore Tech Central on the official site

Does Your Surry Hills Home Need a Reno? New TV show May Be Your Dream Come True

A few years ago, the award-winning TV series ‘Grand Designs” featured a house at 8 Belmore Lane in Surry Hills.

The producers of a new TV show from Foxtel, “Selling in the City,” are looking to feature new local houses whilst undergoing a renovation.

The TV exposure turned out very well at Belmore Lane so being featured would appear to only add $$$$s to your valuation.

Touted as the next Foxtel LifeStyle channel hit, Selling In The City is a Selling Houses Australia spinoff that targets the multimedia-savvy millennial audience. 

Featuring award-winning, Melbourne-based interior designer Rosie Morley and Victoria-based landscape expert Paddy Milne as hosts, Selling in the City will showcase small, urban properties and offer a montage of attractive design ideas and clever solutions for small spaces to help people maximise and get fresh usage out of their domiciles.



Surry Hills Small Home 

Photo Credit: realestate.com.au

Audiences in Surry Hills are no strangers to the “small house makes it big” success story of Grand Designs: Season One fame that is 8 Belmore Lane, a.k.a. ‘The Small House.’

Then-owner Domenic Alvaro, an architect, managed to fit in three bedrooms, two bathrooms, living, dining, and kitchen areas, a rooftop garden, and a lock-up garage into a 6-metre x 7-metre x 5-storey rectangular prism that still allowed plenty of natural light.

The design won the 2011 World House of the Year award at the World Architecture Festival in Barcelona. The small (really small!) yet thoughtfully designed and beautifully executed dwelling on what were once three car spaces in a Surry Hills corner was an instant hit with TV audiences. 

So do you think your home is the next TV success story?

The Selling in the City production team is actively searching for “apartments, townhouses, warehouse conversions and everything else in-between” to feature and offer fresh challenges for the show.

As Selling in the City pitches in its casting call, if the latte life has lost its appeal; or you’ve outgrown your current space and need an upgrade; or you’re looking to sell but want to spruce things up first, maybe it’s time to consider an out-of-the-box solution like going on TV and letting the experts literally run the show. All whilst documenting the experience for all of Australia to watch as it unfolds, of course. 

Those precious minutes of airtime just might give you the home of your dreams.

After all, from shelling out $230,000 in 2008 to selling for $1.88 million in 2014 ahead of its scheduled auction, The Small House of Surry Hills certainly brought Domenic Alvaro value in spades. All that TV popularity (plus the award!) certainly didn’t hurt.

And whilst 8 Belmore Lane’s claim to fame stemmed in part from a different TV show, the premise offered by Selling in the City and its team of real estate experts and renovators to today’s hopeful homeowners is no less attractive and certainly more current.



Photo Credit: Instagram/Wendy Moore

Selling In The City will focus on the millions of urban-dwelling Australians who live in apartments, terraces, and townhouses and want to renovate and transform their homes to sell and change where they live,” says Wendy Moore, Foxtel Group General Manager, Lifestyle.

“This fresh approach takes the trusted Selling Houses brand and opens it up to a whole new audience,” she added.

If you think your home should be on Selling in the City, watch this video and click this button to apply.

Former Home of the Popular Porteño Restaurant in Surry Hills Up for Auction

More than six years after a fire damaged the building, the former home of the popular Porteño Restaurant in Surry Hills is going up for auction. 



Since the fire, Porteño owners and chef Ben Milgate and Elvis Abrahanowicz have moved their establishment to Holt Street with their Bodega tapas bar.

The property on Riley Street then underwent a $2.5-million refurbishment that transformed it into modern office spaces. The refurbishment into a modern office space received recognition at the Australian Interior Design Award and the Idea Awards, alongside various magazine features.

Milligan Group snapped up the former Porteño building and signed the fashion house, AJE, as its tenant.

Photo Credit: AJE/Facebook

AJE still has six years left to its lease but the building owners and investors have decided to put the former Porteno site, with a 760-square metre space, up for auction in late November 2021. Interests in the property has been high since this building stands on “one of Sydney’s most tightly held city fringe destinations,” per industry experts.

The precinct in the corner of Cleveland and Riley Streets is due to change in the coming years, with the redevelopment of the nearby Surry Hills Village from the TOGA Group. This precinct is slated to become a shopping centre with 111 apartment units and a boutique hotel. 

After the fire, Chinese investors bought the building for $6.66 million in 2016. The site currently has a $13 million price guide.

Porteño Restaurant, which serves mostly Argentinian dishes, continues to operate at its new location. It has been recognized as one of the top 50 restaurants in Sydney by Gourmet Traveller, whilst the chefs were named 2013 Chef of the Year by The Sydney Morning Herald. 



In 2020, the owners expanded the Holt Street site by opening Bastardo, a trattoria, and Humble Bakery. Mr Abrahanowicz dubbed this area their own little Porteño precint. 

Surry Hills Real Estate Up 8.4%, New #1 Agent Weighs In

The Surry Hills property market has gone from strength to strength in recent years. After another strong 12 months of growth, the median house price has gone up 8.41% to $2.005 million to the end of September 2021. At the forefront, an agent long-renowned for his sales activity in Redfern has become Surry Hills’ #1 Agent.


Read : Surry Hills Median House Price Hits $2-Million Mark


A lot has been happening around us.

It confirmed what locals already knew, highlighting the constant demand to move to the area, keeping house prices buoyant.

Surry Hills has officially been voted into the top 20 coolest neighbourhoods in the world. (You didn’t know? Click here to read about it.)

At the same time, Sydney saw a trend through Covid for people to move into larger houses. While the typical Surry Hills terrace has a footprint of 100-200 square metres (not huge by the rest of Australia’s standards), these properties offered inner-city residents a lot of spatial options during the pandemic — from living spaces over two storeys, to urban backyards, rear-lane studios and more.

Amid all this activity, Charles Touma of the Ray White Touma Group has been selling more homes than any other local agent. When he sold 3 terrace houses in one weekend recently, he stepped into that #1 spot.

Screenshot: realestate.com.au

Having been #1 in neighbouring Redfern for many years, Touma’s success in Surry Hills increased during lockdown. The government mandates for one-on-one property appointments meant he was personally introducing clients to every home. Some of them had never even considered Surry Hills.

Screenshot: realestate.com.au

Read: 3 Things You May Not Know About the Adam Goodes Mural in Surry Hills


Touma Talks

We’ve been following Charles for his “Touma Talks” series, where he focuses on the stories of Surry Hills and Redfern in a number of videos.

Touma Talks has covered an eclectic mix of stories in a series of videos that gives interesting anecdotes about people and places that shaped their suburb.

Some of the highlights are:

The Perkal Brothers used to ply their trade at 386 Crown St. Their best client was Kerry Packer but they also serviced two Queens.

The Worst Woman in Sydney Episode was a cracker? She operated out of Landsdowne Street, Pearl Street, and Devonshire Street.

Riley Street and surrounds became notorious as a hotspot for Sydney’s underworld for at least two decades.

Other local stories include one on Foster Lane, where there was once a highly secretive local venue called ‘Thommo’s Two-Up School.’ Oh to be a fly on the wall back in the day!

Also, have you heard about the pub that never opened on the corner of Arthur and Alexander Streets?

And did you know that AC/DC’s Bon Scott broke his ankle over on Cleveland Street?

There’s certainly no shortage of Local Legends for Touma to feature in the series.

Despite the likelihood of increased interest rates in 2022, Touma expects demand for terrace houses close to Sydney CBD to continue.

Surry Hills Median House Price Hits $2-Million Mark

With its strong fundamentals and riding off the back of a bullish Sydney property market, Surry Hills hit the $2-million median house price mark during the 12-month period ending September 2021. 


Highlights

  • The median house price of Surry Hills grew by 8.41 per cent between October 2020 to September 2021.
  • The unit market also grew by 3.13 per cent, with 440 units sold during this period.
  • With its strong fundamentals, the Surry Hills property market is projected to keep rising as Sydney eases off its lockdowns. 

House Price Growth

Over the past year, the Sydney property market has seen a distinct upward trajectory in median house prices, increasing by just under a thousand dollars a day, as homeowners take a second look at the lifestyle their property provides. Buyers, unable to travel, have been spending their cash on upgrading their home or choosing a new one.

Surry Hills has already been a strong performer, managing a rise even during the 2018 doldrums when the median house price fell a hefty -9.9% Sydney-wide. With its strong fundamentals, Surry Hills showed a median uptick of 8.41 per cent between October 2020 to September 2021. This growth has pulled the median house price to just above the $2-million mark at $2,005,000 from $1,850,000 in the previous year, per figures from Property Market Updates.

There were 130 properties sold during this period, listed within an average of 46 days on the market. Buyers preferred three-bedroom houses the most (44 sold), although two-bedroom homes were snapped up faster, at a brisk 31 days.

Photo Credit: Property Market Updates

The sale of a renovated luxury terrace on Riley Street, which closed for over $5 million, highlighted the substantial value of acquiring a Surry Hill property. This four-bedroom home, with a mix of preserved original details and high-end features, was priced at just under $2.5 million when it last sold in 2016. 

Unit Price Growth

Not to be left behind, the unit market in Surry Hills also logged a growth of 3.13 per cent. Although that may seem modest. the median unit price is now just a shade shy of the seven-digit mark, at $990,000. There were 440 units sold within an average of 42 days on market. 

Photo Credit: Property Market Updates

Industry experts believe that Surry Hills will continue to pick up post-COVID as Sydney eases off from the lockdowns and life settles into the new normal. Currently, buying trends show a distinct preference for more space, with a lot of buyers opting for a sea-change or tree-change from inner-city living, due to large amounts of time spent indoors during lockdown periods. 



Within this period, hospitality businesses also temporarily closed, students were barred from moving in, and culture or lifestyle events were cancelled — the very facets that defined what living in Surry Hills is all about. 

Despite this, investors, first home buyers, and young professionals have been driving up the Surry Hills property market, seizing the moment to capitalise on the changes. With its high liveability, exceptional convenience, and proximity to business and cultural hubs, Surry Hills and similar choice neighbourhoods in the inner city that enjoy strong fundamentals have historically been insulated from city-wide softening of prices.

About Surry Hills

Surry Hills is Sydney inner city’s food and culture mecca with hundreds of small businesses lined up on its leafy streets, back alleys, and laneways. This suburb has an interesting, eclectic mix of residents from high-earners and professionals working in the CBD five minutes away to the long-term locals who have witnessed the gentrification of the suburb, to the migrants who have been bringing their culture to enrich the community. 

Photo Credit: Google Maps

Just as interesting are its wide ranges of dwelling options  — from terrace houses to converted warehouse lofts, to large apartment blocks in old or refurbished buildings or brand new builds. 

Several residents get around by biking or walking to work or school, shops, venues, and community hubs. However, there are also plenty of transport options like buses, trains, and the tram that make Surry Hills such an accessible area. 

Surry Hills is home to an award-winning city library across the beautiful Shannon Reserve Park on Crown Street. Residents enjoy the benefits of quality childcare and education from facilities like the Sydney Boys and Sydney Girls High Schools and the Australian Institute of Music



“Surry Hills has been gentrified but for the most part hasn’t lost its uniqueness. It’s home to people from all walks of life. I moved back to Surry Hills 3 years ago and have been pleasantly surprised by the level of neighbourliness.”

Good Life

“I lived for 3 years in Surry Hills and it was great. You can walk to Central station and get to literally everywhere in Sydney. Just a short stroll to the CBD so you can walk or cycle to work every day. Vibrant, very active streets full of cafes, restaurants, pubs and shops so it’s definitely a place for young people. Super diverse, inclusive, great demographic mix and multicultural. Located in the heart of Sydney it’s rather dense yet there are no horrible tall buildings as in the CBD.”

UD

Award-Winning Chef Opens The Blue Door with a Unique Menu in Surry Hills

Restaurant heavy-weight Chef Dylan Cashman has opened his new unique gastronomic outpost, The Blue Door, in Surry Hills, where 95 per cent of the menu is dictated by the availability of livestock from farms around New South Wales for a truly authentic farm to table culinary adventure.



The chef and his team purchase whole animals, from farms they have personally visited, to use in their rotating weekly menu. Abiding by ethical and sustainable practices, the kitchen workers at The Blue Door use all of the cuts of meat until it’s consumed so suppliers are never pressured to have the provisions on demand. 

Photo Credit: TheBlueDoor/Instagram

This producer-focused practice also ensures that nothing goes to waste. The food also tastes a whole lot better as Mr Cashman and his team value quality over quantity. 

Their bread choices are baked in-house as well, whilst some of their herbs and produce are snipped from the restaurant’s new sets of Airgardens, the country’s first locally manufactured aeroponic gardens. 

Guests who come to The Blue Door are offered a six-course degustation for dinner with a different menu every week. Once seated, the guests are served freshly-baked bread and house-made butter with choices of salt from four countries. 

Wine is also served, as curated by Angelica Nohra from mostly Australian producers. The Blue Door offers a “secret sips” wine list filled with international selections, vintage choices, and cocktails.

Lunch choices include just two to three a la carte dishes. (View a sample menu)



Mr Cashman — who has worked at Sean’s Panorama (North Bondi), Cottage Point Inn (Ku Ring Gai National Park), and Paper Daisy (Cabarita Beach) — said that he wants his diners to have a connection with the farmers and producers who also care about ethical producing and sustainability.

Photo Credit: TheBlueDoor/GoogleMaps

In 2017, Mr Cashman opened the first Blue Door in Gold Coast, which was named Queensland’s best new restaurant of the year. However, he closed the store immediately after some damage to the building and then moved to New South Wales. 

The Blue Door can seat 24 people at full capacity (16 during restrictions) and officially opened at Waterloo Street on 20 October 2021. Follow their Instagram page for updates.

Surry Hills Listed as One of the Coolest Neighbourhoods in the World

Following a poll of 27,000 people living in various cities across the world, Surry Hills emerged as the 19th coolest neighbourhood in the world and the top Sydney community for 2021.



Time Out asked its readers to pick their favourite neighbourhoods in an online poll and Surry Hills, the heart of Eastern Sydney, ranked high for its trendy cafes, exciting restaurants, and unique boutiques, as well as tattoo parlours. 

Home to hip and vibrant eateries, the suburb’s hospitality venues reinvigorated and shifted to al-fresco dining choices, turning the streets into the most popular destinations when COVID-19 struck. Those outdoor dining options are here to stay as NSW slowly exits the longest lockdown in October 2021.

Comparable to Notting Hill in London, this Eastern Sydney community has its own Surry Hills Markets, where buyers can spot great vintage finds, upcycled goods, and handcrafted pieces. The community is also known for embracing inclusivity and diversity. 

Surry Hills was one of only two Australian cities to make it on the Top 20 Coolest Neighbourhoods in the World, with Richmond in Melbourne’s inner east ranking on the 10th spot. 

Richmond was recognised for its community-centred dynamics, highlighting 30-year outreach activities of the Richmond Churches Food Centre, as well as its cafe culture, live music venue and its fashion stores. 



The number one city on the list is Nørrebro in Copenhagen, Denmark, which appealed to the surveyed participants for its strong community bond, diversity, ultramodern architecture and food, and beautiful historical landmarks. 

Last year, Time Out’s poll had Yarraviell (Melbourne) in 5th place and Marrickville (Sydney) in 10th place. 

The 49 Coolest Neighbourhoods in the World for 2021

  1. Nørrebro, Coppenhagen
  2. Andersonville, Chicago
  3. Jongno 3-ga, Seoul
  4. Leith, Edinburgh
  5. Station District, Vilnius
  6. Chelsea, New York
  7. XI District, Budapest
  8. Ngor, Dakar
  9. Sai Kung, Hong Kong
  10. Richmond, Melbourne
  11. Neukölln, Berlin
  12. Centro, Medellín
  13. Dalston, London
  14. Silver Lake, Los Angeles
  15. Dublin 8, Dublin
  16. Zoloti Vorota, Kyiv
  17. Noord, Amsterdam
  18. Villeray, Montreal
  19. Surry Hills, Sydney
  20. Ancoats, Manchester
  21. Sagene, Oslo
  22. Old Xuhui, Shanghai
  23. Centro, Mexico City
  24. Gràcia, Barcelona
  25. Saúde, Rio de Janeiro
  26. Kemptown, Brighton
  27. Sololaki, Tbilisi
  28. Brickell, Miami
  29. Ouseburn, Newcastle
  30. Barranco, Lima
  31. Chamberí, Madrid
  32. Vinohrady, Prague
  33. Katong, Singapore
  34. Anjos, Lisbon
  35. Daikanyama, Tokyo
  36. Haut-Marais, Paris
  37. Al Bateen, Abu Dhabi
  38. Foz, Porto
  39. Central Square, Boston/Cambridge
  40. Mount Pleasant, Vancouver
  41. Jamestown, Accra
  42. Centro, Oaxaca
  43. Mouassine, Marrakech
  44. Dubai Marina, Dubai
  45. Kadikoy, Istanbul
  46. Poblacion, Manila
  47. Ari, Bangkok
  48. Koregaon Park, Pune
  49. El Arrayán, Santiago

Where to Find Reliable Food Security Options in Surry Hills

Did you know that prior to the pandemic, over 20 percent of Australians experience food insecurity? This number has likely climbed with the lockdowns in Sydney as distribution logistics and workforce issues have also impacted the food supply, including in Surry Hills.



The restrictions have been a great reminder of the fragility of the food system in the country even as the majority of fresh food sold in Australian supermarkets is produced locally. Panic-buying has also been a factor in the shortage of food supplies.

Fortunately, local non-profits and some businesses have been working harder to provide food for families for as long as their resources and access to supply chains are open. By offering free meals or discounted food packages, residents in Surry Hills and the nearby suburbs won’t have to wonder where their next meals will come

If you know of families or vulnerable communities who may need help with food, let them know of this comprehensive list of reliable food security providers in Surry Hills and nearby suburbs. This is a mix of charity providers targeting specific groups and commercially available options.

ORGANISATIONCONTACT DETAILSPROVISIONS
Salvation Army Tel: 13 72 58
Tel: 1300 371 288 (Crisis Assessment Line)
Facebook
Emergency vouchers for food and financial assistance. Can be picked up from nearest Salvation Army store.

If the client does not have access to a phone, there is an allocated phone at Sydney StreetLevel Mission Waterloo (Cnr of Phillip and Cope Street Waterloo) and Sydney Street Level Mission Surry Hills (Derby Lane off Albion Street, rear of 339 Crown Street Surry Hills)
St Vincent De Paul Intake LineTel: (02) 9560 2656
or 13 18 12
Food, financial assistance and emergency relief

Brekky Van operates from Prince Alfred Park in Surry Hills every Sunday from 9 am until 11 am.

Provides hot cooked breakfast for homeless, marginally housed or those facing financial hardship
Surry Hills Community ConnectEmail: sacha.lapi@facs.nsw.gov.au
Email: judit.pege@facs.nsw.gov.au
Mobile: 0417 225 724
Facebook
Frozen Meals are available every Tuesday & Wednesday, 2.00 pm – 3.00 pm for social housing tenants living in Surry Hills
KinelaSuite 101, Level 1/72-80 Cooper St, Surry Hills NSW 2010, Australia
Tel: 1800 431 619
https://www.kinela.com/
Meals designed by dietitians delivered to your home

NDIS co-payment price from $1.50-$2.00 per meal
South Eastern CommunityConnect (SECC)Shop 84, Eastlakes Shopping Centre
Tel: (02) 8338 8506
Shopping Bus, 1-1 Shopping, List Shopping, & Home delivery Service for over 65s

Fruit & Vegetable delivery. $12 a box

Meal Preparation in the home for over 65s. $10 per 2-hour session

Open Monday to Friday
9 am-4:30 pm

Delivery Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday
​​Lakes Gourmet DeliSpecialty Grocery StoreShop 4,19A Evans Avenue Eastlakes
Tel: (02) 9667 4776
or Mary (owner) on 0420 207 172 to order
Continental Delicatessen – range of local and imported small goods, cheeses and groceries.

Delivery will be organised by the owners after 6 pm to the following communities: Eastlakes,Mascot, Kingsford, Kensington, & Maroubra

Cash only
Hours: 8 am-6 pm


These charities and businesses may also need volunteers and donors to sustain their operations. Those interested to help out may also contact the organisations to enquire about donations and other logistical requirements.