⁴ᴷ⁶⁰ Walking Sydney, Australia: Gadigal Metro station

May 18, 2026 - 8:30 AM 64°F / 18°C Walkthrough (without narration) of the Gadigal Metro station in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Filmed with GoPro Hero 12. Highlights: 0:00 - Entering Gadigal station from Park Street, "Return of the Gadi Reed" 3:33 - Lower level 5:43 - Tallawong-bound station platform From Wikipedia: "Gadigal metro station is an underground Sydney Metro station in the central business district of Sydney, Australia which opened in August 2024. The station serves the Metro North West & Bankstown Line, with services operating between Sydenham and Tallawong. Services are expected to extend from Sydenham to Bankstown by 2026. Gadigal station was known during planning and construction as Pitt Street. Gadigal station is located within the Sydney central business district, two blocks east of Town Hall and two blocks west of Hyde Park. The adjacent station to the north is Martin Place station and the adjacent station to the south is Central station. Gadigal station was designed to relieve pressure on Town Hall station, an important interchange on the Sydney Trains network less than 150 metres (490 ft) west of Gadigal station. Unlike Martin Place station, there is no underground walkway between Gadigal and Town Hall stations as planners wanted to avoid creating a megastation and to avoid problems at one station affecting the other. Gadigal station has two entrances. The north entrance is on the northern side of Park Street between Pitt and Castlereagh streets. The south entrance is on the south-eastern corner of Pitt and Bathurst streets. The northbound platform is located beneath Pitt Street and the southbound platform is located beneath Castlereagh Street. As the tunnel had to be bored above the Cross City Tunnel, the platforms are 17 metres (56 ft) below Park Street and 20 metres (66 ft) below Bathurst Street, making Gadigal station the shallowest station on the City & Southwest project. At each entrance is an artwork titled The Underneath, by Callum Morton. This consists of two 12.5-metre-high (41 ft) tiled murals on the walls opposite the escalators at each entrance."