Strathfield Municipality has a number of town centres. The Town Centres of Strathfield, Homebush and Flemington are located around the railway which was first established in 1855. Other town centres such as Strathfield South and Enfield (The Broadway) developed around major roads.
The major transport and retail centre of the Strathfield district is the Strathfield Town Centre. In the late 19th century Strathfield Town Centre featured a small rail station, a few shops and large Victorian mansions. However, in the 1920s the rail station was extensively expanded and Strathfield became one of NSW’s major city and country rail stations. Homes made way for rail expansion and development of a shopping precinct. Strathfield Council acquired land surplus to the railway and created Strathfield Square (park and open space) in the 1920s. Strathfield Plaza opened in the early 1980s and Strathfield Square was extensively redesigned in the 1980s.
The Homebush Village
shopping centre is located
near the historic Homebush
rail station, one of
Sydney’s first rail stations
built in 1855.
Originally the shops
extended from Rochester
Street to Parramatta Road,
however when the railway
tracks were raised,
Rochester St was split and
the northern end became
Knight Street. This
separated the two shopping
centres on Rochester Street
and Parramatta Road. The
buildings in the Homebush
Village date back to the
early 1900s and feature many
federation and interwar
style buildings.
The Homebush West
residential and shopping
centre, Flemington Rail
Station and Sydney’s
Stockyards (now Sydney
Markets) commenced
development in the 1880s.
Flemington Rail Station
opened in 1884. Nearby
residential and industrial
development created demand
for local shops. The oldest
shops still standing in
Homebush West were built in
the 1920s.
The Strathfield South
Shopping Centre is located
on the ‘crossways’ of
Liverpool Road and Liverpool
Road (Hume Hwy). Liverpool
Road was first built in 1814
joining Sydney to Liverpool
by road. This road predates
most residential development
in Strathfield and in early
times featured small
half-way hotels for
travellers. By the late 19th
century a small shopping
area developed featuring a
post office, general stores
and White’s timber yards.
Though the timber yard is
long gone, older locals
still refer to this centre
as ‘White’s Corner’. Many
buildings including the
Crossways Hotel date back to
the 1920s.
Enfield Shopping Centre is
also known as 'The Broadway'
and is located at the
intersection of Liverpool
Road, The Boulevarde and
Coronation Parade and is
separated between
Strathfield and Burwood
Councils. Until 1948,
trams ran from the Tangarra
Street Enfield Terminus,
down Coronation Parade and
Liverpool Road to Burwood,
Ashfield and Mortlake.
The Centre featured many
shops and the former Enfield
Savoy Cinema.
The Cave Road Shopping Centre is a small set of shops built c.1960. This area was a former golf course but redeveloped as a residential precinct. Cave Road adjoins the Cooks River and is located close to Liverpool Road in the west of Strathfield.





