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Hi, I am moving soon to Sydney for about a year, and I am not sure which suburb to look for accomodation (I am still overseas and would like to find sg before flying in)
Is there a suburb/area, that has a beautiful beach (for swimming) and maybe parks, but also close to the city centre (on foot) and hopefully convenient to access Sydney Uni?
Is Woolloomooloo bay like that? Is it good for swimming? sorry for too many questions, but it is hard to know these from web sites. any advice on web sites for finding a room? thank you for your help! m

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1

There is nowhere close to the City or Sydney University that is also on the beach - even Woolloomooloo is not within walking distance of UnivSyd, and it is not swimmable in any case. You can either look at suburbs like Glebe, Camperdown, Annandale, Newtown, Redfern or Surry Hills and be close to the University (recommended) or you can live out on the beach (Clovelly, Bondi, Coogee, Bronte, etc) and go through a difficult commute each day (not so recommended). Live close to the University in a share house, and get to the beach on summer weekends. There are also public swimming pools both at and around the University.

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2

thank you so much for your answer.

is there any nice beach area that is at least kind of walking distance/close to the City Centre area?

From this list, which one do you recommend?: Clovelly, Bondi, Coogee, Bronte, etc

In the winter months, is it not possible to swim on the beach? Too cold? From when to when is it too cold?

Thank you! m

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3

The main beaches are on the ocean. The city centre is on south side of the harbour. The harbour beaches are on the north side. So, no beautiful swimming beaches within walking distance, but plenty reachable by public transport in a short time.

Woolloomooloo Bay is military/industrial docks etc as far as I can see

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4

Don't you have a map (with a scale on it)? Sydney CBD to Bondi Beach would be 8-9 km (I guess). That is the sort of distance you are looking at. For many people it is too cold April to October. Some swim all year - at the other extreme some find it too cold on all but the hottest days of January-February. Please do some research - a lot of this is Gude Book stuff.

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5

<blockquote>Quote
<hr>Gude Book stuff<hr></blockquote>
like the Bible?

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6

I once lived in Rose Bay on the eastern suburbs - nice area... sort of halfway between Bondi and the CBD... Watsons Bay, just up the hill was OK too, if you couldn't be arsed getting on a bus on a Sunday.

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7

thank you, all. Ianw, sorry, i meant, regardless of the distance, beach-wise, is it nicer to live at Clovelly or Bronte, or Cooggee? I guess Bondi is a bit too crowded/touristy to live there.

thanks, Nerb:
>The harbour beaches are on the north side. <

So you'd need to take a ferry to get there?

>So, no beautiful swimming beaches within walking distance, but plenty reachable by public transport in a short time.<

Do you mean ocean front ones, e.g. Bondi, Clovelly, Coogee, etc?

OK, so I guess it's either the ocean front or downtown city centre. Any nice suburbs for recommendation which are close to the city centre, but still livable?

Yes, I have a map and all, but it helps a lot to hear from the ones who actually live around there. Thanks! m

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8

I am a Sydney Uni graduate who loves the beach! Ian is right that the easiest way to live (if you are intending to be at the uni on a daily basis) is probably to head for one of the suburbs he has mentioned above in #1- and surrounding - all of which are pretty lively suburbs to live in - and go to the beach on the weekend. Its much better to stay on the south side of the harbour for access to the university.

Alternatively, Clovelly, Bronte and Coogee are all good suburbs and therefore relatively highly sought after. Coogee and Bronte have good beaches. I also like Bondi, but lots of people don't. Coogee is probably the larger of those 3 suburbs, along with Bondi and there is a lot of rental accommodation in both. Rents vary a lot and you'll get what you pay for.

If you want to live on the beach side, you'll be better off if you're close to a bus route which goes across the city to central station- or live close to or on a route to - Bondi Junction train station.
Either way, unless things have changed, it is still a trip across the city and not well serviced by direct routes. If you live in one of the other suburbs close to the uni you can often walk.

As for your questions in #7, yes, a ferry is a good way to get cross the harbour, but it wont get you to any ocean beach except Manly. The harbour side beaches can be reached by a combination of ferry and bus or direct by bus.
Yes, the ocean beaches can be reached by public transport.
The suburbs Ian has mentioned in #1 will be your best bet. There are some closer as well - Ultimo, Chippendale etc.

Confused?

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9

firstly I suggest you get hold of a map or nothing anyone says is going to make any sense

personally, i would suggest living somewhere like Waverley....

- walking distance to most of the eastern beaches like Bronte/Coogee/Clovelly
- walking disatance to Centennial Park
- walking distance to Bondi Junction Station from where you are 3 train stops from the City
- you can ride a bike to Sydney Uni ( which I did for several years as it was faster than stuffing around on public transport)

but basically what you are asking for doesn't exist and you wouldn't be able to afford it if it did....this is something you need to consider....what sort of money are you expecting to spend on rent?

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