The project will be a sensitive and beautifully resolved work of architecture and public domain. The project will successfully address the multiple challenges of its heritage and parkland setting, cyclists’ needs, Country, and engineering requirements. It will enhance its setting and be an asset to the whole community, both cyclists and noncyclists.
The serpentine form of the cycleway ramp—an assembly of complimentary curves—is minimal in its solution and organic in its geometry. Lightness, fluidity, and transparency have been given equal weighting to robustness, constructability, sustainability, and long-term maintenance. This ensures a reduced visual impact on the Harbour Bridge and Bradfield Park as well as minimised over-shadowing of the groundplane below.
The ramp’s paving design draws on the imagery and themes of local marine life in Gadigal and Cammeraygal land and waters. Two intertwining eels are shown along the length of the cycleway ramp, one journeying north and one south. They reflect the historical and present day physical and spiritual connection between Gadigal and Cammeraygal at this important crossing location in Sydney Harbour.