For Maria Chen, a marketing manager in Parramatta, the Sydney Metro project feels like a daily reality check. Her morning commute from her home in Westmead—currently 45 minutes by bus and train—could halve once the new line opens in 2028. But right now, roadworks on Church Street have added 15 minutes to her journey, and she's already noticing construction dust on her veranda.
Chen's experience is playing out across multiple neighbourhoods as Transport NSW pushes ahead with what officials describe as the city's most significant infrastructure investment since the Harbour Bridge. The $20 billion Metro project, running from Chatswood through the CBD to Sydenham, promises to transform daily life for an estimated 500,000 residents along the corridor. But the benefit isn't equally distributed, and the disruption is very real.
Local property markets are already shifting. Analysis by leading Sydney real estate firms shows apartments within 400 metres of planned Metro stations have appreciated 12–18% faster than comparable properties elsewhere since 2024. In Parramatta, Burwood, and Alexandria, the "Metro effect" is unmistakable. But for renters—who make up roughly 32% of Sydney's population—rising rents near stations mean displacement, not opportunity. Real estate agents report rental yields climbing 3–4% annually in these precincts.
The construction phase brings visible trade-offs. Between now and 2028, Chatswood's Orchard Road will see partial lane closures. Victoria Cross station work is affecting foot traffic on Miller Street in North Sydney. Local retailers worry: during the recent CBD light rail extensions, some small businesses saw customer numbers drop 20–30% during peak construction years. Meanwhile, commuters on the existing T1 line can expect continued crowding as passengers defer switching until the Metro opens.
But community feedback suggests residents are largely willing to weather the storm. At recent consultation sessions in Sydenham and Marrickville, attendance was strong, with locals asking detailed questions about construction timelines, noise mitigation, and future bus network redesigns. The promise is tangible: a train every 4 minutes during peak hours, cutting commute times by roughly 30% system-wide.
The wildcard is equity. Without targeted planning, the Metro's completion could accelerate inner-west gentrification—a process already visible in Marrickville and Dulwich Hill. Advocates are pushing the NSW government to protect affordable housing near stations. Transport Secretary Hugh Gleeson has signalled openness to such measures, though details remain scarce.
Sydney's growth depends on moving people efficiently. The Metro does that. Whether it works fairly for everyone is the harder question residents will be asking for the next two years.
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