Kellyville Centre Park will be a lively destination for the whole community, with a strong focus on active, adventure-based spaces for young people.
Located alongside the Kellyville Metro Station, the unique, linear park will provide a fun, relaxing place to gather, move and explore.
The park is jointly funded under the NSW Government’s $300 million Parks for People program and the Sydney Metro Northwest Places Program (a partnership between Landcom and Sydney Metro). Parks for People is part of the NSW Government’s $520 million Transport Oriented Development (TOD) Accelerated Precinct investment to help deliver critical road upgrades, active transport links and high-quality public open spaces like parks and walkways.
Kellyville Centre Park will embrace and celebrate the natural environment. More than half the space will be dedicated to plants, shade and native trees, giving the park a unique feel, connected to nature.
Key elements include:
- a planted channel to cool the park, clean stormwater, and create habitat for local wildlife
- native trees and shaded areas that provide cool, comfortable spaces to relax, gather or play
- retained existing hills and slopes that enhance the park’s natural character.
The community asked for places to move, play and be social, particularly for young people. The design includes a wide range of flexible recreation areas that support everyday activity, casual play and gatherings.
Proposed key features include:
- a shared pedestrian and cycle path to improve access to Kellyville Metro Station
- spaces for sport and play from pickleball to basketball, skating, roller blading and more
- a central lawn and adaptable community spaces for informal sport, events and gatherings
- durable, low maintenance materials and inclusive design so people of all ages and abilities can enjoy the space comfortably.
An interconnected network of pathways will connect activity areas throughout the park, making it easy to wander, explore and enjoy.
Key features will include:
- a wide, all-weather walkway with shaded seating beneath the Metro viaduct
- lighting to enhance safety, and public art to create a strong sense of place
- convenient connections to Metro, bus, and cycling routes.
The design celebrates local heritage and embeds cultural values in line with Connecting with Country principles.
The design will include:
- First Nations stories reflected through artwork and landscape design
- native planting that supports local wildlife and threatened species.
Design process
-
Pre-design community input
Initial community feedback, along with input from The Hills Shire Council, cultural knowledge holders and Traditional Custodians, helped shape the park’s vision and informed the designs.
-
Exhibition
The designs were on exhibition from Monday 23 February 2026 to Tuesday 24 March 2026.
We’re now reviewing the feedback received during the exhibition period to refine the final design.
-
Final design release
The final design will be completed and released in the coming months.
-
Construction
Construction is planned to begin in 2027.
View the designs and proposed features on the NSW Planning Portal.