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Gosford CBD renewal gathers pace as four major projects enter construction simultaneously

Updated

The simultaneous delivery of a new hospital tower, council civic hub, private mixed-use tower, and river park marks a turning point for the city centre.

By Central Coast Daily · Published 23 June 2026 at 11:05 pm · 1 min read(253 words)

Verified by The Daily Central Coast editorial teamReviewed by our Central Coast editorial team. Last verified: 28 June 2026 at 12:51 am.

Updated 27 June 2026 at 11:05 pm

Gosford CBD renewal gathers pace as four major projects enter construction simultaneously
Photo: Photo by Unsplash

Gosford city centre is experiencing its most concentrated burst of development activity in living memory, with four major projects having entered construction simultaneously in the past six months — signalling that the region's long-anticipated urban revival is moving from plan to reality.

The projects in active construction include the $550 million Gosford Hospital tower expansion, the Central Coast Council's new $195 million civic and administration hub, a $280 million mixed-use tower at the former Channel 9 site on Mann Street, and a $38 million upgrade of Gosford foreshore park along Brisbaine Water. Together they represent more than $1 billion of committed investment within a 500-metre radius of the Gosford train station.

Central Coast Council administrator Rik Hart said the simultaneous delivery was the result of years of project planning aligning by coincidence and design. "Each of these projects has its own history, but together they are creating something transformative for Gosford," he said.

The hospital tower is the most consequential for residents, adding 140 beds and expanding the emergency department from its current 28 treatment spaces to 52. Construction workers on the hospital alone account for more than 400 jobs on any given day at the site.

The council civic hub will consolidate staff currently split across multiple outdated buildings into a single purpose-built facility on the foreshore, freeing up several sites for future redevelopment. Completion of the hub is scheduled for 2027.

This article was compiled by AI from the sources linked above and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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This article was produced by the The Daily Central Coast editorial desk and covers news in Central Coast. See our editorial standards for how we use AI.

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