Why Marian St?

Vision

A rebuilt community hub at Marian St that is welcoming and accessible for all, supporting artists and offering a diverse range of artistic, cultural and community activities.

Our Strategy

ACTION 1
Raise awareness in the community

Support building the approved DA. This design includes a 249 seat theatre, 63 seat studio theatre, 60 seat rehearsal space, flexible community space, commercial cafe, and outdoor amphitheatre.

Use online and in-person activities to generate interest and support.

ACTION 2​
Achieve commitment of funding from Council

Hold new and continuing councillors accountable for any commitments they make to renovate Marian St Theatre.

Achieve a renewed commitment from Council to at least the higher of $10m or one-third of the final build cost.

Propose combining local, state, and federal funding sources to support this exciting design, with a sustainable operating model that delivers value for money for current and future generations.

ACTION 3
Secure funds from philanthropic and state/federal avenues

Raise support from the local community and established arts and cultural philanthropists to fund another third of the costs.

Raise support from state and federal government for the final third of the costs.

ACTION 4
Establish a permanent Foundation to sustain the vision financially

There is already an approved design. Just build it.


About the approved designs


Timeline of Marian St Theatre

We’ve been there. We’ve done that. There is already an approved design. Just build it.

  • 1905    Killara Hall Pty Ltd buys land (Lot 27 Marian St) and erects hall.
  • 1918    Local citizens buy hall for community purposes as a memorial hall.
  • 1931    Ku-ring-gai Council buys Killara Soldiers Memorial Hall, renews licence under Theatre and Public Halls Act.
  • 1966    KRG Council leases to Community Theatre Co Ltd.
  • 1974    Change of name to Marian St Theatre Ltd under Mr John Krummel.
  • 1990    Building applications 46a 90/663, 46 b 90/1673, 46c 90/1876.
  • 2001    Marian St Theatre Ltd terminates lease. Marian St Theatre for Young People (MSTYP) continues as resident company.
  • 2002    KRG Council calls for Expressions of Interest for lease.
  • 2003    DA1013 lodged for theatre restaurant, withdrawn Oct 2004.
  • 2005    KRG Council workshop to consider Marian St Theatre’s future.
  • 2007    Marian St into the future community consultation.
  • 2008    MSTYP performances cease due to lack of POPE (performance) licence, classes, workshops, and admin continue.
  • 2008    Marian St Feasability report (“Australia St”). Cost estimate $6m ($2m – $15m) for a major rebuild as a national centre for excellence.
  • 2009    Federal government infrastructure grant $292,000; DA0185/09 approved.
  • 2013    Soft Tread report proposes softer capital works with multiple resident companies. Cost $1m.
  • 2013    Marian St Theatre closed to all activities; doors locked.
  • 2014    Currie Report proposes Council-run venue with no resident companies.
  • 2016    Mayor Szatow encourages formation of community-run Save Marian St Theatre Committee (SMST). Community consultation by Evelyn Mason & Associates on funding models.
  • 2018    June – Community petition (3919 names) to preserve Marian St and allow SMST to raise funds.
  • 2018    July – SMST presents Marian St Business Plan to Ku-ring-gai Council, unanimously accepted by Councillors.  Cost c $10m. Ku-ring-gai Council considers alternative renovation models. Consensus reached for full renewal. Consultants adamant that Marian St was the right place, right size, recommend multifunctional space.
  • 2019    Council commissions Options Report on Creative Arts Facilities: The Left Bank Report.
  • 2019    KRG Council convenes Marian St Theatre Community Reference Group.
  • 2020    DA 0144/20 lodged in May; amended plans lodged in April 2021. Cost $12m.
  • 2021    11th August 2021 DA 0144/20 approved by Sydney North Planning Panel (5 years to August 2026).
  • 2022    Cr Spencer proposes motion to rezone and sell 2A Marian St, motion lapses with no seconder.
  • 2023    Cr Lennon motion to seek alternative funding through the Special Rates Variation defeated.  Cost c $26m.
  • 2023    Ku-ring-gai Council commissions “Soft Tread” – consultants to examine cost of reopening without rebuild.
  • 2024    SMST becomes Marian St Action (Arts and Culture Together In Our Neighbourhood).
  • 2024    Ku-ring-gai Council convenes Arts and Cultural Community Reference Committee.
  • 2024    Ku-ring-gai Council notes Hydromedial Feasibility Report  $7m – $15m ‘band aid’ solution.
  • 2024    Ku-ring-gai Council applies for $15m “Thriving Suburbs” Federal Government Grant (Department of Infrastructure). Unsuccessful.