MAKING WOY WOY GREAT AGAIN

It was once called the Venice of Australia because of its idyllic location surrounded by pristine waterways, but since those good ole days when vintage Sydneysiders used to day trip north for the beach, Woy Woy has struggled with its identity.

In recent years, an influx of city-slickers and commuters has started to change the fabric of the sleepy suburb and in the past couple of months of 2017, with a series of exciting renos and openings, a new chapter has been written.

From the Coast’s first rooftop bar to a tropicana-themed pizza joint, Woy Woy is set to go off this summer.

On the waterfront, Woy Woy Fishermen’s Wharf has a new look following a massive renovation. The over-the-water structure juts out the back of the iconic Coastie establishment offering one of the best dining locations on the Coast. The site was under construction for most of 2017 as the Claytons – the fishmonger family behind WWFW for the past 40 years – rebuilt the wharf their restaurant perches on. A new structure has landed and with Xanthe Highfield, one half of local design studio Stewart + Highfield, working with hubby Sam Clayton and his mum Jenni on the interiors, it’s as fish’n’chic as the former establishment.

Just up the road, you’ll find a stylish rooftop bar overlooking the sparkling waterfront. Built on top of The Bayview, Frankie’s Rooftop offers a killer cocktail list, including chartreuse every which way, and a killer view. With funky tiles, exposed brick, a succulent garden and herringbone timber ceiling, Frankie’s is another Stewart + Highfield masterpiece.

Since The Lucky Bee relocated from New York to Frankie’s kitchen, the rooftop bar has become the hottest hangout on the Coast. Run by spunky restaurant couple Rupert Noffs and Matty Bennett (formerly of Longrain Sydney), The Lucky Bee has brought saucy, spicy Asian food to the Peninsula. The bao buns and crunchy szechuan salt and pepper chicken wings are set to become the stuff of legend and if you have room left, ask for dessert – Matty’s tapioca pudding is almost too beautiful to eat.

Around the corner in the Colonial News Shopping Centre off Blackwall Road, a new pizza place opened its doors late last year. Tropicana Pizza Pizza is the brainchild of Woy Woy local Tim Stock and his stylish missus Cate Stewart, the other half of Stewart + Highfield. It’s all a bit retro with the kind of pan pizza that harks back to carefree 80s summers, but with modern flavour twists like roasted fennel and sausage or ham, pineapple and pickled jalapeños, and a tropicana-tiki kit out in a nod to the joint’s coastal location.

Next door, Fudge Monkey is a mecca for gluten-free Coasties with a sweet tooth. It’s the only coeliac-safe, 100 per cent gluten-free cakery on the Coast. It’s the place to go for hand-made, high-quality vegan desserts such as gluten-free gateauxs, a rainbow of fudge flavours, vegan cupcakes, and a growing gelato selection which includes dairy-free flavours like soy hazelnut, coconut sorbet and passion fruit swirl.

The newest kid on the block, Costa Centrale, is bringing some Italian flavours to the Peninsula. Italian for ‘Central Coast’, Costa Centrale has breathed (minty fresh) new life into the site that was previously home to Boulevarde Burgers. The chic mint-green cafe is owned and operated by brother and sister team Andrea and Emilia and their partners Rose and Semuel, who all moved up from Sydney in search of affordable housing. Coffee lovers will lap up the Toby’s Estate coffee poured from the custom La Marzocco machine and Italophile’s will go ga-ga over the freshly piped ricotta cannoli and deep dish lasagna, a family recipe all the way from southern Italy.

Bit by bit the suburb has been coming alive in the past couple of years. There was a lot of excitement when Cook & Co opened on Blackwall Road providing a hip hangout with good coffee and a tantalising Mediterranean menu of burgers and baked eggs. Then Young Barons pasta bar opened across the road and the whiff of a Woy Woy nightlife pervaded the air. Run by 23-year-olds Bryce Gleeson and Dannielle Mills, who both spent time at Bells, the people of the Peninsula had a reason to get off the couch and head out at night for a bowl of pasta and a glass of vino. Bryce, who grew up in Woy Woy and moved back with Dannielle, started a social campaign with the hashtag #makewoywoygreatagain, and there’s no doubt that his stylish eatery is doing exactly that.

While we’ve always loved strolling along the waterfront as ducks waddle past and pelicans glide overhead or popping into the Gnostic corner for a coffee and a nourishing feed, the arrival of fresh new faces and fresh new spaces is helping to bring Woy Woy into the new millennium and will undoubtedly #makewoywoygreatagain.

Words from: Christine

A nouveau Coastie, Christine is the stripe-toting, doughnut-scoffing, beach-loving, ristretto-drinking creator of Coastal Chic

www.coastalchic.com.au

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