{{Short description|Australian charity}} {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2019}} {{Use Australian English|date=September 2020}} {{Infobox building | name = | logo = | logo_size = | logo_caption = | image = (1)Wayside Chapel-2.jpg | image_size = | image_caption = | pushpin_map = | pushpin_map_alt = | map_caption = | pushpin_mapsize = | pushpin_label = | pushpin_mark = | pushpin_relief = | former_names = | alternate_names = | etymology = | status = | cancelled = | topped_out = | building_type = | architectural_style = | classification = | address = 29 Hughes Street | location_city = Potts Point | location_country = Australia | coordinates = {{Coord|-33.871619|151.2244486|format=dms|type:edu}} | altitude = | current_tenants = | namesake = | groundbreaking_date = | construction_start_date = | construction_stop_date = | est_completion = | topped_out_date = | completion_date = | opened_date = | inauguration_date = | relocated_date = | renovation_date = | closing_date = | demolished_date = | ren_awards = | number_of_rooms = | parking = | website = <!-- {{URL|example.com}} --> | embed = | embedded = | references = | footnotes = }}

The '''Wayside Chapel''' is a charity and parish mission of the Uniting Church in Australia in the Potts Point area of Sydney.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://nswact.uca.org.au/community/parish-missions/|title = Uniting Church - Parish Missions|date = |website = The Uniting Church in Australia - NSW/ACT Synod|publisher = The Uniting Church in Australia|last = |first = }}</ref> Situated near Sydney's most prominent red-light district in Kings Cross, the Wayside Chapel offers programs and services which attempt to ensure access to health, welfare, social and recreation services.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url = http://thewaysidechapel.uberflip.com/i/431642|title = Wayside Chapel Annual Report, 2013-14|date = 2015|website = The Wayside Chapel Annual Report|publisher = The Wayside Chapel|last = |first = }}</ref> The centre assists homeless people and others on the margins of society.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-09-05/a-history-of-tying-the-knot-at-the-wayside-chapel/7813904|title = Wayside's weddings on the margin inspire verbatim theatre| newspaper=ABC News|date = 5 September 2016}}</ref>

== Description == The Wayside Chapel's mission is described as "creating a community with no 'us' and 'them'".<ref name=":0" /> Its motto, developed during the leadership of the Rev. Graham Long is "Love Over Hate".<ref name=":0" />

Graham Long described the Wayside Chapel's approach in a 2014 interview as not having "any interest at all in solving problems".<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url = http://svaconsultingquarterly.com/2014/12/08/wayside-chapel-vision-mission-just-wishin/|title = Vision, mission or just wishing'|date = 2014|website = SVA Consulting Quarterly|publisher = Social Ventures Australia|last = Peppercorn|first = Duncan}}</ref> Rather, the Wayside Chapel characterises its approach in the following way:<blockquote>"I don’t want you to be a problem that I have to fix. I want you to be a person that I can meet. And I think if we meet you’ll change and so will I. You’ll move towards health and so will I. That’s how it works."<ref name=":1" /></blockquote>

==History== The Wayside Chapel was established in the Kings Cross area of Sydney in 1964.<ref>{{Cite web|url = https://www.thewaysidechapel.com/history.php|title = The Wayside Chapel, Our Story, Our History|date = |website = |publisher = The Wayside Chapel|last = |first = }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/wayside_chapel |title = Wayside Chapel | author = Mark Dunn | date = 2008 |work = Dictionary of Sydney |publisher = Dictionary of Sydney Trust |access-date = 11 October 2015}}<nowiki>[</nowiki>CC-By-SA<nowiki>]</nowiki></ref> Ted Noffs was the founder of the Wayside Chapel, which was at the time a Methodist ministry (Uniting Church from 1977).<ref name="Collins">{{Citation|author1=Noffs, Ted|title=The Wayside Chapel : a radical Christian experiment in today's world / Ted Noffs |year=1969|publisher=Collins|language=English}}</ref> At that time, it was only a single room with a dozen chairs in a block of flats at 29 Hughes Street, Potts Point. Within twelve months of his arrival, Noffs had transformed it into a chapel, coffee shop drop-in and community resource centre.<ref name="Collins"/> The expectations of the church hierarchy—that Noffs's experiment would fail and become obscure and irrelevant—were not realised.

The centre grew until it occupied the entire building at No. 29. Later it grew still further and occupied the block of flats adjacent to the first block. A crisis centre was established in 1971 to handle crises which might arise at any time of day or night, including drug overdoses and possible suicides. More conventional church activities such as weddings were also carried out and the Wayside Chapel became one of the most popular wedding venues in Sydney, along with St Mark's Church, Darling Point.{{cn|date=October 2025}}

On 22 October 1971 Aboriginal nurse and activist Isobelle Mary Ferguson (then McCallum) married her second husband, Francis George Kent, at the chapel.<ref name=adb>{{cite web | last1=Best | first1=Odette | last2=Slinger | first2=Abigaill |first3=Rani |last3=Kerin | title=Isobelle Mary Ferguson | website=Australian Dictionary of Biography| publisher = ANU. National Centre of Biography | date=28 October 2024 | url=https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/ferguson-isobelle-mary-33932 | access-date=30 September 2025| quote=This article was published: in the ''Indigenous Australian Dictionary of Biography'' online in 2024| others=Research edited by Rani Kerin}}</ref>

In the late 1990s, Pastor Ray Richmond and others established a "tolerance room" where people who inject drugs were able to do so in a supervised environment, as an act of civil disobedience.<ref>{{cite web | last=Sweet | first=Melissa | title=Alex Wodak: The Tolerance Room ten years later | website=blogs.crikey.com.au | date=21 May 2009 | url=http://blogs.crikey.com.au/croakey/2009/05/21/alex-wodak-the-tolerance-room-ten-years-later/?wpmp_switcher=mobile | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303222659/http://blogs.crikey.com.au/croakey/2009/05/21/alex-wodak-the-tolerance-room-ten-years-later/?wpmp_switcher=mobile | archive-date=3 March 2016 | url-status=dead | access-date=1 October 2025}}</ref> This eventually led to the creation of the legal Medically Supervised Injecting Centre in Kings Cross.{{cn|date=October 2025}}

=== New building === In July 2009, the Wayside Chapel received a grant of $2 million from the state government for the purpose of rebuilding its physical facilities. An additional grant from the federal government for $3 million was received in late 2009. The balance of funds were raised by private donation. Graham Long said that rainwater had been penetrating the brick walls and causing bricks to fall out. Forty per cent of the existing buildings had already been condemned, but moves were afoot to start a renovation and rebuilding worth $7.5 million.<ref>Daily Telegraph, 7 July 2009, p. 8</ref>

On 19 May 2012 Wayside held the opening of its newly redeveloped building, designed by Environa Studio, the product of an {{AUD|8.2 million}} investment, five years of fundraising and 22 months of construction. The purpose-built facility features a community service centre, café, dedicated program space for The Aboriginal Project and Day-to-Day Living (a program for people with long-term mental health issues), community hall, offices and meeting spaces for groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous. The new building also includes a rooftop garden with over 50 varieties of vegetables, fruit, flowers and herbs, along with a bee hive{{cn|date=April 2025}}, worm farm{{cn|date=April 2025}} and compost.{{cn|date=April 2025}}

==Governance and people== From 2004–2017 the pastor of Wayside Chapel was Graham Long.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.abc.net.au/queensland/conversations/stories/s1916157.htm| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080205060514/http://www.abc.net.au:80/queensland/conversations/stories/s1916157.htm| archive-date= 5 Feb 2008|website= ABC| title=Wayside Chapel's Graham Long| date= May 7, 2007| series=The Backyard}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=Let he who has not sinned … | website=Sydney Morning Herald| date=27 December 2008 | url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/let-he-who-has-not-sinned-20081227-gdt7th.html | access-date=9 September 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | last=Grogan | first=Zilka | title=Long story has hopeful ending | website=Daily Telegraph| date=30 July 2013 | url=https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/city-east/wayside-chapel-pastor-graham-long-to-release-book-after-a-decade-in-kings-cross/news-story/59a0c287e9bcbfff7d51f8d2d0db9886 | access-date=9 September 2020}}</ref> He was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia in the 2015 Queen's Birthday Honours in recognition of his community work.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Reverend Graham Stuart LONG |url=https://honours.pmc.gov.au/honours/awards/1151867 |access-date=2024-04-30 |website=Australian Honours Search Facility}}</ref>

{{as of|2025}} the pastor and CEO of Wayside Chapel is Jon Owen, who has served in the position since July 2018.<ref>{{cite web | title=Our Team | website=Wayside Chapel | date=8 April 2025 | url=https://www.waysidechapel.org.au/our-team/ | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250423005948/https://www.waysidechapel.org.au/our-team/ | archive-date=23 April 2025 | url-status=live | access-date=1 October 2025}}</ref>

== Service development == Ted Noffs intended the Wayside Chapel to be a place where action came before preaching and engagement with the community was more important than going to church on Sunday. Successive ministers have endeavoured to uphold this tradition. Noffs pioneered a number of far-reaching and innovative developments in social welfare at The Wayside Chapel:{{citation needed|date=September 2020}} * The Crisis Centre * The Drug Referral Center * Shepherd of the Streets (SOTS) * Life Education Centre * Relatives Against Intake of Narcotics (REIN)

Raymond Richmond was responsible for:{{citation needed|date=September 2020}} * Hands-On Health Centre (initiated by chiropractors in 1992, later closed down) * Supervised Injecting Room

Graham Long attempted to develop the mission of "creating community with no 'us and them'". He described his approach as telling people they are not problems to be solved but rather people to be met.<ref>{{cite web | last=Long | first=Graham | title=The man providing hope in a lost, lonely world | website=Daily Telegraph | date=1 August 2013 | url=https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/entertainment/books/life-lessons-from-the-wayside-chapel-in-sydney8217s-kings-cross/news-story/d1af4a49d583254b6c9a2db65a66e239 | access-date=9 September 2020}}</ref> Under Long's leadership the following programs have been implemented: * Aboriginal Project * Day to Day Living Program (for people living with long-term and persistent mental health issues) * Wayside Youth * Community Development

==Current programs and services== {{refimprove|section|date=October 2025}}<!---looks like copyvio here, and note WP:CURRENTLY - needs to be dated with an as of date---> * Community Service Centre: The CSC is the first point of contact for visitors and provides showers, clothing and emergency food for the most disadvantaged members of the community. The centre also helps those at their lowest ebb transition to better health and a better life through housing support, referrals to drug and alcohol rehabilitation and steps to manage mental health issues. * Aboriginal Project: Providing a space for specialised, culturally sensitive support, the Aboriginal Project provides opportunities for community members to reconnect with their culture. The project also creates opportunities for leadership, mentoring and positive life choices for those visitors to Wayside who identify as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander. * Wayside Youth: Supporting young people who are at risk, living on or around the streets of Kings Cross, Wayside Youth provides support through a drop-in centre and street-based youth work. It offers laundry and shower facilities, lounge room, kitchen, and activity areas. * Day to Day Living: Day to Day living is a structured activity program for people experiencing long-term and persistent mental health issues. It aims to support people experiencing social isolation and to improve their independence in the community by teaching social skills, developing social networks and promoting confidence. * Community Development: The Community Development Program is dedicated to creating opportunities for all members of the community to come together for activities and events to help reduce social isolation and promote togetherness. * Wayside Cafe: The Wayside Café provides low-cost meals and beverages in a relaxed environment. * Wayside Op Shop: There is an op shop attached to the chapel, and in September 2020, Wayside launched Wayside Online Op Shop.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-09-13|title=The Wayside Chapel Has Launched an Online Op Shop with Hundreds of Items Under $50|url=https://concreteplayground.com/sydney/design-style/the-wayside-chapel-has-launched-an-online-op-shop-with-hundreds-of-items-under-50|access-date=2020-09-15|website=Concrete Playground}}</ref>

==References== {{Reflist}}

==External links== * [http://www.thewaysidechapel.com Wayside Chapel Site] * [http://www.noffs.org.au/ Ted Noffs Foundation site]

{{Sydney City of Sydney suburbs}} {{Sydney landmarks}} {{Homelessness in Australia}} {{Authority control}}

Category:Uniting Church in Australia Category:Homelessness organizations Category:Kings Cross, New South Wales