SUNNY, fashion-forward and multiethnic, Sydney is an animated city bent on making its mark. But with its skyline already crowded with skyscrapers, and its place on the world stage firmly set, the city seems to be in the midst of a historical revival. Traditional Australian cuisine like meat pies is being remade in the locavore age. Sports like surfing are being celebrated in their national birthplace. And older buildings are enjoying an architectural second act as salons for the city’s cognoscenti, who can’t seem to get enough of Sydney’s homegrown charms.

Friday

4 p.m.

1) DOWNTOWN REBORN

Young Sydney is rediscovering downtown along George Street. Stroll back in time at the 19th-century Strand Arcade (412-414 George Street; 61-2-9232-4199; strandarcade.com.au), the last of the glass-domed late-Victorian shopping bazaars where Australian labels in the style forefront like Manning Cartell, Jayson Brunsdon and Little Joe by Gail Elliott have set up shop. Less kitschy than the more famous Queen Victoria Building, the arcade includes Strand Hatters (61-2-9231-6884; strandhatters.com.au), which carries the kind of straw hats that are fashionable again, and Haigh’s Chocolates (61-2-9221 6999; haighschocolates.com.au), a venerable outpost of the Adelaide-based chocolatier where even locals line up for its newest confections.

6 p.m.

2) SCALING THE HEIGHTS

Unless you suit up and make the climb up the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the best spot to catch the sunset may be the top of the Rocks, the historic district where young merchant princes and professionals like to pub crawl from the Lord Nelson Brewery Hotel (19 Kent Street; 61-2-9251-4044; lordnelsonbrewery.com), one of the city’s oldest continuously operating bars and now also a hotel and microbrewery, to the Hero of Waterloo (81 Lower Fort Street; 61-2-9252-4553; heroofwaterloo.com.au), with stone cellars hiding tunnels once used for smuggling. Another hot spot is the plaza outside the MoS Cafe (37 Phillips Street; 61-2-9241-3636; moscafe.com.au) at the spiffy Museum of Sydney, faintly perfumed by the Royal Botanic Gardens.

8 p.m.

3) COVERING THE WATERFRONT

Walsh Bay, by the gigantic old wharves, is being reborn as an arts and culinary neighborhood. The revitalized Sydney Theater Company (Pier 4, Hickson Road; 61-2-9250-1777; sydneytheatre.com.au), under the artistic direction of Cate Blanchett and Andrew Upton, her husband, often showcases emerging Australian playwrights. Pretheater or after, join an affluent crowd at Restaurant Arras (24 Hickson Road, 61-2-9252-6285; restaurant-arras.com.au), a well-tailored establishment in a former wool store that serves cleverly updated Anglo fare, like snapper with potato napoleon and cockles, or spiced mulloway, lentils and bacon, mead and rye. Dinner for two, about 120 Australian dollars, or $113 at 1.06 Australian dollars to the U.S. dollar.