Mount Sugarloaf, also known as Great Sugar Loaf, is a mountain in the lower Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia, standing at 412 metres (1,352 feet),[3] it looks over the cities of Newcastle, Lake Macquarie, Cessnock, and Maitland.
However, the mountain itself is also part of the city of Cessnock suburbs Mulbring and Richmond Vale.
One tower, built to transmit the original VHF analogue television services of NBN Television on VHF Channel 3, transmits NBN and two government digital TV services.
There is a third smaller tower that has many directional antennae, mainly used for telecommunications, but also for two-way radio for emergency services and other similar purposes.
[5] The shape of the mountain is said to look like a wedge-tailed eagle and is the setting for a cautionary tale concerning the fate of two children at the hands of a monster called Puttikin.