Brunswick_East

Brunswick East, Victoria

Brunswick East, Victoria

Suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia


Brunswick East is an inner-city suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 5 km (3.1 mi) north of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Merri-bek local government area. Brunswick East recorded a population of 13,279 at the 2021 census.[1]

Quick Facts Brunswick East Melbourne, Victoria, Coordinates ...

Bordered generally by Lygon Street and Holmes Street in the west; the Merri Creek in the east adjoining Northcote; Park Street, Nicholson Street and Glenlyon Road in the south adjoining Carlton North and Fitzroy North; and Moreland Road in the north adjoining Coburg. Brunswick East is a mixed-use suburb, consisting of primarily residential and commercial properties.

Geography

Lygon Street and Nicholson Street run along Brunswick East's western border with neighbouring Brunswick, while Park Street (one block south of the main thoroughfare of Brunswick Road) and Glenlyon Road form the southern border with Carlton North and Fitzroy North respectively. Merri Creek marks the eastern border with adjoining Northcote. Moreland Road marks the northern border with adjoining Coburg.

Brunswick East has a hillier landscape than Brunswick.[2]

History

East Brunswick Hotel, built in 1880

In 1839, under the instructions of Robert Hoddle, chief surveyor, the area of Brunswick, including East Brunswick, was surveyed. Big blocks were marked out of 112 miles long by 1/4-mile wide. The blocks were bought mostly by land speculators.

Bluestone quarrying was one of the first industries in Brunswick East. By 1852, the local stone quarries had been worked to the point of exhaustion.

Significant residential subdivision of the area took place in the 1880s (Brunswick East Post Office opening on 13 January 1888)[3] and also in the period after World War I. In 1916, the tram along Lygon Street was electrified, making access much easier.

Brunswick's first textile factory, Prestige Hosiery, opened in 1922, and the suburb became the location of numerous textile and garment factories. The textile industry has been in substantial decline in the suburb since the 1980s, with the liberalisation and elimination of tariff controls by successive Federal Governments.

Redevelopment of commercial and industrial property has taken place for medium and high density housing, as part of the intense gentrification Brunswick East has been subjected to.

Demographics

Our Lady Help Of Christians Catholic Church

According to the 2011 census, there were 8476 people were living in Brunswick East.[4] The population rose from 7410 recorded in 2006,[5] and 6845 in 2001.[6]

The suburb has a higher proportion of people 18–34 years and a lower proportion of children 0–17 years and older people over 70 years, than the Merri-bek average. While cultural diversity is declining, nearly one third of all citizens were born overseas, which, although lower than the Merri-bek average, is substantially higher than the metropolitan average.

In the 2011 census, 65.5% of people reported speaking only English at home. The most common other languages spoken at home are Italian (9.2%), Greek (4.6%), Arabic (2.5%), Mandarin (1.8%) and Cantonese (1.0%).[4] In the census, 39.4% of people identified as having no religion (markedly more than the state average of 24.0%), 26.5% as Catholic, 6.6% as Eastern Orthodox, 4.4% as Anglican and 2.8% as Buddhist.[4]

Brunswick East has a high proportion of flats, units, apartments and semi-detached row townhouses. Separate houses make up just over half of all dwellings. More than one in four households in Brunswick East are lone person households and 14 per cent are group households, which is higher than the Merri-bek and metropolitan averages. There is also a high proportion of rental households, which is also significantly higher than the metropolitan and Merri-bek averages.

Residents of Brunswick East tend to be highly educated, with 28 per cent having a bachelor's degree or higher, and over half of all residents having completed Year 12 schooling, significantly higher than the municipal and metropolitan averages. A high proportion of professionals work in Brunswick East, with declining numbers of labourers, trades, production and transport workers. Income data from the 2001 census highlights that there are still pockets of disadvantage in the suburb, with almost half of the citizens on weekly individual incomes of less than $400 per week, with 10 per cent of citizens on incomes of less than $120 per week.

Commerce and culture

At the southern end of the Brunswick East strip of Lygon Street there is an increasing diversity of restaurants and cafés offering a variety of cuisines including: Italian, Greek, Lebanese, Vietnamese, Japanese, Indian, Thai, and Malaysian foods. This restaurant strip is quite separate from the longer established "Little Italy" strip of restaurants and street cafés further south in Lygon Street, Carlton. At the northern end of the Brunswick East strip of Lygon Street is a neighbourhood strip with a mixture of community, retail and entertainment venues. Between the two, Lygon Street is predominantly light industrial buildings undergoing a process of redevelopment to mixed-use. The East Brunswick Club Hotel became popular in the mid-2000s as a music venue.

Community radio station 3RRR moved from Fitzroy to the corner Blyth and Nicholson Streets in late 2004, opposite another music venue, the Lomond Hotel.

Transport

E 6005 tram at East Brunswick on route 96

Commuters to the city use bus and tram routes.[2]

Bus

Five bus routes travel east–west through the suburb, including:

Cycling

Cyclists have available many, on road cycle lanes as well as easy access to the Merri Creek Trail along Merri Creek. On the southern edge of the suburb, the old Inner Circle railway line is now a linear park which is a part of the Capital City Trail for pedestrians and cyclists. This trail connects the Merri Creek Trail to the Moonee Ponds Creek Trail in the network of pedestrian and bicycle shared use paths for Cycling in Melbourne.

Tram

Three tram routes service Brunswick East:

Landmarks

Brunswick East Primary School
  • The CERES Community Environment Park (Centre for Education and Research in Environmental Strategies) is a 10-acre (40,000 m2) urban environmental centre located in Brunswick East's eastern border.
  • A long-standing landmark of the northern half of Brunswick East is the Brunswick East Primary School, Stewart Street, first established in 1893, which still retains the original bell tower construction and much of its overall core structure, plus necessary additions over the decades.
  • The heritage-listed buildings at Brunswick South Primary School on Brunswick Road are a local landmark.
  • A large yellow community building operated by the Cretan Brotherhood of Melbourne is found by the tram terminal at the end of Nicholson Street.

Public open space

Houses in Brunswick east, looking towards Melbourne from Jones Park Hill

East Brunswick has several parks and reserves of varying size, as well as the Merri Creek corridor which is managed by a long-standing community group and has a popular bike path connected to the main Yarra Trail. The public open space forming part of the Merri Creek corridor or directly accessible from it includes:

  • Allard Park (oval)
  • Anderson Reserve
  • Jones Park
  • Roberts Reserve
  • Brunswick Velodrome
  • Sumner Park (small oval/soccer pitch)
  • Merri Creek Reserve

Within the built-up area of East Brunswick, public open space includes:

  • Fleming Park (including the Brunswick Bowling Club)
  • Methven Park
  • Fisher Reserve
  • Balfe Park (soccer pitch)
  • Douglas Reserve

Educational facilities

Brunswick East has two government primary schools, Brunswick East Primary School (BEPS) and Brunswick South Primary School (BSPS), and a Catholic primary school, Our Lady Help of Christians next to a Church of the same name. Northcote Secondary College is the nearest high school in Brunswick East.[2] Brunswick East Primary School opened in 1893, and renovated in 1922, the early 1970s and 1997.[12] CERES provides courses about environmental sustainability.

Development issues

Brunswick East is an area in transition. Lygon Street and parts of Nicholson Street are its main activity centres, with a mix of commercial, retail, community and light industrial in the former, and a bias towards light industrial and residential in the latter. Rises in land values due to gentrification have resulted in many of the industrial uses vacating their buildings, which have become attractive to developers of medium and higher-density residential projects, often with a small commercial or retail component. Many of these projects have been contentious among the local community, the most notable being the East Brunswick Village development on Nicholson Street.[13] Local groups such as the Brunswick Progress Association and the Brunswick Residents Network have been active in anti-development campaigns, along with the local branch of Save Our Suburbs, Brunswick Residents Against Inappropriate Development. In 2006, Moreland City Council commenced a consultative process to develop a Structure Plan for the Brunswick Major Activity Centre, whose study area incorporates Lygon Street, Nicholson Street and much of the adjoining suburb of Brunswick.

Politics

Brunswick East was a part of the City of Brunswick local government area until the latter was amalgamated with councils to the north to form the City of Moreland (now City of Merri-bek) in 1994. The area has traditionally been considered an Australian Labor Party stronghold, although with recent demographic changes the area has contributed to the election of an Australian Greens Party Councillor to the Moreland Council in 2001, 2004, 2008,[14] and again in 2012.[15]

At federal level, Brunswick East is within the Division of Wills, held by Peter Khalil of the ALP since 2016. In the Victorian Legislative Assembly, Brunswick East lies within the Electoral district of Brunswick, which has been held by The Greens' Tim Read since the 2018 state election. For the 1999 state election, the suburb was in the Electoral district of Coburg.[16] Polling place statistics are presented below combining the votes from the Brunswick East and Brunswick South East polling places in the federal and state elections as indicated.

Federal results
More information Election, First ...
State results (Two candidate preferred votes)
More information Election, First ...

Notable people

See also

  • City of Brunswick – Brunswick East was previously within this former local government area.

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Brunswick East (Suburbs and Localities)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2 July 2022. Edit this at Wikidata
  2. Premier Postal History. "Post Office List". Retrieved 11 April 2008.
  3. Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "Brunswick East (State Suburb)". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 23 June 2012. Edit this at Wikidata
  4. Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Community Profile Series: Brunswick East (State Suburb)". 2006 Census of Population and Housing. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
  5. Australian Bureau of Statistics (19 November 2002). "2001 Community Profiles: Brunswick East (State Suburb)". 2001 Census of Population and Housing. Retrieved 20 May 2016. Edit this at Wikidata
  6. "Brunswick East Primary School". Retrieved 7 July 2016.
  7. Council, Merri-bek City. "East Brunswick Village". Merri-bek City Council. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
  8. "Home page - VIC Greens". www.vic.greens.org.au. Retrieved 2 February 2009.
  9. "Home page - VIC Greens". vic.greens.org.au. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  10. "Coburg District Two Candidate Preferred Results by Voting Centre". State Election 1999. Victorian Electoral Commission. 30 May 2014. Archived from the original on 30 March 2011. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  11. "Polling Place - Brunswick East". Election 2013:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 1 October 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  12. "Polling Place - Brunswick South East". Election 2013:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 1 October 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  13. "Polling Place - Brunswick East". Election 2010:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 13 October 2010. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  14. "Polling Place - Brunswick North East". Election 2010:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 13 October 2010. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  15. "Polling Place - Brunswick East". Election 2007:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 12 December 2007. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  16. "Polling Place - Brunswick North East". Election 2007:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 12 December 2007. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  17. "Polling Place - Brunswick East". Election 2004:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 9 November 2004. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  18. "Polling Place - Brunswick North East". Election 2004:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 9 November 2004. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  19. "Polling Place - Brunswick North East". Election 2001:Virtual Tally Room. Australian Electoral Commission (AEC). 2001. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
  20. "Brunswick District Two Candidate Preferred Results by Voting Centre". State Election 2014. Victorian Electoral Commission. 17 July 2015. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  21. "Brunswick District Two Candidate Preferred Results by Voting Centre". State Election 2010. Victorian Electoral Commission. 14 May 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  22. "Brunswick District Two Candidate Preferred Results by Voting Centre". State Election 2006. Victorian Electoral Commission. 14 May 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2016.
  23. "Brunswick District Two Candidate Preferred Results by Voting Centre". State Election 2002. Victorian Electoral Commission. 14 May 2014. Retrieved 4 June 2016.

Notes

  • Barnes, Les (1987). It Happened in Brunswick 1837–1987. Brunswick Community History Group. ISBN 0-9587742-0-X. (64 pages)
  • Moreland City Council: Brunswick East Suburb Profile (2004)

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