Kaleen, Australian Capital Territory

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Kaleen
CanberraAustralian Capital Territory

Population: 7,757 (2001 census)
Established: 1974
Postcode: 2617
Property Value: AUD $356,000 (2005)[1]
District: Belconnen
Suburbs around Kaleen
Giralang Crace
Kaleen Lawson
Belconnen Bruce Lyneham

Kaleen (35°14′S 149°06′E) is a suburb in the Canberra district of Belconnen. The postcode is 2617. The suburb's name means ‘water’ in the language of the Wiradhuri Aboriginal tribe of the Central West of New South Wales. It was gazetted on 15 January 1974. The streets are named after Australian Rivers.

The suburb is next to Lyneham, Giralang, Lawson and Bruce. It is bordered by Baldwin Drive and Ginninderra Drive. It has several ovals; Kaleen North oval, Kaleen Enclosed oval, Kaleen District Playing Fields and Kaleen South oval, which play host to a number of sports, including soccer, cricket, and rugby. Unusually for a suburb, there are two small shopping centres in Kaleen, both bordering the main street of Maribyrnong Avenue. There is also a larger shopping centre near Kaleen's border with Giralang on Georgina Crescent, which is surrounded on three sides by several religious structures, including a Greek Orthodox church, a Coptic Orthodox church, and an Anglican church, St. Simon's Kaleen. The suburb also has two government run primary schools: Maribyrnong Primary School and Kaleen Primary School. Kaleen High School is located off Baldwin drive. The 2XX transmitting station is also located in Kaleen, near the Barton Highway. On the east side of the suburb is the Lyneham Ridge eucalypt plantation and a horse holding paddock.

Kaleen, like most of Canberra, is located on a network of well-maintained bicycle paths. The main track in Kaleen passes under Ginninderra Drive, and runs through the middle of the suburb in a generally north-south direction, exiting the other side to the neighbouring suburb of Giralang.

[edit] Geology

Silurian age Canberra Formation calcareous shale is in the east. Ordovician age Pittman Formation greywacke is in the west. The Gungahlin Fault separates the two kinds of sediments. Also to the east is the Winslade Fault roughly parallel and aligned north east.

See also: Geology of the Australian Capital Territory


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