Currambine, Western Australia

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Currambine
PerthWestern Australia

Doncaster Park.
Population: 5,975 (2001 census)[1]
Established: 1990s
Postcode: 6028
Area: 3.1 km² (1.2 sq mi)
Property Value: AUD $430,500 (Q3 2006)[2]
Location:
LGA: City of Joondalup
State District: Mindarie
Federal Division: Moore
Suburbs around Currambine:
Burns Beach Kinross Neerabup
Iluka Currambine Joondalup
Ocean Reef Connolly Joondalup

Currambine is a northern suburb of Perth, the capital city of Western Australia, and is located 30 km north of Perth's central business district. Its Local Government Area is the City of Joondalup. It contains the Currambine Market Place shopping centre and cinema complex.

Contents

[edit] History

Currambine was approved as a suburb name in 1980. The name was chosen by the City of Wanneroo in 1979 from a book by A.W. Reed.[3] It is an Aboriginal word from New South Wales meaning "heaps of rocks".[4]

Currambine was developed as a chiefly residential suburb in the mid-1990s on land adjacent to the Currambine train station, which was built and opened in 1993.

[edit] Geography

Currambine is bounded by Burns Beach Road to the north, Marmion Avenue to the west, Shenton Avenue to the south and the future Mitchell Freeway extension to the west. Moore Drive (east-west) and Connolly Drive (north-south) bisect the suburb.[5]

At the ABS 2001 census, Currambine had a population of 5,975 people living in 2,019 dwellings. The ABS reported that Currambine's workforce, like many northern coastal suburbs, was divided almost evenly between the three major occupation types - clerical and service workers; professionals and managers; and tradespersons and labourers.[1]

[edit] Facilities

Currambine is a residential suburb, and is served by the Currambine Market Place shopping centre at its southwestern corner, which also includes a cinema. The southeastern part of the suburb contains 5 holes of the 27-hole Joondalup Golf Course, part of the Joondalup Resort complex based in neighbouring Connolly. The suburb also contains two primary schools, one public (1997) and one private (Currambine Catholic Primary School), and the suburb is within Ocean Reef Senior High School's catchment area.[5]

[edit] Transport

Currambine is served by the 470, 471 and 472 Transperth bus routes from Joondalup,[6] operated by Path Transit.

[edit] Politics

Currambine is a fairly new suburb and a classic "mortgage belt" suburb which leans towards the Liberal Party in federal elections and the Australian Labor Party in state elections, in line with many northern Perth suburbs..

2004 Federal Election
  Liberal 55%
  Labor 35%
  Greens 4.9%
  CDP 2.4%
  One Nation 1.8%
2001 Federal Election
  Liberal 47%
  Labor 40%
  Greens 3.9%
  Democrats 3.6%
  One Nation 3.4%
2005 State Election
  Labor 49%
  Liberal 39%
  Greens 6.2%
  Family First 4.3%
  CDP 3.3%
2001 State Election
  Liberal 42%
  Labor 39%
  Greens 6.4%
  One Nation 5.0%
  CDP 4.2%

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (19 November 2002). Community Profile Series : Currambine (State Suburb). 2001 Census of Population and Housing. Retrieved on 2007-05-15.
  2. ^ REIWA Suburb Profile
  3. ^ Reed, Alexander Wyclif (1970). Aboriginal place names and their meanings. ISBN 0-589-07097-5.  (135 pages)
  4. ^ Western Australian Land Information Authority. History of metropolitan suburb names - C. Retrieved on 2007-05-15.
  5. ^ a b Department of Land Information. StreetSmart® Perth Street Directory, 49 (2008), West Australian Newspapers Ltd, Map 220. ISBN 978-1-921048-19-7. 
  6. ^ Northern 67 timetable, Transperth, effective 8 August 2005. Accessed 2007-01-17

[edit] External links