Kambah, Australian Capital Territory

Kambah
Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
Coordinates 35°23′40″S 149°04′07″E / 35.39444°S 149.06861°E / -35.39444; 149.06861Coordinates: 35°23′40″S 149°04′07″E / 35.39444°S 149.06861°E / -35.39444; 149.06861
Population 14,900 (2016 census)[1]
 • Density 1,319/km2 (3,415/sq mi)
Established 1974
Gazetted 22 March 1973
Postcode(s) 2902
Area 11.3 km2 (4.4 sq mi)
District Tuggeranong
Territory electorate(s) Murrumbidgee
Federal Division(s) Canberra
Suburbs around Kambah:
Chapman Fisher Mount Taylor
Canberra Nature Park Kambah Wanniassa
Greenway Wanniassa

Kambah (postcode 2902) is the northernmost suburb in the district of Tuggeranong, Canberra. It is located just south of Mount Taylor in the Canberra Nature Park. It is located north of the suburbs of Greenway and Wanniassa. It is bounded by Sulwood Drive to the north and Athllon Drive to the south east.

Kambah was not designed according to the 'neighbourhood' philosophy guiding the design of other Canberra suburbs and is the largest suburb in Canberra with an area of 1130 ha. The suburb name was gazetted on 22 March 1973[2] and it was first settled in 1974 and consists predominantly of detached single storey suburban houses. It was the first suburb in the satellite city of Tuggeranong. Kambah was named after the Kambah Homestead which was originally located in the Tuggeranong district.[2] The name Kambah derives from Ngambri, the name of the clan that originally lived in the area before European occupation. The same word is the origin for the name Canberra.

In 2009, Kambah was voted one of the top ten bogan suburbs in Australia, according to Punch Magazine.[3]

Amenities

Opening of Parkway in April 2007

The Murrumbidgee Country Club is located in Kambah, and Kambah also has three district playing fields and a tennis club. The Kambah Pony Club and Vikings BMX Park are located in the north of the suburb. Kambah has two Scout halls, and the Kambah Woolshed is located in the suburb.[4]

Churches

Several churches are located in Kambah. St. Stephen's Anglican Church, St. Thomas Catholic Church, the Christian City Church and the Tuggeranong Baptist Church were joined in 2007 by Parkway, an Apostolic Church that had lost its building in Holder during the 2003 Canberra bushfires. The new building caused some controversy, as the imposing structure was built on what had been open grassland next to the fire station, and in a very prominent location on the Tuggeranong Parkway. Southside Bible Church began meeting at Namadgi School in January 2016.

Shopping centres

Kambah Karpet a variety of Acacia dealbata discovered at the Kambah Village

Located in the north of the suburb is the group centre called Kambah Village.[4][5][6] It has a supermarket, service station, hotel, clubs and many smaller shops and businesses. Located in the south is the Drakeford Drive Corridor;[4][5][7] this has evolved into the Kambah Centre, a medium-sized community centre with a health centre, a storage facility, a service station, indoor sports facility, a Baptist Church, two Buddhist centres and a Jehovah's Witnesses centre. One of the car parks is used for model car racing by the ACT Model Car Racing Club. Kambah also has several smaller local centres scattered around the suburb.[4][5]

Schools

Originally, four public primary schools operated in Kambah: Mount Neighbour Primary School, Taylor Primary School, Urambi Primary School and Village Creek Primary School. Under the ACT Government's Towards 2020 plan, Mount Neighbour Primary closed at the end of the 2006 school year with Village Creek Primary following at the end of 2007. The Learning Support Unit relocated from Mount Neighbour to Urambi Primary School at the end of 2006 and the Tuggeranong Primary Introductory English Centre relocated from Village Creek Primary School to Urambi Primary School at the end of 2007. The preschools associated with Mount Neighbour Primary and Village Creek Primary will develop relationships with Urambi Primary and Taylor Primary respectively; Village Creek Preschool closed at the end of 2010. Urambi Primary School closed at the end of 2010.

Kambah High School was a secondary school for years 7-10. It had Kambah and Greenway as its main intake area. At the end of 2007 the school educated around 140 students and employed around 20 staff. Kambah High was also closed at the conclusion of the 2007 school year as part of the ACT's Towards 2020 education reforms,[8] having operated for 31 years. Kambah High and Urambi Primary were replaced by Namadgi School, a P-10 school built in 2011.

Aerial photo from east

In addition to public education, St. Thomas the Apostle Primary School is located in Kambah. St Thomas the Apostle Primary opened in 1977, and is a systemic Catholic primary school, under the direction of the Canberra Goulburn Catholic Education Office. St Thomas the Apostle Primary is attached to the St Thomas the Apostle Parish.[9]

Physical features

West of Kambah is the Murrumbidgee River, one of Australia's major rivers. Surrounding hills include Mount Taylor, Arawang Hill, Mount Neighbour, McQuoids Hill, Forster Hill on the north side, and Urambi Hills on the south west side. Most of Kambah is occupied by the Village Creek Valley, but it also extends into Allens Creek and McQuoids Creek Valleys closer to the Murrumbidgee.

On the Murrumbidgee itself is the Red Rocks Gorge and Kambah Pool, a swimming hole. Kambah pool is the main swimming and fishing destination for South Canberrans. Kambah is home to many different types of fish (particularly carp) and mammals.[10]

Geology

Kambah as viewed from Mount Taylor, to the north

Kambah is underlain by Silurian volcanics. Rhyodacitic ignimbrite in the form of grey rhyodacitic and dacitic crystal tuff is under most of Kambah apart from the eastern corner. These are Laidlaw Volcanics aged 420.7±2.2 mya of Ludlow Age.[11] In the east of Kambah alongside Athllon Drive can be found green-grey, purple and cream rhyolite, agglomerate, purple tuff or rhyodacite. In a band just to the west of this is red-purple and green-grey rhyodacite. This material is from the Deakin Volcanics and is older than the Laidlaw Volcanics.[12] Also around Kambah on some of the hills are outcroppings of a coarse pink-brown rhyodacitic intrusion of porphyry. These intrusions can be found on Neighbour Hill, Forster Hill, McQuoids Hill, and the east and south east of Mount Taylor also around Menzie Place and another patch around the south of Mount Neighbour pre school. These intrusions were likely the necks of volcanoes that erupted the other tuff and dacite in the area.

A Cenozoic age dyke of teschenite intrudes the Laidlaw ignimbrite in the Kambah Pool and Red Rocks Gorge area.

Quaternary alluvium covers the ground around the upper reaches of Village creek, around Drakeford Drive. A fault runs from the north west in Allchin Circuit to the south east under Urambi primary school.[13]

People

John Bryant the CEO of Kellogg Company used to live in Kambah.[14]

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Kambah (State Suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
    Edit this at Wikidata
  2. 1 2 Canberra's suburb and street names : origins and meanings. Department of the Environment, Land and Planning. 1992. p. 68. ISBN 1-86331-128-9.
  3. David Penberthy (4 August 2009). "Frankston not in the hunt for Australia’s top bogan suburb". also reported in secondary sources such as Illawarra Mercury
  4. 1 2 3 4 Canberra Street Map 33rd Edition, UBD, Macquarie Centre
  5. 1 2 3 The Territory Plan Online
  6. Territory Plan Part B2E: Group Centres Land use Policies - Commercial 'C'
  7. Territory Plan Part B2E: Corridors and Office Sites Land use Policies - Commercial 'E'
  8. Towards 2020: Renewing Our Schools - Tuggeranong
  9. St Thomas the Apostle Primary | Canberra
  10. fish found at Kambah pool
  11. D. Wyborn and M. Owen, W. Compston and I. McDougall (June 1982). "The Laidlaw Volcanics: a Late Silurian point on the geological time scale". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 59 (1): 90–100. doi:10.1016/0012-821x(82)90119-4.
  12. Cooleman Ridge Geology
  13. Henderson G A M and Matveev G, Geology of Canberra, Queanbeyan and Environs 1:50000 1980.
  14. Doherty, Megan (15 March 2012). "Meet the ex-Canberra boy putting the snap crackle and pop into a $13b cerial empire". Canberra Times. pp. 1–2.
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