Currambine, Western Australia

Currambine
Perth, Western Australia

Doncaster Park.
Currambine
Coordinates 31°43′55″S 115°45′04″E / 31.732°S 115.751°E / -31.732; 115.751Coordinates: 31°43′55″S 115°45′04″E / 31.732°S 115.751°E / -31.732; 115.751
Population 6,775 (2011 census)[1]
 • Density 2,190/km2 (5,660/sq mi)
Established 2015
Postcode(s) 6028
Area 3.1 km2 (1.2 sq mi)
Location
LGA(s) City of Joondalup
State electorate(s) Ocean Reef, Joondalup
Federal Division(s) 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 30 km north of Perth's central business district. Its local government area is the City of Joondalup. It contains the Currambine Central shopping centre and cinema complex.

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.[2] It is an Aboriginal word from New South Wales meaning "heaps of rocks".[3]

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.

Geography

Currambine is bounded by Burns Beach Road to the north, Marmion Avenue to the west, Shenton Avenue to the south and Mitchell Freeway to the west. The suburb is effectively bisected into quarters by the dual carriageways Connolly Drive (north-south) and Moore Drive (east-west).[4]

At the ABS 2006 census, Currambine had a population of 6,655 people living in 2,237 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]

Facilities

Currambine is a residential suburb, and is served by the Currambine Market Place shopping centre (now renamed Currambine Central) at its southwestern corner, the complex includes

Food Health Clothing and Beauty Other Services
London Cafe Lacey's Gym Mash Boutique Grand Cinema
Basq Go Vita Hot Bods Boutique Brice and Turner Travel Associates
Great British Chippy Eyes on Currambine W-Lane TAB
Woolworths Currambine Pharmacy Rockmans Quality Drycleaners
ikebab Harvey World Travel
Baker's Delight Fast Phone Repairs
Star of the North Currambine Lotto
Pizza Pizzaz First Western Realty
Oscar’s Restaurant Woolworths Petrol
Currambine Chinese redi ATM
Cafissimo Bankwest ATM
Pasta Cup ANZ ATM
Subway Westpac ATM
Dan Murphy's

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 Currambine Primary School) and one private (Francis Jordan Catholic School). The suburb is within Ocean Reef Senior High School's catchment area.[4]

Transport

Currambine is served by the 460, 461, 470, these three busses run through Shenton ave 471 and 472 Transperth bus routes from Joondalup,[5] operated by Transdev Perth and by the Currambine railway station.

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. This has changed in recent elections with majority voting for Liberal in the state elections. As Currambine is a part of two state electorates it is represented by both Albert Jacob: Ocean Reef (Environmental and Heritage Minister of Western Australia) and Jan Norberger: Joondalup, both of which are liberal representatives.

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%

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "State Suburbs: Currambine". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
  2. Reed, Alexander Wyclif (1970). Aboriginal place names and their meanings. Sydney, NSW. ISBN 0-589-07097-5. (135 pages)
  3. Western Australian Land Information Authority. "History of metropolitan suburb names – C". Retrieved 2007-05-15.
  4. 1 2 Department of Land Information. StreetSmart® Perth Street Directory (54 (2013) ed.). West Australian Newspapers Ltd. pp. Map 220. ISBN 978-0-909439-67-5.
  5. Northern 67 timetable, Transperth, effective 8 August 2005. Accessed 2007-01-17
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, January 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.