Belgrave, Victoria

Belgrave
Melbourne, Victoria

Belgrave main street (Burwood Highway)
Belgrave
Coordinates 37°54′43″S 145°21′21″E / 37.912067°S 145.3558°E / -37.912067; 145.3558Coordinates: 37°54′43″S 145°21′21″E / 37.912067°S 145.3558°E / -37.912067; 145.3558
Population 4,094 (2006 census)[1]
 • Density 999/km2 (2,590/sq mi)
Established 1851
Postcode(s) 3160
Elevation 200 m (656 ft)
Area 4.1 km2 (1.6 sq mi)
Location
LGA(s) Shire of Yarra Ranges
State electorate(s) Monbulk
Federal Division(s) La Trobe
Suburbs around Belgrave:
Upwey Sherbrooke Kallista
Tecoma Belgrave Selby
Belgrave Heights Belgrave South Belgrave South

Belgrave is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 35 km east of Melbourne's central business district. Its local government area is the Shire of Yarra Ranges. At the 2006 Census, Belgrave had a population of 4094, and the suburb is only 16 years younger than the Melbourne CBD.

History

Belgrave was first settled in 1851.

Belgrave was named after an 1840s chapel in Leeds, Yorkshire, England; the name was carried by Mr and Mrs R.G. Benson when they came to Melbourne in 1856. Their sons, the Benson Brothers, settled in the Belgrave district in the 1870s. Though originally the area was known as "Monbulk" for the reservoir that lay near by, the town wasn't known as Belgrave until around 1903, and another suggested name for the town at that stage was Glassford.[2] A Post Office opened in the area around 1904.[3] Many men from Belgrave went to the two world wars, and there is a war memorial in Belgrave.

Business

Most of the commercial district of Belgrave is located on Main Street, which is at the end of Burwood Highway. There are also shops on Bayview Road, which is located just across the rail bridge. Belgrave has galleries and bookshops. There is an organic and fair trade emphasis amongst some businesses including Belgrave Organics, a number of cafés serving fairtrade coffee (Earthly Pleasures Organic Café, The Laughing Owl, Grunge Café, The Village Idiot, Bensons and Reel Café). There are two retro clothing stores (Walk in Wardrobe and The Silver Compac). There is a Woolworths supermarket, three hairdressing salons, two travel agencies, a building design (drafting) service, a pharmacy, a butcher, a dry cleaner, two bakeries, a patisserie, a newsagency, a cinema, a few fast food outlets, restaurants, a Centrelink office, a pub and a few bars/lounges, two banks (the Commonwealth Bank and the Bendigo Bank), a tattoo studio, as well as a public library. It also has a very active Traders Association.

Tourism

Locomotive 12A on the famous Monbulk Creek trestle bridge near Belgrave.
The 1000 steps

Belgrave's most notable attraction is the heritage narrow gauge, steam-operated Puffing Billy Railway, which was reopened in 1962—after four years of restoration by volunteers—and travels through 24 kilometres of cool temperate rainforest, semi-urban development and rural farmland to Gembrook.[4] It is also the terminus of the Belgrave Suburban Electric Railway Line.

Other nearby attractions include The 1000 Steps, Sherbrooke Forest and Sherbrooke Falls in the Dandenong Ranges National Park.[5]

Social scene

Belgrave has a park 3 km from the Main Street.

The Cameo Cinema has eight cinemas, with Cinema 1 dating to the 1930s. There is an outdoor Cinema at the rear of the building, which is open only during the summer months (December to March). There is a music scene with live acts taking place at Sooki Lounge, Gin Lane and Bell Tavern. There is a recording studio. The historic property known as Glen Harrow Gardens has been featured on travel television programs. During the summer months Belgrave Pool is open. Belgrave pool is an outdoor 33m heated pool.

Schools

Belgrave itself does not contain any state schools, with these being located in the neighbouring suburbs of Tecoma, Selby and Belgrave South. Upwey High School is the nearest state high school.

Two Catholic schools operate within Belgrave: St Thomas More's Primary School that was founded in 1963 by the parish of Belgrave, and is situated on Reynolds hill overlooking Belgrave and adjacent to St. Thomas More's Catholic Church, and Mater Christi College, a girls' secondary school located on Bayview Road.

Recreation and government buildings

Belgrave has a police station, which acts as the base for all police stations in the Dandenong Ranges Region. There is also the Belgrave Volunteer Fire Brigade on Bayview Road, which has been serving the community for over 80 years. It is also home to the Dandenong Ranges Fire Brigades Group HQ, from there, the CFA and Parks Victoria used to manage all major fires within the Dandenong Ranges, though this has moved to an Incident Control Centre in Ferntree Gully since the Black Saturday Fires of 2009. There is also an Ambulance station in Bayview Road.

There is a Centrelink office on the high side of Main Street. The State Member for the seat of Monbulk, James Merlino MLA, has his Electoral Office in Belgrave. The closest Shire of Yarra Ranges office is in Upwey on Main Street.

The Belgrave Town Park, just below the police station, provides a fine view over the town as well as a public space for events such as the annual Christmas carols. Just off the Belgrave-Hallam Road is the Belgrave outdoor swimming pool, tennis courts and a playground.

The town supports both a cricket and Australian Rules football team which are located at Belgrave Recreation Reserve on Reserve Road. It is also the home ground of the Belgrave Junior Football Club. The Belgrave Cricket Club is affiliated with the Ferntree Gully And District Cricket Association, while the Belgrave Football Club competes in the Yarra Valley Mountain Football League.[6]

Transport

Belgrave railway station is located behind the main street shops, with the steam train Puffing Billy just beyond it. Belgrave suburban electric trains go to Melbourne via Ringwood. Puffing Billy goes to Gembrook.

Bus services are located throughout the suburb, and go to Oakleigh, Lilydale, Gembrook, Olinda, Belgrave South, Upwey.

Major roads include Burwood Highway, Wellington Road, Ferntree Gully Road and Belgrave-Hallam Road, all providing access to the city centre of Melbourne.

Public reserves

Public reserves in Belgrave include Belgrave Lake Park, Belgrave Recreation Reserve, Borthwick Park, Violet Larsen Reserve and Dandenong Ranges National Park.

Belgrave Lake Park

Biodiversity

A small reserve surrounding Belgrave Lake and located south of Belgrave town centre. It is an important biolink between Dandenong Ranges National Park and Birdsland as well as Lysterfield Lake Park. The park has a combined focus of recreation and conservation. Monbulk creek flows through the area and is important for wildlife such as platypus and water rat. In the trees, arboreal mammals include the sugar glider and also would have been a habitat for the yellow-bellied glider. The reserve is dominated by Eucalyptus cypellocarpa (mountain grey gum) on the slopes. Along the riparian zone (adjacent to creek) the dominant plant species are Eucalyptus viminalis subsp. viminalis (manna gum), Acacia dealbata (silver wattle).

History

Belgrave Lake was constructed in 1893 to supply water to Dandenong. Water flowed by pipeline to Heany Park in Rowville and then by aqueduct and pipeline through Churchill Park and on to Dandenong. From 1924 water supply to Dandenong was discontinued but the pipeline continued to supply water to farms in the Lysterfield area. Fern Tree Gully Shire leased the pipeline from 1940 to 1950.[7][8] The pipeline was still in use in the 1970s and was closed some time after that.

Media

Belgrave's local newspapers are The Free Press Leader, and The Ferntree Gully-Belgrave Mail and its local radio station is 3MDR on 97.1FM.

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (25 October 2007). "Belgrave (State Suburb)". 2006 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  2. Reflections of the Past - Volume 3
  3. Premier Postal History, Post Office List, retrieved 2008-04-11
  4. Puffing Billy Steam Railway, Tourism Victoria, retrieved 2011-07-25
  5. Belgrave, Tourism Victoria, retrieved 2011-01-10
  6. Full Points Footy, Belgrave, archived from the original on 16 May 2008, retrieved 2008-07-25
  7. "RLHP Local Stories: Heany Park". Rlcnews.org.au. Retrieved 2010-09-07.
  8. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 2010-08-04.

External links

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