Noble Park, Victoria: Difference between revisions
afl is not football |
→Transport: Update Noble Park and Yarraman station images. Updated Yarraman station image to a better quality one, same used in the Yarraman station info-box and update Noble Park station image to a more recent one Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit Advanced mobile edit |
||
(382 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Use Australian English|date=August 2019}} |
|||
'''Noble Park''' is a [[suburb]] of [[Melbourne]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], [[Australia]] close to 25 kilometres south-east of the [[central business district]]. It has a mixture of residential, commercial and industrial zones and is home to a highly multicultural population, with residents who have immigrated from [[Europe]], [[Africa]], [[Asia]] and the [[Americas]]. |
|||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} |
|||
{{Infobox Australian place |
|||
| type = suburb |
|||
| name = Noble Park |
|||
| city = Melbourne |
|||
| state = vic |
|||
| image = File:Noble Park centre.jpg |
|||
| caption = Noble Park's commercial centre in 2018 |
|||
| lga = City of Greater Dandenong |
|||
| alternative_location_map = Australia Victoria metropolitan Melbourne |
|||
| coordinates = {{coord|37.967|S|145.176|E|display=inline,title}} |
|||
| postcode = 3174<ref>[https://auspost.com.au/postcode/3174 Noble Park Postcode] Australia Post</ref> |
|||
| pop = 32,257 |
|||
| pop_year = {{CensusAU|2021}} |
|||
| pop_footnotes = <ref name="abs21">{{Census 2021 AUS | id = SAL21952 | name = Noble Park (Suburbs and Localities) | accessdate = 2 July 2022 | quick = on}}</ref> |
|||
| area = 12.4 |
|||
| est = 1909 |
|||
| stategov = [[Electoral district of Clarinda|Clarinda]] |
|||
| stategov2 = [[Electoral district of Dandenong|Dandenong]] |
|||
| stategov3 = [[Electoral district of Mulgrave (Victoria)|Mulgrave]] |
|||
| fedgov = [[Division of Hotham|Hotham]] |
|||
| dist1 = 25 |
|||
| location1 = [[Melbourne city centre|Melbourne]] |
|||
| dist2 = 4 |
|||
| location2 = [[Dandenong, Victoria|Dandenong]] |
|||
| near-nw = [[Springvale, Victoria|Springvale]] |
|||
| near-n = [[Noble Park North, Victoria|Noble Park North]] |
|||
| near-ne = [[Dandenong North, Victoria|Dandenong North]] |
|||
| near-w = [[Springvale South, Victoria|Springvale South]] |
|||
| near-e = [[Dandenong, Victoria|Dandenong]] |
|||
| near-sw = |
|||
| near-s = [[Keysborough, Victoria|Keysborough]] |
|||
| near-se = |
|||
| local_map = yes |
|||
| zoom = 12 |
|||
}} |
|||
'''Noble Park''' is a suburb in [[Melbourne]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]], [[Australia]], 25 km south-east of Melbourne's [[Melbourne city centre|Central Business District]], located within the [[City of Greater Dandenong]] [[Local government areas of Victoria|local government area]]. Noble Park recorded a population of 32,257 at the {{CensusAU|2021}}.<ref name="abs21"/> |
|||
Noble Park has a number of schools, churches, mosques, temples, nunneries and monasteries, as well as a large collection of Vietnamese bakeries. Nazareth College is the suburb's most prominent secondary school (Catholic). While often considered to be a low socio-economic area, certain areas have large and elaborate homes. Due to the relatively low property costs in Noble Park however, it has recently undergone substantial residential redevelopment, which is increasing much of the property quality and value, if not the socio-economic quality, of the suburb. |
|||
Noble Park has a mixture of residential, commercial and industrial zones and is home to a highly [[Multiculturalism in Australia|multicultural]] population, with residents who have emigrated from [[Europe]], [[Asia]], the [[Americas]], and [[Africa]]. |
|||
Formerly market gardens, Noble Park has fertile soil and to this day still has a large number of [[River Red Gum]] trees. The streets often flood during storms due to the flat profile and old drains. Noble Park has a postcode of 3174. |
|||
==History== |
|||
It is located in Zone 3 on the [[Cranbourne railway line, Melbourne|Cranbourne]]/[[Pakenham railway line, Melbourne|Pakenham]] [[Rail transport|railway lines]]. |
|||
The history of Noble Park as a suburb in Melbourne began in 1909. Allan Buckley nicknamed the land subdivision '''Nobel Park'''<ref name = "a">{{cite web| last = Phoenix Auctions History | title = Post Office List | url = http://www.phoenixauctions.com.au/cgi-bin/wsPhoenix.sh/Viewpocdwrapper.p?SortBy=VIC&filter=*Noble*Park* | access-date = 11 February 2021}}</ref> after the Swedish inventor [[Alfred Nobel]], as Buckley had used the estate to demonstrate Nobel's [[explosive]]s, but the name was soon transformed to Noble Park by common usage.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hibbins|first1=Gillian M.|title=A History of the City of Springvale|date=1984|publisher=Port Melbourne, Lothian/City of Springvale|location=Melbourne|isbn=0850911745|edition=1st|url=http://www.emelbourne.net.au/biogs/EM01063b.htm|access-date=22 April 2015}}</ref> |
|||
To the north lies the Sandown Park Raceway, a motor racing track. |
|||
Early settlement was encouraged by building a [[community centre]], [[church (building)|church]], [[school]], [[post office|postal centre]] and later, [[Noble Park railway station|a railway station]]. The postal centre was opened in August 1910 and the railway station was completed in July 1912, but in the early days, the town's growth was relatively slow due to the lack of population growth in the area. In the early 1920s, the Railway Department set up a [[poultry farm]] and eventually a [[plant nursery]] was set up in the eastern part of the suburb. The focus of the small community was based around its local [[town hall]].<ref name = "a"/> |
|||
Arguably Melbourne's most notorious [[street gang]] during the 1980s originated in Noble Park and took the name 3174, immortalising that postcode in Melbourne's underworld history. |
|||
In the 1980s Noble Park became known for its infamous [[street gang]]s that carried out [[violent crime]]s against the community,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/noble-park-in-lockdown/story-e6frf7kx-1111114870534 |title=Noble Park in lockdown, retrieved 2009-11-19 |publisher=Herald Sun |access-date=2012-05-29}}</ref> as well as the scene of a major [[shootout]] between members of the [[Victoria Police]] and Pavel Marinof, a burglar on the run.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/victoria/nightmare-hunt-for-mad-max/story-e6frf7kx-1111114433163 |title=Nightmare hunt for Mad Max, retrieved 2009-11-22 |publisher=Herald Sun |access-date=2012-05-29}}</ref> Residential growth in the second half of the century saw an end to the grazing paddocks and market gardens. By the 1990s, 56% of Noble Park's population was born overseas, with the largest being from [[Great Britain]] and [[Ireland]], followed by [[Bosnians]], [[Italians]] and [[Greeks]]; and [[South Asia|South]] and [[Southeast Asia]]ns (including [[Non-resident Indian and person of Indian origin|Indians]], [[Sri Lankans]] and [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]]), according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. In recent years there has been an upsurge of migrants and [[refugee]]s settled from [[North Africa]]n countries, especially [[Sudan]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2007/s2057250.htm |title=ABC News: Andrews stands by remarks on African refugees, retrieved 2009-11-19 |publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|access-date=2012-05-29}}</ref> |
|||
Noble Park's football club which includes cricket, lawn bowls, and legalized gambling makes it one of the EFL's richest football clubs. |
|||
=== Today === |
|||
In the late 1980's,the notorious gunman known as "Mad Max" caused a state wide manhunt by police to end his rein of terror in Noble Park. For 3 days the suburb was under heavy police presence . |
|||
Recent years have witnessed substantial investment by local and state governments, including the Paddy O'Donoghue Community Complex which opened in 2006, the redevelopment of Noble Park Railway Station and the construction of the Aquatic Centre which is home to Melbourne's largest water slide. Public amenities include number of schools, as well as churches, temples and mosques. Noble Park's primary commercial district contains bakeries, cafés, restaurants and convenience stores. Noble Park has an active [[Rotary International|Rotary Club]] and an active [[Rotaract|Rotaract Club]]. |
|||
Being formerly market gardens, Noble Park has fertile soil and to this day still has many [[River Red Gum]] trees. |
|||
{{MelbSuburbBox2|LGA=[[City of Greater Dandenong]]| |
|||
Northwest=[[Springvale, Victoria|Springvale]]| |
|||
==Demographics== |
|||
North=[[Noble Park North, Victoria|Noble Park North]]| |
|||
{{unreferencedsect|date=February 2023}} |
|||
Northeast=[[Dandenong North, Victoria|Dandenong North]]| |
|||
The suburb is characterised by similar social conditions to those across Greater Dandenong, including high levels of migrant settlement and cultural diversity, relatively low incomes, elevated rates of early school leaving, low-medium crime rates and a high density of flats. The 2011 Census recorded that 60% of Noble Park residents were born overseas, the same as for Greater Dandenong and nearly twice the corresponding metropolitan percentage (33%). Among the 121 birthplaces of residents were India, accounting for 9% of residents, Vietnam (8%) as well as others such as Sri Lanka, Cambodia, China, Bosnia, Afghanistan and Sudan. |
|||
West=[[Springvale South, Victoria|Springvale South]]| |
|||
Here=Noble Park| |
|||
Rates of migrant settlement are correspondingly high, with 7% of residents having arrived in Australia within the previous 2.5 years – the same as for Greater Dandenong. Languages other than English are spoken by about three-fifths of residents (61%) – twice the metropolitan average. Reflecting this diversity of languages, 13% of Noble Park residents have limited fluency in the use of spoken English, much the same as for the municipality, and over three times the metropolitan level of 4%. Patterns of religious faith are similar to those seen across the municipality, with 18% of residents adhering to Buddhism, 4% following Hinduism, and 9% Islam. |
|||
East=[[Dandenong, Victoria|Dandenong]]| |
|||
Southwest=[[Keysborough, Victoria|Keysborough]]| |
|||
Contemporary educational outcomes are marked by a high rate of early school leaving, with 13% of young adults (20–24 years) having left school before completing year 11 – equivalent to the municipal average, but higher than the metropolitan level, of 10% Median individual gross incomes, recorded in the Census, stood at 68% of the metropolitan median - similar to municipal levels, which are the lowest in metropolitan Melbourne. |
|||
South=[[Keysborough, Victoria|Keysborough]]| |
|||
Southeast=[[Dandenong South, Victoria|Dandenong South]]}} |
|||
Among the 10,200 homes in Noble Park, a third are flats - twice the proportion of metropolitan Melbourne. Sixty per cent of homes in the suburb are owned or being purchased by their occupants - less than the corresponding metropolitan level of 71%. |
|||
==Transport== |
|||
===Public transport=== |
|||
==== Trains ==== |
|||
[[File:Noble Park railway station Platform 2 (south-east view)(7 October 2024).jpg|thumb|The 2018 rebuilt Noble Park station at Platform 2, facing south-east towards [[East Pakenham railway station|East Pakenham]] and [[Cranbourne railway station|Cranbourne]]]] |
|||
[[File:Yarraman railway station - Melbourne.jpg|thumb|Station building on Platform 1 at Yarraman station, facing north-west]] |
|||
Noble Park has two [[suburban railway]] [[train station|station]]s on the [[Pakenham railway line|Pakenham]]/[[Cranbourne railway line|Cranbourne line]] of the [[Melbourne rail network]]: |
|||
* [[Noble Park railway station]] at the [[town centre]], servicing the [[strip mall|shopping strip]]s alongside [[Djerring Trail#Noble Park to Yarraman|Douglas Street]]. |
|||
* [[Yarraman railway station]] at the suburb's southeastern neighbourhoods (also unofficially known as "Noble Park East"), just west of the [[EastLink (Melbourne)|EastLink]] [[overbridge]]. |
|||
==== Buses ==== |
|||
Noble Park is serviced by three [[list of Melbourne bus routes|bus services]] operated by [[Ventura Bus Lines]]: |
|||
* Route 709,<ref>{{cite PTV route|709}}</ref> to [[Mordialloc]]. |
|||
* Route 811,<ref>{{cite PTV route|811}}</ref> to [[Dandenong railway station]] and [[Brighton, Victoria|Brighton]]. |
|||
* Route 815,<ref>{{cite PTV route|815}}</ref> to Dandenong railway station. |
|||
There are also six other bus routes that traverses parts of the suburb, including: |
|||
* Route 800, on [[Princes Highway]] to Dandenong railway station and [[Chadstone Shopping Centre]]. |
|||
* Route 812, to Dandenong railway station and Brighton. |
|||
* Route 813, to Dandenong railway station and [[Waverley Gardens Shopping Centre]]. |
|||
* Route 824, to [[Keysborough]] and [[Moorabbin railway station]]. |
|||
* Route 978 [[Night Network (Melbourne)#Night Bus|Night Bus]], [[night bus service|night service]] on Princes Highway from Dandenong railway station to [[Elsternwick railway station]]. |
|||
* Route 979 Night Bus, night service on Heatherton Road from Dandenong railway station to Elsternwick railway station. |
|||
===Bicycle trails=== |
|||
The [[Djerring Trail]] (Caufield–Dandenong Rail Trail), completed in 2018, is connected to the Noble Park railway station, as well as to Noble Park's skate park and aquatic centre.<ref>{{cite web | title=Djerring it is | website=Level Crossing Removal Authority | url=https://levelcrossings.vic.gov.au/media/news/djerring-it-is | date=2018-09-26 | access-date=2019-06-12}}</ref> |
|||
The [[EastLink Trail]], after crossing the [[Princes Highway]], closely follows the Yarraman Creek and crosses the Pakenham/Cranbourne line railway via the Yarraman station footbridge, before continuing on along the Mile Creek after the two creeks join each other. |
|||
==Community facilities == |
|||
* Noble Park Public Hall, located on Buckley Street just off the shopping strip. |
|||
* Giac Hoang Temple, a Vietnamese [[Buddhist temple]], is located in the suburb.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.phatgiaoucchau.com/p107/thanh-vien-giao-hoi |publisher=The Unified Vietnamese Buddhist Congregation of Australia - New Zealand |title=THÀNH VIÊN GIÁO HỘI|accessdate= 14 July 2021}}</ref> |
|||
==Environment== |
|||
* The middle-lower section of the '''Miles Creek''', a small [[Strahler number#River networks|second-order]] right-bank [[tributary]] of the lower [[Dandenong Creek]] system and the last before the latter becomes the [[Patterson River]], flows obliquely through the centre of Noble Park just north of the [[town center]]. Majority of the creek within Noble Park is [[River engineering#Channelization|concrete-lined]] and its value is mostly [[hydrological]] (as a [[flood control channel]]) rather than [[ecological]], except in its very last section east of Chandler Road. |
|||
** The '''Yarraman Creek''', a small [[urban stream]] flowing south from [[Noble Park North]] and the only tributary of the Miles Creek, forms the suburb's eastern boundary with the neighbouring [[Dandenong West]]. The creek, though small and often partly dry, has two groups of [[retention pond]]s along its course and is surrounded by [[linear park]]s and forested [[open space reserve]]s, providing most of the ecological functions of the Miles Creek catchment. The [[Yarraman railway station]] servicing Noble Park East is named after this creek. |
|||
* Noble Park has fertile soil and to this day still has many [[river red gum]] trees, including the oldest river red gum at Parkfield Reserve, which is classified by the [[National Trust of Australia]]. |
|||
==Sport== |
|||
The Noble Park Aquatic Centre, located just northwest of the town centre and the train station, is home to Melbourne's largest [[water slide]]. A former swimming pool of the Aquatic Centre, just off Heatherton Road, was converted into the Noble Park Skatepark. |
|||
Noble Park has a local [[Australian rules football]] team, the [[Noble Park Football Club|Noble Park Bulls]], competing in the [[Eastern Football League (Australia)|Eastern Football League]]. It also includes a [[cricket]] and [[lawn bowls]] club. |
|||
Noble Park is represented by [[Southern Stars FC]] soccer team. The team currently competes in the [[Victorian State League Division 1]] which is the [[Australian football (soccer) league system|third tier]] in Australia behind the [[A-League]] and the [[Victorian Premier League]]. |
|||
Noble Park is also home to the Parkfield Netball Club, Noble Park United FC - Drina, and Parkfield Cricket Club. |
|||
Both Noble Park Tennis Club and Noble Park Community Tennis Club represent Noble Park in tennis. |
|||
Noble Park home to the Noble Park Skate Park located on Memorial Drive (off Heatherton Road). The skate park was designed and built by a team led by Noble Park resident and pro skater John McGrath. {{cn|date=February 2021}} It is a unique skate park in Melbourne's south east and includes a plaza, snake-run and bowl. It is adjacent the Noble Park Aquatic Centre to the west on Memorial Drive, which currently has a {{cvt|50|m|yd}} heated outdoor pool, an indoor heated pool, a [[water slide]] and a [[water play area]]. The 50 m outdoor pool is partially shaded and provides ramp access, and is occasionally converted into two 25 m pools. |
|||
==Notable residents== |
|||
* [[John Farnham]] Australian singer and songwriter{{Citation needed|date=October 2011}} |
|||
* [[Darren Millane]] Australian rules football{{Citation needed|date=December 2016}} |
|||
* [[Stephen Milne]] Australian rules football{{Citation needed|date=December 2016}} |
|||
* [[Adam Ramanauskas]] Australian rules football player{{Citation needed|date=December 2016}} |
|||
* [[Glenn Archer]] Australian rules football{{Citation needed|date=December 2016}} |
|||
* [[James Gwilt]] Current Australian rules football{{Citation needed|date=December 2016}} |
|||
* [[Adam Treloar]], Australian rules footballer<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/afl-premiership/adam-treloar-could-be-convinced-to-stay-with-gws-giants-after-jeremy-cameron-re-signing/story-e6frf3e3-1227258962864|title=Adam Treloar could be convinced to stay with GWS Giants after Jeremy Cameron re-signing|first=Sam|last=Edmund|date=11 March 2015|access-date=12 March 2015|publisher=Fox Sports Australia}}</ref> |
|||
==See also== |
|||
* [[City of Dandenong]] – Parts of Noble Park were previously within this former local government area. |
|||
* [[City of Springvale]] – Parts of Noble Park were previously within this former local government area. |
|||
==References== |
|||
{{reflist}} |
|||
{{City of Greater Dandenong suburbs}} |
{{City of Greater Dandenong suburbs}} |
||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Noble Park, Victoria}} |
|||
{{melbourne-geo-stub}} |
|||
[[Category:Suburbs of Melbourne]] |
|||
[[Category:Suburbs of the City of Greater Dandenong]] |
Latest revision as of 11:20, 7 October 2024
Noble Park Melbourne, Victoria | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coordinates | 37°58′01″S 145°10′34″E / 37.967°S 145.176°E | ||||||||||||||
Population | 32,257 (2021 census)[1] | ||||||||||||||
• Density | 2,601/km2 (6,738/sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Established | 1909 | ||||||||||||||
Postcode(s) | 3174[2] | ||||||||||||||
Area | 12.4 km2 (4.8 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Location | |||||||||||||||
LGA(s) | City of Greater Dandenong | ||||||||||||||
State electorate(s) | |||||||||||||||
Federal division(s) | Hotham | ||||||||||||||
|
Noble Park is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 25 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Greater Dandenong local government area. Noble Park recorded a population of 32,257 at the 2021 census.[1]
Noble Park has a mixture of residential, commercial and industrial zones and is home to a highly multicultural population, with residents who have emigrated from Europe, Asia, the Americas, and Africa.
History
[edit]The history of Noble Park as a suburb in Melbourne began in 1909. Allan Buckley nicknamed the land subdivision Nobel Park[3] after the Swedish inventor Alfred Nobel, as Buckley had used the estate to demonstrate Nobel's explosives, but the name was soon transformed to Noble Park by common usage.[4]
Early settlement was encouraged by building a community centre, church, school, postal centre and later, a railway station. The postal centre was opened in August 1910 and the railway station was completed in July 1912, but in the early days, the town's growth was relatively slow due to the lack of population growth in the area. In the early 1920s, the Railway Department set up a poultry farm and eventually a plant nursery was set up in the eastern part of the suburb. The focus of the small community was based around its local town hall.[3]
In the 1980s Noble Park became known for its infamous street gangs that carried out violent crimes against the community,[5] as well as the scene of a major shootout between members of the Victoria Police and Pavel Marinof, a burglar on the run.[6] Residential growth in the second half of the century saw an end to the grazing paddocks and market gardens. By the 1990s, 56% of Noble Park's population was born overseas, with the largest being from Great Britain and Ireland, followed by Bosnians, Italians and Greeks; and South and Southeast Asians (including Indians, Sri Lankans and Vietnamese), according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. In recent years there has been an upsurge of migrants and refugees settled from North African countries, especially Sudan.[7]
Today
[edit]Recent years have witnessed substantial investment by local and state governments, including the Paddy O'Donoghue Community Complex which opened in 2006, the redevelopment of Noble Park Railway Station and the construction of the Aquatic Centre which is home to Melbourne's largest water slide. Public amenities include number of schools, as well as churches, temples and mosques. Noble Park's primary commercial district contains bakeries, cafés, restaurants and convenience stores. Noble Park has an active Rotary Club and an active Rotaract Club.
Being formerly market gardens, Noble Park has fertile soil and to this day still has many River Red Gum trees.
Demographics
[edit]The suburb is characterised by similar social conditions to those across Greater Dandenong, including high levels of migrant settlement and cultural diversity, relatively low incomes, elevated rates of early school leaving, low-medium crime rates and a high density of flats. The 2011 Census recorded that 60% of Noble Park residents were born overseas, the same as for Greater Dandenong and nearly twice the corresponding metropolitan percentage (33%). Among the 121 birthplaces of residents were India, accounting for 9% of residents, Vietnam (8%) as well as others such as Sri Lanka, Cambodia, China, Bosnia, Afghanistan and Sudan.
Rates of migrant settlement are correspondingly high, with 7% of residents having arrived in Australia within the previous 2.5 years – the same as for Greater Dandenong. Languages other than English are spoken by about three-fifths of residents (61%) – twice the metropolitan average. Reflecting this diversity of languages, 13% of Noble Park residents have limited fluency in the use of spoken English, much the same as for the municipality, and over three times the metropolitan level of 4%. Patterns of religious faith are similar to those seen across the municipality, with 18% of residents adhering to Buddhism, 4% following Hinduism, and 9% Islam.
Contemporary educational outcomes are marked by a high rate of early school leaving, with 13% of young adults (20–24 years) having left school before completing year 11 – equivalent to the municipal average, but higher than the metropolitan level, of 10% Median individual gross incomes, recorded in the Census, stood at 68% of the metropolitan median - similar to municipal levels, which are the lowest in metropolitan Melbourne.
Among the 10,200 homes in Noble Park, a third are flats - twice the proportion of metropolitan Melbourne. Sixty per cent of homes in the suburb are owned or being purchased by their occupants - less than the corresponding metropolitan level of 71%.
Transport
[edit]Public transport
[edit]Trains
[edit]Noble Park has two suburban railway stations on the Pakenham/Cranbourne line of the Melbourne rail network:
- Noble Park railway station at the town centre, servicing the shopping strips alongside Douglas Street.
- Yarraman railway station at the suburb's southeastern neighbourhoods (also unofficially known as "Noble Park East"), just west of the EastLink overbridge.
Buses
[edit]Noble Park is serviced by three bus services operated by Ventura Bus Lines:
- Route 709,[8] to Mordialloc.
- Route 811,[9] to Dandenong railway station and Brighton.
- Route 815,[10] to Dandenong railway station.
There are also six other bus routes that traverses parts of the suburb, including:
- Route 800, on Princes Highway to Dandenong railway station and Chadstone Shopping Centre.
- Route 812, to Dandenong railway station and Brighton.
- Route 813, to Dandenong railway station and Waverley Gardens Shopping Centre.
- Route 824, to Keysborough and Moorabbin railway station.
- Route 978 Night Bus, night service on Princes Highway from Dandenong railway station to Elsternwick railway station.
- Route 979 Night Bus, night service on Heatherton Road from Dandenong railway station to Elsternwick railway station.
Bicycle trails
[edit]The Djerring Trail (Caufield–Dandenong Rail Trail), completed in 2018, is connected to the Noble Park railway station, as well as to Noble Park's skate park and aquatic centre.[11]
The EastLink Trail, after crossing the Princes Highway, closely follows the Yarraman Creek and crosses the Pakenham/Cranbourne line railway via the Yarraman station footbridge, before continuing on along the Mile Creek after the two creeks join each other.
Community facilities
[edit]- Noble Park Public Hall, located on Buckley Street just off the shopping strip.
- Giac Hoang Temple, a Vietnamese Buddhist temple, is located in the suburb.[12]
Environment
[edit]- The middle-lower section of the Miles Creek, a small second-order right-bank tributary of the lower Dandenong Creek system and the last before the latter becomes the Patterson River, flows obliquely through the centre of Noble Park just north of the town center. Majority of the creek within Noble Park is concrete-lined and its value is mostly hydrological (as a flood control channel) rather than ecological, except in its very last section east of Chandler Road.
- The Yarraman Creek, a small urban stream flowing south from Noble Park North and the only tributary of the Miles Creek, forms the suburb's eastern boundary with the neighbouring Dandenong West. The creek, though small and often partly dry, has two groups of retention ponds along its course and is surrounded by linear parks and forested open space reserves, providing most of the ecological functions of the Miles Creek catchment. The Yarraman railway station servicing Noble Park East is named after this creek.
- Noble Park has fertile soil and to this day still has many river red gum trees, including the oldest river red gum at Parkfield Reserve, which is classified by the National Trust of Australia.
Sport
[edit]The Noble Park Aquatic Centre, located just northwest of the town centre and the train station, is home to Melbourne's largest water slide. A former swimming pool of the Aquatic Centre, just off Heatherton Road, was converted into the Noble Park Skatepark.
Noble Park has a local Australian rules football team, the Noble Park Bulls, competing in the Eastern Football League. It also includes a cricket and lawn bowls club.
Noble Park is represented by Southern Stars FC soccer team. The team currently competes in the Victorian State League Division 1 which is the third tier in Australia behind the A-League and the Victorian Premier League.
Noble Park is also home to the Parkfield Netball Club, Noble Park United FC - Drina, and Parkfield Cricket Club.
Both Noble Park Tennis Club and Noble Park Community Tennis Club represent Noble Park in tennis.
Noble Park home to the Noble Park Skate Park located on Memorial Drive (off Heatherton Road). The skate park was designed and built by a team led by Noble Park resident and pro skater John McGrath. [citation needed] It is a unique skate park in Melbourne's south east and includes a plaza, snake-run and bowl. It is adjacent the Noble Park Aquatic Centre to the west on Memorial Drive, which currently has a 50 m (55 yd) heated outdoor pool, an indoor heated pool, a water slide and a water play area. The 50 m outdoor pool is partially shaded and provides ramp access, and is occasionally converted into two 25 m pools.
Notable residents
[edit]- John Farnham Australian singer and songwriter[citation needed]
- Darren Millane Australian rules football[citation needed]
- Stephen Milne Australian rules football[citation needed]
- Adam Ramanauskas Australian rules football player[citation needed]
- Glenn Archer Australian rules football[citation needed]
- James Gwilt Current Australian rules football[citation needed]
- Adam Treloar, Australian rules footballer[13]
See also
[edit]- City of Dandenong – Parts of Noble Park were previously within this former local government area.
- City of Springvale – Parts of Noble Park were previously within this former local government area.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Noble Park (Suburbs and Localities)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
- ^ Noble Park Postcode Australia Post
- ^ a b Phoenix Auctions History. "Post Office List". Retrieved 11 February 2021.
- ^ Hibbins, Gillian M. (1984). A History of the City of Springvale (1st ed.). Melbourne: Port Melbourne, Lothian/City of Springvale. ISBN 0850911745. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
- ^ "Noble Park in lockdown, retrieved 2009-11-19". Herald Sun. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
- ^ "Nightmare hunt for Mad Max, retrieved 2009-11-22". Herald Sun. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
- ^ "ABC News: Andrews stands by remarks on African refugees, retrieved 2009-11-19". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
- ^ "709 Mordialloc - Noble Park Station via Keysborough South". Public Transport Victoria.
- ^ "811 Dandenong - Brighton via Heatherton Road & Springvale". Public Transport Victoria.
- ^ "815 Dandenong - Noble Park". Public Transport Victoria.
- ^ "Djerring it is". Level Crossing Removal Authority. 26 September 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2019.
- ^ "THÀNH VIÊN GIÁO HỘI". The Unified Vietnamese Buddhist Congregation of Australia - New Zealand. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
- ^ Edmund, Sam (11 March 2015). "Adam Treloar could be convinced to stay with GWS Giants after Jeremy Cameron re-signing". Fox Sports Australia. Retrieved 12 March 2015.