Malvern East, Victoria

Malvern East
Melbourne, Victoria

Waverley Road
Malvern East

Location in metropolitan Melbourne

Coordinates 37°52′41″S 145°03′36″E / 37.878°S 145.060°E / -37.878; 145.060Coordinates: 37°52′41″S 145°03′36″E / 37.878°S 145.060°E / -37.878; 145.060
Population 20,066 (2011 census)[1]
 • Density 2,640/km2 (6,840/sq mi)
Postcode(s) 3145
Area 7.6 km2 (2.9 sq mi)
Location 12 km (7 mi) from Melbourne
LGA(s) City of Stonnington
State electorate(s) Malvern
Federal Division(s) Higgins
Suburbs around Malvern East:
Malvern Glen Iris Ashburton
Caulfield East Malvern East Ashwood
Carnegie Murrumbeena Chadstone

Malvern East is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 12 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Stonnington. At the 2011 Census, Malvern East had a population of 20,066.

Malvern East is bounded to the north by Wattletree Road and Gardiners Creek, to the east by Warrigal Road, to the south by the Princes Highway (Dandenong Road) and to the west by Tooronga Road.

It is most famous for the Chadstone Shopping Centre, the largest shopping centre in the southern hemisphere, and the largest by total lettable space under one roof.[2][3][4][5]

In recent times, what was once a relatively small suburb was extended to incorporate parts of neighbouring Chadstone. Based on its easterly proximity to Malvern, the expansion and redefinition of Malvern East was driven in the 1990s by resident groups eager to 'reclaim' their address from being identified with the Chadstone Shopping Centre, which had been massively expanded since its original construction. However, the Chadstone Shopping Centre shares the 'Malvern East' address and postcode.

History

The first Malvern East Post Office opened on 4 August 1914 and was renamed Wattletree Road twenty days later. The second Malvern East Post Office opened in 1924 and was renamed Central Park in 1928. The third Malvern East Post Office was renamed from Caulfield East in 1928, but reverted to that name in 1929. The fourth Malvern East Post Office opened around 1935 and closed in 1993.[6]

Three Post Offices remain marking the major commercial areas of the suburb; Wattletree Road office on the corner of Tooronga Road, Central Park office on Burke Road near Wattletree Road and Darling South office on Waverley Road.

The suburb is also home to the Buddhist Society of Victoria, founded in 1953, making it the oldest Buddhist Institution in Victoria.

Parks and gardens

Malvern East has a number of popular public open spaces, the most notable of which are Hedgeley Dene Gardens, Central Park and the Urban Forest Reserve. While Central Park and its surrounding residential neighbourhood are subject to heritage protection, Hedgeley Dene Gardens is the first public open space to be designated worthy of protection on neighbourhood character grounds.

Transport

Tram terminus on Waverley Road

Malvern East is serviced by Darling, East Malvern and Holmesglen railway stations, all on the Glen Waverley line, Caulfield and Malvern railway stations on the Frankston line, Cranbourne line and Pakenham line and the numbers 3 and 5 tram routes.

The Melbourne bus routes 612, 623, 624, and 626 also services the area.

The suburb is also serviced by the community bike path along Gardiners Creek, which joins and is an integral part, of the Greater Melbourne network of bike paths.

Sport

The suburb has an Australian Rules football team, Tooronga Malvern Football Club, competing in the Southern Football League. The De La Salle Old Collegians Associated Football Club also competes at Waverley Park, on Waverley Road, in the Victorian Amateur Football Association in A Section.

Malvern East also boasts one of the largest Australian Rules Auskick clinics in Australia, which is held on Saturday mornings during winter.

Golfers play at the course of the East Malvern Golf Club, on Golfers Drive,[7] the Malvern Valley Public Golf Course on Golfers Drive [8] or at the course of the Nepean Golf Club, on Waverley Road.[9]

Notable citizens

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.