Everything about Wattle Park totally explained
Wattle Park is a park in
Melbourne,
Australia, located in the suburb of
Burwood. It is known for its plantation of 12,000
wattle trees. It is currently maintained by
Parks Victoria
.
Wattle Park is located within the
City of Whitehorse. Approximately one third of the park is recorded as a heritage place by
Heritage Victoria and the
National Trust of Australia has also classified the park. The ‘
Lone Pine’ is listed on the National Trust's Significant Tree Register.
The park contains areas of indigenous remnant bush land which has been identified as regionally significant. The Urban Fauna Survey Unit (Department of Conservation Forests and Lands, 1989) nominated the site as one of regional significance on the basis of its high diversity of common native fauna in a suburban environment.
Image:Wattle_Park_Melbourne_wattle_trees_01.jpg|Wattles in bloom (August 2006, Wattle Park, Melbourne)
Image:Wattle_Park_Melbourne_wattle_trees_02.jpg|A large wattle tree in bloom, upper foliage (August 2006, Wattle Park, Melbourne)
Image:Wattle_Park_Melbourne_wattle_trees_03.jpg|A small wattle tree in bloom (August 2006, Wattle Park, Melbourne)
Image:Wattle_Park_Melbourne_wattle_trees_04.jpg|Wattles in bloom (August 2006, Wattle Park, Melbourne)
The park also provides a wide range of recreational opportunities, combining aspects of:
- Public open space for passive recreation
- Sporting facilities accessed on a fee paying basis
- Commercial activities
Wattle Park is also recognised as a place of ‘social value’. It provides a traditional and spiritual connection between the past and present. It is accessible to the public and the repeated use of the park has built up significant associations and values in the community. It is unlike any other park in the greater metropolitan region of Melbourne.
History
The park was first created when the
Hawthorn Tramway Trust (HTT) purchased 137 acres (554,000 m²) of land from Mrs Eliza Welch, under the condition it was to be used as a public park. The park opened on
31 March,
1917 when Sir
Arthur Stanley planted a Golden Wattle and named the park.
Due to the HTT's financial troubles, further development of the park was put off for some time. After the HTT had been amalgamated into the
Melbourne and Metropolitan Tramways Board, it was put off due to work on electrifying
Melbourne's cable tramways. Planning and development of the park started in the
1920s and
30s, with a plantation of 12,000 wattle trees planted in between
1926 and
1928. A 9-hole
golf course opened at Wattle Park in October
1937, with other facilities following later.
With the rise of popularity of motor cars in the
1960s and
70s, the MMTB (which was absorbed by the new
Metropolitan Transit Authority in 1983, was focusing its attention elsewhere. Subsequently, local residents began to complain to the state government about the poor state of Wattle Park. In
1991, ownership of Wattle Park was passed from the Public Transport Corporation to the
Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works, which undertook a program to rehabilitate the park's landscape.
Connection with trams
As Wattle Park, for most of its history, had been maintained by Melbourne's tram operators, it retains a connection with Melbourne's tramways. The
Melbourne Tramways Band (sponsored by
Yarra Trams) plays at Wattle Park once a month during spring and autumn. The bodies of two
W2 class trams are used as shelters at Wattle Park, and it's the terminus of
tram route 70.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Wattle Park'.
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