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City of Glen Eira
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | City of Glen Eira |
| state | vic |
| image | MelbLGA-GlenEira.gif |
| pop | 153858 |
| pop_year | 2018 |
| pop_footnotes | |
| poprank | 50th |
| area | 39 |
| area_footnotes | |
| est | 1994 |
| seat | Caulfield |
| mayor | Anne-Marie Cade |
| region | Greater Melbourne |
| local_map | yes |
| zoom | 11 |
| logo | GlenEiraLogo.svg |
| url | http://www.gleneira.vic.gov.au |
| stategov | Bentleigh |
| stategov2 | Caulfield |
| stategov3 | Oakleigh |
| fedgov | Goldstein |
| fedgov2 | Hotham |
| fedgov3 | Macnamara |
| near-nw | Port Phillip |
| near-n | Stonnington |
| near-ne | Monash |
| near-w | Port Phillip |
| near-e | Monash |
| near-sw | Bayside |
| near-s | Kingston |
| near-se | Kingston |
| near-nw = Port Phillip | near-n = Stonnington | near-ne = Monash | near-w = Port Phillip | near-e = Monash | near-sw = Bayside | near-s = Kingston | near-se = Kingston
The City of Glen Eira is a local government area in Victoria, Australia. It is located in the south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne. It has an area of 39 km2 and has an estimated population of 153,858
The local government area was formed in 1994 from the merger of the City of Caulfield and parts of the City of Moorabbin, and takes its name from two local landmarks—Glen Eira Road and Glen Eira Mansion. The local government area was originally planned to be named "City of Gardiner" from the merger of City of Caulfield and parts of the City of Malvern.
Townships and localities
The city had a population of 148,908 at the 2021 census, up from 140,875 at the 2016 census.
| Population | Locality | 2016 | 2021 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16,153 | 17,921 | ||
| 27,635 | 30,159 | ||
| ^ | 15,998 | 16,757 | |
| 17,388 | 17,909 | ||
| 5,595 | 5,748 | ||
| 1,584 | 1,293 | ||
| 15,269 | 16,903 | ||
| 11,854 | 12,328 | ||
| 10,349 | 10,887 | ||
| 1,006 | 1,019 | ||
| 5,040 | 4,905 | ||
| 6,064 | 6,878 | ||
| 9,926 | 9,996 | ||
| 8,417 | 8,328 | ||
| ^ | 13,101 | 12,571 |
^ - Territory divided with another LGA
Demographics
Ages
The median age for Glen Eira residents is 37 years. Children 0–14 years make up 18.0% of the population, 15 to 19 years 5.4%, 20 to 64 61.9% and those 65 years and over 14.7%.
Registered marital status
Of people in Glen Eira aged 15 years and over, 49.6% are married, 35.1% have never married and 9.1% are divorced or separated.
Country of birth
The country of birth for City of Glen Eira residents includes Australia 60.3%, India 3.8%, China 3.2%, England 2.8%, South Africa 2.3% and Greece 1.7%.
Religion
The City of Glen Eira includes a large Jewish community in Elsternwick, St Kilda East and Caulfield. At the 2011 Census 54.9% of all Victorians who gave Judaism as their religion were living in Glen Eira. The major responses were No Religion 22.9%, Catholicism 20.1%, Judaism 18.9%, Anglican 8.4% and Eastern Orthodox 6.6%.

History
This area was originally occupied by the Boonwurrung/Bunurong and Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung peoples, Indigenous Australians of the Eastern Kulin nation, who spoke variations of the Boonwurrung and Woiwurrung language groups respectively.
Settlement
Victoria was proclaimed a separate colony in 1851.
East St Kilda commenced to be settled in the 1850s. The area of Glen Eira was once swamps.
Caulfield became a Shire in 1871 and a City in 1913; Moorabbin became a Shire in 1874 and a City in 1934.
The first railway link to the area was at Caulfield and Carnegie railway stations, which opened in 1879, to be followed in 1881 by Glen Huntly and Ormond railway stations.
- 1857 Caulfield Road District
- 1862 Moorabbin Road District
- 1863 Shire of Caulfield
- 1874 Shire of Moorabbin
- 1913 City of Caulfield
- 1934 City of Moorabbin
- 1994 City of Glen Eira, by merging of Caulfield and north Moorabbin
Train network
Caulfield railway station originally opened on 7 May 1879.
Glen Huntly railway station opened on 19 December 1881 as Glen Huntly Road. It was later renamed to Glen Huntly in 1882 before being renamed Glenhuntly in 1937 and then back to Glen Huntly in 2023.
Ormond railway station opened on 19 December 1881 as North Road. It was later renamed to Ormond in 1897.
[Carnegie railway station opened on 14 May 1879 as Rosstown. It was later renamed to Carnegie in 1909.
Monash University, Caulfield Campus
Monash University, Caulfield campus was founded as the Caulfield Technical School in 1922. A Junior Technical High School was added in the 1950s, with the Technical School becoming a Senior Technical High School. They separated in 1958 with the junior school absorbed by other technical schools in the area and the senior school became Caulfield Technical College. In the 1970s it became the Caulfield Institute of Technology. In 1982 the Caulfield Institute of Technology amalgamated with the State College of Victoria at Frankston to form the Chisholm Institute of Technology. This Institution merged with Monash University in 1990 and became Monash University, Caulfield campus. http://www.monash.edu.au/alumni/reunion/Caulfieldhistory.html
Sacking of Council - 2004
In September 2004, the then Minister for Local Government, Candy Broad, was asked to appoint an inspector by the Glen Eira City Council to investigate and report on matters arising out of an internal audit of councillors' expenses. In July 2005, the Inspector of Municipal Administration, Merv Whelan, forwarded a report to the Minister. The key findings portrayed a complete breakdown of communication and behavioural standards within the elected council, although Whelan found the council was well-managed and in a sound financial position because of its CEO and administration. A report in The Age newspaper alleged that several councillors had used their phone entitlements for non-council purposes.
On 11 August 2005, the then Minister sacked the council, and appointed John Lester, the former Chief Commissioner of Darebin City Council and former chair of the Victorian Grants Commission, as Administrator. An election for a new council was held on 26 November 2005 with redrawn ward boundaries. Only one councillor from the previous council, Margaret Esakoff, was re-elected. Three other sacked councillors (Noel Erlich, Veronika Martens and Bob Bury) did run again but failed to get elected into council.
Carbon neutral
Controversially, in 2009 the City of Glen Eira was one of the few regions in the Melbourne metropolitan area to make the decision not to become carbon neutral, despite most LGA's in Melbourne converting to a cleaner energy contract.
In 2020, Glen passed a motion to declare a climate emergency, and committed to net zero Council carbon emissions by 2025.
Council
Glen Eira City Council is the third tier of government and deals with services such as waste collection, building permits and approvals, roads, drainage, health services, food safety, parks and gardens, library services, pets, street parking permits and the collection of rates and charges. The Council meets at the Glen Eira Town Hall. Since 2024, the Council area is divided into nine wards, each electing a single councillor. The most recent election took place on 26 October 2024 and saw the following councillors elected:
| Ward | Party | Councillor | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bambra | Independent}} | Independent | Margaret Esakoff | |
| Booran | Labor}} | Independent Labor | Jane Karslake | |
| Caulfield Park | Independent}} | Independent | Sam Parasol | |
| Jasper | Independent}} | Independent | Arabella Daniel | |
| Mallanbool | Independent}} | Independent | Kimberley Young | |
| Moorleigh | Independent}} | Independent | Kay Rimbaldo | |
| Murrumbeena | Independent Labor}} | Independent Labor | Luca Ragni | |
| Orrong | Independent}} | Independent | Simone Zmood | |
| Wattle Grove | Independent Labor}} | Independent Labor | Li Zhang |
Mayors
Main article: List of Mayors of Glen Eira
Election results
2024
2020
Past councillors
1997–2005 (three wards; preferential voting)
Jasper Ward
| Year | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | 2 councillors (1997−2000) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | independent}} | Barry Neve | Independent | independent}} | Russell Longmuir | Independent | ||||
| 2000 | independent}} | David Bloom | Independent | independent}} | Rachelle Sapir | Independent | independent}} | |||
| 2003 | independent}} | Jamie Hyams | Independent | independent}} | Bob Bury | Independent | independent}} |
Mackie Ward
| Year | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | 2 councillors (1997−2000) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | independent}} | Veronika Martens | Independent | independent}} | Norman Kennedy | Independent | |||
| 2000 | independent}} | Rachelle Sapir | Independent | ||||||
| 2003 | independent}} | Dorothy Marwick | Independent |
Orrong Ward
| Year | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | 2 councillors (1997−2000) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | independent}} | Alan Grossbard | Independent | independent}} | Noel Erlich | Independent | |||
| 2000 | independent}} | Dorothy Marwick | Independent | ||||||
| 2003 |
2005–2024 (three wards; proportional representation)
Camden Ward
| Year | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | liberal}} | Michael Lipshutz | Independent Liberal | liberal}} | Helen Whiteside | Liberal | ||
| 2008 | independent}} | Frank Penhalluriack | Independent | |||||
| 2010 | independent}} | Cheryl Forge | Independent | |||||
| 2012 | Labor}} | Mary Delahunty | Labor | Greens}} | Thomas Sounness | Greens | ||
| 2016 | liberal}} | Joel Silver | Liberal | independent}} | Dan Sztrajt | Independent | ||
| 2020 | independent}} | Sam Parasol | Independent | independent}} | Simone Zmood | Independent | ||
| 2024 | labor}} | Jane Karslake | Labor |
Rosstown Ward
| Year | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | independent}} | Margaret Esakoff | Independent | independent}} | Steven Tang | Independent | ||
| 2008 | independent}} | Neil Piling | Independent | |||||
| 2012 | liberal}} | Karina Okotel | Liberal | |||||
| 2016 | liberal}} | Kelvin Ho | Liberal | |||||
| 2016 | Labor}} | Tony Athanasopoulos | Independent Labor | greens}} | Clare Davey | Greens | ||
| 2020 | independent}} | Neil Piling | Independent | |||||
| 2022 | greens}} | Sue Pennicuik | Greens |
Tucker Ward
| Year | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | independent}} | David Feldman | Independent | labor}} | Nick Staikos | Labor | ||
| 2008 | independent}} | Henry Buch | Independent | |||||
| 2008 | Liberal}} | Jamie Hyams | Liberal | Labor}} | Jim Magee | Labor | ||
| 2009 | Labor}} | Oscar Lobo | Labor | |||||
| 2012 | ||||||||
| 2016 | Labor}} | Nina Taylor | Labor | |||||
| 2018 | independent}} | Anne-Marie Cade | Independent | |||||
| 2020 | Labor}} | Li Zhang | Labor |
Government
The Goldstein, Higgins, Hotham and Macnamara divisions of the Australian House of Representatives, and the Bentleigh, Caulfield and Oakleigh state electoral districts of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, are partly in the City of Glen Eira. The council area is within the Southern Metropolitan Region for the Victorian Legislative Council.
Public transport
Glen Eira is well-served by an efficient network of public transport in a mix of trams, trains and buses.
Train lines and stations
Glen Eira is served by 3 train lines. These are the:
- Frankston Line
- Pakenham/Cranbourne Lines
- Sandringham Line
The Frankston line is served by: Caulfield (Zone 1), Glenhuntly (Zone 1), Ormond (Zone 1 & 2), McKinnon (Zone 1 & 2), Bentleigh (Zone 1 & 2) and then by Patterson (Zone 2).
The Pakenham/Cranbourne lines are both served by:Caulfield (Zone 1), Carnegie (Zone 1) and then by Murrumbeena Railway Station (Zone 1).
The Sandringham Line is served by: Elsternwick (Zone 1).
Tram routes
- Route 3 - Malvern East to Melbourne University which travels along Waverley Road, Balaclava Road, Carlisle Street before proceeding along St Kilda Road into the central business district
- Route 16 - Kew to St Kilda and Melbourne University which travels along Glenferrie Road, Hawthorn Road and Balaclava Road, Carlisle Street, The Esplanade, Fitzroy Street before proceeding along St Kilda Road into the central business district
- Route 64 - Brighton East to Melbourne University which runs along Hawthorn Road and Dandenong Road, before proceeding along St Kilda Road into the central business district
- Route 67 - Carnegie to Melbourne University which runs along Glen Huntly Road and Brighton Road, before proceeding along St Kilda Road into the central business district
Schools in the City of Glen Eira
Government
- East Bentleigh Primary School
- Tucker Road Bentleigh Primary School
- Bentleigh Secondary College
- St Peters Primary School
- Coatesville Primary School
- Bentleigh West Primary School
- Valkstone Primary School
- Glen Eira College
- Caulfield South Primary School
- Caulfield Primary School
- Caulfield Park Community Secondary School
- Caulfield Junior College
- Glen Huntly Primary School
- Carnegie Primary School
- Ripponlea Primary School
- McKinnon Secondary College
- McKinnon Primary School
- Murrembeena Primary School
- Ormond Primary School
Private
- Adass Israel School
- Beth Rivkah College
- Caulfield Grammar Senior School
- Katandra School
- Kilvington Grammar School
- Leibler Yavneh College
- Melbourne Grammar School - Grimwade House
- Mount Scopus Memorial College - St Kilda East Campus
- Our Lady of Sacred Heart College
- Wesley College - Elsternwick Campus
- St. Aloysius Catholic Primary School
- St. Anthony's Catholic Primary School
- St. Bede's Bentleigh East Catholic College
- St. Joseph's School
- St. Kevin's Catholic Primary School
- St. Patrick's Catholic Primary School
- St. Paul's Catholic Primary School
- Shelford Girls' Grammar
- Sholem Aleichem College
- Yeshivah College
Libraries and information
The city is served by free council run libraries. Library membership is free.
Council public library branches
- Bentleigh - 161 Jasper Road, Bentleigh
- Carnegie - a large suburban library and civic centre, which was built in 2005 - 7 Shepparson Avenue, Carnegie
- Caulfield - at the City Hall, Corner Glen Eira and Hawthorn Roads, Caulfield
- Elsternwick - 4 Staniland Grove, Elsternwick
Private libraries open to the public
- Kadimah Jewish Cultural Centre and National Library - 7 Selwyn St, Elsternwick
- Makor Jewish Community Library- 306 Hawthorn Rd, Caulfield https://web.archive.org/web/20090601035628/http://www.makorlibrary.com/
Sister cities
- Japan Ōgaki, Gifu Prefecture, Japan
Notes
References
References
- (27 March 2019). "3218.0 – Regional Population Growth, Australia, 2017-18: Population Estimates by Local Government Area (ASGS 2018), 2017 to 2018". [[Australian Bureau of Statistics]].
- (51.6% female and 48.4% male).{{Census 2016 AUS|id=LGA22310 |name=Glen Eira (C) |accessdate=19 December 2017 |quick=on}}
- "History and heritage - Glen Eira City Council".
- (9 April 1994). "Municipal shake-up". The Age.
- (11 January 2023). "Census {{!}} Australian Bureau of Statistics".
- Australian Bureau of Statistics. (28 March 2013). "Local Government area Glen Eira 2011 Census, 2011".
- ""Census of Population and Housing - Cultural Diversity, 2016, TableBuilder"". Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).
- "Acknowledgement of Country | Glen Eira City Council".
- Whelan, Merv. (13 July 2005). "Report of investigation into Glen Eira City Council". Victorian Government Printer.
- Farrah Tomazin and Martin Boulton. (12 August 2005). "Council sacked as politics, egos clash". [[The Age]].
- Minister for Local Government (Press release). (11 August 2005). "Administrator Appointed to Glen Eira Council".
- Parliament of Victoria. (16 August 2005). "Local Government (Further Amendment Bill) 2005 (VIC) - Explanatory Memoranda".
- Riordan, Paul. "Glen Eira against green tide". News.
- "Climate change - Glen Eira City Council | Glen Eira City Council".
- "Glen Eira City Council results". VEC.
- "Glen Eira Municipality Public Transport Information". Metlink Melbourne.
- City of Glen Eira. (2007). "Sister City".
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