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Fairy Meadow, New South Wales

Fairy Meadow, New South Wales

FieldValue
typesuburb
nameFairy Meadow
statensw
cityWollongong
area4.4
imageFairy Meadow Aerial.jpg
captionAerial photo
lgaCity of Wollongong
postcode2519
coordinates
pop7,512
pop_year
pop_footnotes
elevation12
stategovWollongong
fedgovCunningham
dist181
location1Sydney
dist24
location2Wollongong
near-nwFernhill
near-nTowradgi
near-wBalgownie
near-swMount Ousley
near-sNorth Wollongong

|near-nw = Fernhill |near-n = Towradgi |near-ne = |near-w = Balgownie |near-e = |near-sw = Mount Ousley |near-s = North Wollongong |near-se =

Aerial views of Fairy Meadow from a paraglider.

Fairy Meadow is a suburb in the City of Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia. Located in the Illawarra region and only 4 km from the city centre, it is a mainly low-density residential area, with a large strip of commercial and industrial properties along and off the Princes Highway.

Overview

Fairy Meadow is popular with tourists and surfers, due to its long beach (Fairy Meadow Beach) and views of Mount Keira, and Mount Kembla. Fairy Meadow residents live mainly in older-style houses, though apartments are now being built along the aforementioned strip. The main shopping area includes Coles, Woolworths and Aldi supermarkets and many smaller stores and boutiques. Guest Park which is located to the west of the Princes Highway commercial strip has a skate park, tennis courts, netball courts and a large soccer pitch. A local historical building is the old Northern Illawarra Council Chambers.

To the southeast of Fairy Meadow in North Wollongong is Puckeys Estate Reserve, a bush reserve known for bird watching and coastal environment protection, open to the public for walking on the tracks, once the site of a saltworks. The area is also bordered by a long beach which stretches from Towradgi Point in the north, to Wollongong in the south, interrupted only by the rocks at the Fairy Lagoon entrance.

North of Puckey’s Reserve and east of Fairy Meadow is Fairy Meadow Beach, the picnic facilities, playground and toilets in 2007 went under upgrades along with several other beachside areas in the Illawarra. The beach is patrolled in summer and has a surf life saving club, established in 1951.

West of Puckeys Reserve is Brandon Park, a greyhound racing track and the Wollongong Science Centre and Planetarium complex as well as an area of university property. The science centre is known for its laser concerts. The science centre was opened on 15 May 2000 by MP Colin Markham. The centre building is overtly white and clearly visible from Wollongong's higher points. Outside the entrance there stands a sculpture called 'Southern Cross', featuring poles in the shape of the constellation with graphics on them. The science and planetarium centre contains two levels, including a laser theatre, observatory, dinosaur and fossil exhibit, electronics exhibit and other attractions such as a setup demonstrating solar power with a model railroad and a forest logging simulation game

Fairy Meadow churches include the historic 1928 Anglican church Crossroads Christian Community, the more recent 1952 St John Vianney's Catholic Church, and the Reformed Church.

Population

According to the of Population, there were 7,512 people in Fairy Meadow.

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 2.2% of the population.
  • 68.6% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were England 3.0%, India 2.5%, Italy 2.4%, Vietnam 1.7% and China 1.7%.
  • 72.3% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Italian 2.9%, Turkish 2.2%, Vietnamese 1.9%, Mandarin 1.7% and Arabic 1.4%.
  • The most common responses for religion were No Religion 35.3%, Catholic 25.7% and Anglican 9.8%.

History

Fairy Meadow, currently part of the City of Wollongong, was originally a village called Ferrah Meadow, when the area was occupied to 300 acres by Connor Bowlen on 13 February 1824. Two village lots from the Balgownie Estate were later advertised in 1841 and the village from this sale presently became Fairy Meadow.

Following World War II, the area became a major arrival point for European and later Vietnamese refugees. The Balgownie/Fairy Meadow Migrant Hostel, which operated from 1951 to 1982, was a major landmark, accommodating up to 700 residents in Nissen huts. By the mid-20th century, the area grew rapidly, with the transformation of wetlands and increased commercial activity along the Princes Highway. Puckey's Estate, formerly a salt works in the early 1900s, became a key natural reserve.

Transportation

The area is served by Fairy Meadow railway station on the South Coast Line, which is part of the NSW TrainLink railway network. The station is accessed via steps which climb to the road bridge on Elliot's Road that runs from Puckeys Estate/Fairy Meadow Beach Surf Lifesaving Club to Princes Highway.

Fairy Meadow is also located along Wollongong's free shuttle bus to North Wollongong railway station, and Keiraville University of Wollongong campus. The free shuttle bus service that serves Fairy Meadow includes City of Wollongong bus routes 55A and 55C.

Education

The suburb hosts two primary schools – Good Samaritan Catholic Primary and Fairy Meadow Demonstration School – as well as two high schools: Keira Technology High School and Wollongong High School of the Performing Arts. Other nearby primary schools include Mount Ousley Public School and Towradgi Public School.

Fairy Meadow is home to University of Wollongong's Innovation Campus – iC. The campus houses a large part of UOW's student population in the Campus East housing complex. The Innovation Campus is home to the university's faculty of science. Among the iC campus' many features is the aforementioned Science Centre and Planetarium.

A TAFE site is also located adjacent to Keira high school.

Heritage listings

Fairy Meadow has a number of heritage-listed sites, including:

  • Squires Way: Balgownie Migrant Workers Hostel

Notable residents

  • Birthplace of cricketer Dave Gregory, captain of the first Australian cricket test team
  • Birthplace of Dr Mary Puckey, the first female superintendent of an Australian hospital

References

References

  1. {{Census 2021 AUS. 50px]] Material was copied from this source, which is available under a [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License].
  2. "Fairy Meadow – Local area information".
  3. "Crossroads Christian Community".
  4. [http://www.crcw.com.au Wollongong Christian Reformed Church]
  5. "Welcome To Our School {{!}} Mount Ousley Public School".
  6. "Towradgi Public School".
  7. {{cite NSW SHR. 5055121. Balgownie Migrant Workers Hostel: Huts 201, 204 and 210
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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