| Melbourne, Victoria | |
Smith Street looking North |
|
| Population: | 5494 (2006) [1] |
| Established: | 1850s |
| Postcode: | 3066 |
| Property Value: | AUD $560,000 [2] |
| LGA: | |
| State District: | Richmond |
| Federal Division: | Melbourne |
Collingwood is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3 km north-east from Melbourne’s central business district. Its Local Government Area is the City of Yarra. At the 2006 Census, Collingwood had a population of 5494.
Collingwood is one of the oldest suburbs in Melbourne and is bordered by Smith St, Alexandra Parade, Hoddle St. and Victoria Parade. The suburb is named after Baron Collingwood, a famous British admiral.
Collingwood is notable for its historical buildings, with many 19th century dwellings, shops and factories still in use.
Australian author Frank Hardy set the novel Power Without Glory in a fictionalised version of the suburb, named Carringbush. The name is also used by a number of businesses in the area, such as “Carringbush Business Centre“. At one time a ward in the City of Yarra that includes part of Collingwood was actually named Carringbush.
History
Former Collingwood Coffee Palace in 1879.
Subdivision and sale of land in Collingwood began in 1838, and was mostly complete by the 1850s. Collingwood was declared a municipality separate from the City of Melbourne on 24 April 1855, the first to follow the state’s major population centres of Melbourne and Geelong. Collingwood was proclaimed a town in 1873, and later a city in 1876.
Collingwood’s early development was directly impacted by the boom in Melbourne’s population and economy during the Victorian gold rush of the 1850s and 1860s. This resulted in the construction of a large number of small dwellings, as well as schools, shops and churches to support this new population. Around the same time, large industrial developments such as a flour mill and the Fosters brewery were being established.
In the 1870s, Smith Street became the dominant shopping strip, with its tram line established in 1887. Many of Collingwood’s grand public buildings were erected in the 1880s, including the post office and town hall. Collingwood also had a strong temperance movement with two “coffee palaces” springing up in the 1870s, including the large and grand Collingwood Coffee Palace (since demolished).
At the turn of the century Collingwood’s Smith Street rivaled Chapel Street in Prahran as the dominant home of suburban emporiums and department stores. The street was home to the first G.J. Coles store in 1912.
Since the 1950s, Collingwood has been home to many groups battling to save the suburb’s unique character against development and gentrification.
In 1958 residents rallied at Collingwood Town Hall against the Housing Commission of Victoria‘s slum reclamation projects which would see demolition orders for 122 of the suburb’s homes.
In the 1970s, 150 residents protested against plans for the F-19 freeway with some putting themselves in front of earthmovers during the construction.
The Collingwood Action Group formed in 2006 to fight the “Banco” development, a large mixed use project on Smith Street.
In 2010, over 2,000 people rallied to save the The Tote Hotel, a popular live music venue which became a potential state election issue.
Culture and Sport
The Collingwood Australian rules football Club (the Magpies) has a history dating back to 1892 as an incorporated football club. They were once housed at Victoria Park. In recent years they won the 1990 premiership.
PBS 106.7FM resides in Collingwood at 47 Easey St, just off Smith St. PBS is a community radio station that celebrated its 25th year of broadcast in 2004.
Economy
Madman Entertainment has its head office in Collingwood and in the Langridge Ward of the City of Yarra.
Education
Collingwood Technical School was established in July 1912 as a trades and technical training school. The school closed in 1987, forming along with Preston Technical School the basis for the formation of the Northern Melbourne Institute of TAFE, which continues to have a Collingwood campus in Otter street.
Collingwood College, a state P-12 school is located in the suburb.
Architecture
The suburb is notable for its historical buildings, with many 19th century dwellings, shops and factories still in use. From its early days large commercial buildings often coexisted with small dwellings occupied by working-class families, and that mixture of industry and community continues to the present time. For example, Oxford and Cambridge Streets are dominated by imposing red-brick factories and warehouses formerly occupied by the Foy and Gibson company, but also feature a number of stone, brick and timber dwellings that date back to the earliest days of the suburb.
Housing
Collingwood’s housing consists of a large number of hi-rise housing commission flats and a number older single and double storey former workers cottages on small subdivisions. More recently older warehouses and factories have been converted into fashionable apartments and there has been modern townhouse infil and medium density unit development.
Public and Commercial Buildings
Collingwood has many buildings listed on the Victorian Heritage Register and several notable commercial and public buildings. Yorkshire Brewery, built in 1880 to the design of James Wood with its polychrome brick and mansard roof tower was once Melbourne’s tallest building. For many years it has been subject to development proposals and the heritage stables were at one stage demolished without a permit, however the site remains neglected.
The former Collingwood Post Office was built between 1891 and 1892 in the Victorian Mannerist style to the design of John Marsden is similar to Rupertswood with its tall tower.
Prominent include the Leinster Arms Hotel, established in 1865 and is the only single story hotel built in Melbourne in that era; the Sir Robert Peel (“The Peel”) Hotel and the Vine Hotel.
The ornate Collingwood Town Hall is an imposing building that was used until 1994 as the centre of local government for the City of Collingwood.
Transport
Transport within Collingwood consists mainly of narrow one way streets. The suburb is bounded by main roads: Smith Street to the west, Victoria Parade to the south, Hoddle Street to the east and Alexandra Parade to the north. Major tramlines are on Victoria Street (tram route 109) and Smith Street (route 86), which are on the edge of the suburb. Johnston, Wellington and Langridge streets are the main arterials going through the suburb.
The Collingwood Railway Station is actually in neighbouring Abbotsford.
Source: Wikipedia