Edensor Park, New South Wales

Edensor Park is a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Edensor Park is located 38 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district in the local government area of the City of Fairfield. It is mainly a residential area, Edensor Park is part of the Greater Western Sydney region.

Edensor Park
Sydney, New South Wales
Wat Prayortkeo Dhammayanaram Buddhist temple
Population9,772 (2016 census)[1]
Established1970s
Postcode(s)2176
Location38 km (24 mi) west of Sydney CBD
LGA(s)City of Fairfield
State electorate(s)Cabramatta
Federal Division(s)Fowler
Suburbs around Edensor Park:
Abbotsbury Bossley Park Greenfield Park
Abbotsbury Edensor Park Bonnyrigg
Cecil Hills Bonnyrigg Heights Bonnyrigg

History

John Brown Bossley (1810-1872) came to Australia around 1838 and practised as a chemist in Sydney. Bossley built an English styled farmhouse on his land near Clear Paddock Creek. He called the property Edensor, after a village near Chatsworth in Derbyshire, England. This established the name Edensor Park after Edensor House.[2] Edensor Park and its surrounding suburbs was a rural area until the 1970s, when it was developed into a residential settlement. Edensor Park belonged to the Prospect County Council, before its amalgamation into Fairfield City Council.

Commercial area

Edensor Park is a mainly residential suburb served by a local shopping centre, Edensor Park Plaza, which features a Coles supermarket and a number of convenient stores and delis.

Schools

Edensor Park is served by two primary schools Edensor Park Public School and Governor Philip King Public School and three high schools outside the suburb.

Sport and recreation

Edensor Park has a number of recreation areas including Angle Vale Reserve, Allambie Reserve and Bosnjak Park. It is also home to the Sydney United Sports Centre, home of the Croatian backed football (soccer) team, Sydney United, which was once a member of the now defunct Australian National Soccer League (NSL) and currently plays in the New South Wales Premier League.

Another local sporting team is the CVD Edensor Park Cobras Junior Rugby league Football Club, who play in the Parramatta Junior Rugby League Association and use Bosnjak Park as their home ground. Edensor Park is also home to the Nineveh Club, the first Assyrian social club to be built in Australia. The club was constructed in the early 70s using ancient Assyrian features and is distinguished by two winged bulls at the entrance. Girl guides named after the above mentioned area

Population

Edensor Park residents are culturally diverse, with ethnic backgrounds from the Middle East, Europe and Asia. According to the 2016 Census 46.6% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were Iraq 13.1%, Vietnam 8.4%, Cambodia 2.6%, Italy 2.5% and Croatia 2.1%. The most common ancestries were Vietnamese 10.2%, Italian 9.5%, Assyrian 8.9%, Australian 8.1% and Chinese 7.0%. 30.0% of people spoke only English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Vietnamese 11.8%, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic 10.7%, Chaldean Neo-Aramaic 6.5%, Arabic 5.3% and Italian 4.7%. The most common responses for religion were Catholic 45.8%, Buddhism 14.5%, No Religion 9.0%, Assyrian Church of the East 5.8% and Not stated 4.8%.[1]

gollark: You mean 5GHz WiFi or 5G the unneceesary mobile standard?
gollark: RFTools has a builder block thing which can copy areas if you feed in the items, which makes the difficult bit just autoproducing all the items involved, which other mods can do okayishly.
gollark: It would probably be easier to just use CC and OC at least for central coordination and stuff.
gollark: That would be *doable*, if *hard* without CC and OC, probably just by using a bunch of mods allowing for autoconstruction.
gollark: I'm guessing from the other stuff you said that you want Von Neumann machines, i.e. self replicators, ingame.

References

  1. Australian Bureau of Statistics (27 June 2017). "Edensor Park (State Suburb)". 2016 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 12 March 2011. Retrieved 4 November 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

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