Mount Gravatt, Queensland

Mount Gravatt
Brisbane, Queensland

Mount Gravatt Central. Logan Road looking south.
Population 3,238 (2011 census)[1]
 • Density 1,199/km2 (3,110/sq mi)
Postcode(s) 4122
Area 2.7 km2 (1.0 sq mi)
Location 10 km (6 mi) from Brisbane
LGA(s) City of Brisbane
State electorate(s) Greenslopes, Mansfield
Federal Division(s) Bonner
Suburbs around Mount Gravatt:
Holland Park West Holland Park Mansfield
Nathan Mount Gravatt Mount Gravatt East
Macgregor Upper Mount Gravatt Wishart

Mount Gravatt is the name of both a major suburb of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia and a prominent hill in this suburb. The suburb is situated in the south-east of the city and was one of Brisbane's largest. This was before it was divided into Mount Gravatt East, Upper Mount Gravatt and Mount Gravatt South; the last being changed to Wishart in the early 1990s. At the 2011 Australian Census the suburb recorded a population of 3,238.[1]

Mount Gravatt hill was named in 1840 after Lieutenant George Gravatt who was the commander of the Moreton Bay Settlement for two months in 1839. Gravatt was later transferred to India where he died in 1843.[2]

Crowd observing the first tram through the suburb in 1951

Between 1953 and 1969 electric trams ran from the suburb into Brisbane's Central Business District (CBD) along Logan Road. As Mount Gravatt was the end of the line, part of the area was known locally as "The Terminus". Since then public transport has been provided by buses operated by Brisbane Transport and a local bus company the Mount Gravatt Bus Service. The South East Busway is connected by a service from Mount Gravatt Central to the Busway terminal at Griffith University.

The people of greater Mount Gravatt are represented by the State parliamentary seats of Mansfield and Greenslopes and the federal seats of Bonner, Griffith and Moreton.

The Mount Gravatt Showgrounds are an important centre for cultural and community activities and the site of the annual Mount Gravatt Show, an agricultural fair. The grounds are positioned on Logan Road, opposite the mega-church, Hillsong Brisbane Campus (formerly known as Garden City Christian Church).

Lookout

Panorama from Mount Gravatt, looking north to Brisbane

Mount Gravatt Lookout is accessible via Shire Road which winds its way past water towers up to the lookout carpark and a communications tower. Furthermore, there is a large cave complex located at on a walking trail on the southern slope of the mountain (Latitude: 27.544184º S Longitude:153.076841º).

Demographics

Lookout kiosk

The suburb is populated by middle class, young families seeking stability.[3] Mount Gravatt was once a popular destination of German, Irish and English Immigrants to Australia after World war 1 and 2. The suburb has a growing number of Southern Europeans (mostly from Greece and Italy).

In Mount Gravatt common birthplaces outside of Australia included New Zealand 3.2%, England 3.1%, India 2.1%, China (excludes SARs and Taiwan) 1.0% and South Africa 1.0%.

Languages other than English spoken at home included Arabic 1.1%, Mandarin 1.0%, Punjabi 1.0%, Greek 0.7% and Italian 0.7%.[4]

Education

Griffith University has its main campus in the suburb. There is also St Agnes Catholic Primary School, St Catherine's School, Mount Gravatt State High School and Mount Gravatt State School.

Sport

References

  1. 1 2 Australian Bureau of Statistics (31 October 2012). "Mount Gravatt (State Suburb)". 2011 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  2. Appleton, Richard and Barbara (1992). The Cambridge Dictionary of Australian Places. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-39506-2.
  3. Timms, Duncan (1975). The Urban Mosaic: Towards a Theory of Residential Differentiation. CUP Archive. p. 112. ISBN 0521099889. Retrieved 20 October 2013.
  4. QuickStats: Mount Gravatt (State Suburb)

Coordinates: 27°32′24″S 153°04′05″E / 27.54°S 153.068°E / -27.54; 153.068

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