Footscray, Victoria

Footscray
Melbourne, Victoria

Paisley Street in central Footscray
Footscray

Location in metropolitan Melbourne

Coordinates 37°47′53″S 144°53′56″E / 37.798°S 144.899°E / -37.798; 144.899Coordinates: 37°47′53″S 144°53′56″E / 37.798°S 144.899°E / -37.798; 144.899
Population 15,259 (2013)[1]
 • Density 3,050/km2 (7,900/sq mi)
Postcode(s) 3011
Area 5 km2 (1.9 sq mi)
Location 5 km (3 mi) from Melbourne
LGA(s) City of Maribyrnong
State electorate(s) Footscray
Federal Division(s) Gellibrand
Suburbs around Footscray:
Maidstone Maribyrnong Flemington
Footscray West Footscray West Melbourne
Kingsville Seddon Yarraville

Footscray is a suburb (neighborhood) 5 km west of Melbourne, Australia. Its local government area is the City of Maribyrnong. At the 2011 Census, Footscray had a population of 13,203.

Footscray is characterised by a very diverse, multicultural central shopping area, which reflects the successive waves of immigration experienced by Melbourne, and by Footscray in particular. Once a centre for Greek, Italian and former Yugoslavian migrants, it later became a hub for Vietnamese and East African immigrants in Melbourne, but has recently begun to undergo gentrification.

Footscray is named after Foots Cray, on the River Cray in London, England.[2]

History

Photograph of a bridge over the Maribyrnong River, showing a man wearing a hat standing in middle of punt. The building on the hill in the background was known as Malakoff's Castle.

Footscray is part of the City of Maribyrnong and was built largely on the traditional lands of the Kulin nation.[3]

For thousands of years, Footscray was the meeting place of the lands of the Yalukit-willan, the Marin-balluk and the Wurundjeri. Koories stalked game, collected food and fished along the river junction, estuaries, swamps and lagoons. Within Melbourne's western region, the Marin-balug and Kurung-jand-balug clans of the Woiwurrung cultural group, and the Yalukit willam clan of the Boonwurrung cultural group shared the luscious resources around the Maribyrnong Valley.[4]

The first European to visit the area was Charles Grimes in 1803. A park, where he landed, is named after him at Napier St.[5]

In 1839 a punt was built on the Maribyrnong River, it was the only connecting link between Melbourne and Geelong, Ballarat, Castlemaine and Bendigo. The Punt Hotel opened three years later and was the first building in the area. During the first decade drovers transporting cattle and sheep provided the only business at the hotel. After 1851, when gold was discovered out west, the pub did a roaring trade with diggers. Part of the old pub still stands and it has been renamed The Pioneer. (Ref: Charlie Lovett's Footscray)

The Post Office first opened on 12 October 1857.[6]

Footscray was declared a municipality in 1859 with a population of 300 and 70 buildings. Around the same year the first bridge was built across Saltwater (now Maribyrnong) River. (Ref: Charlie Lovett's Footscray)

Between 1881 and 1891 Footscray's population more than tripled from almost 6,000 to 19,000. (Ref: Charlie Lovett's Footscray)

Footscray developed into an industrial zone in the second half of the nineteenth century, with the manufacturing industry beginning to decline in the 1960s and 70s.[5]

People

Footscray was home to the Aboriginal Woimurrung and Boonwurrung tribes of the Kulin nation.[7]

In 2011, Footscray's 13,193 residents[8] came from 135 countries.[9]

In 2006 less than half the population (41.1%) was born in Australia,[10] the main countries of overseas origin are Vietnam, China, India, United Kingdom and Italy. In the 21st Century, Maribyrnong of which Footscray is a part, saw a major increase in residents from Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Myanmar, including a large proportion of refugees.[11]

Footscray has Victoria's fourth-highest proportion of residents born in South-East Asia (13.9%).[12]

The average person in Footscray is a youthful 33 years of age.[13]

Maribyrnong Council predicts a population boom will more than double Footscray resident numbers from 14,100 to 30,500 by 2031, requiring about 7000 new dwellings.[14]

Politics

Footscray falls within the federal electorate of Gellibrand (currently held by Tim Watts from the ALP) and the state electorate of Footscray (currently held by the ALP's Marsha Thomson), and the City of Maribyrnong at local level (currently controlled by four independents). The suburb's historical voting patterns have been fairly typical of a working-class suburb with a high migrant population. Footscray is a very safe state ALP seat, 65% of the vote went to Labor at the 2014 State election.[15]

Consistent with other inner-city electorates in Melbourne, and other state capitals, voter support for the Australian Greens has increased in recent years; the Greens received 17 per cent of the primary vote in Footscray at the 2014 State Election.[15] One third of voters at the Central Footscray booth voted for the Australian Greens in the 2010 Federal election, almost doubling the Greens vote in one election cycle.[16]

For the first time in over 100 years, Maribyrnong Council is no longer under Labor control. In 2012 voters elected four Independent Councillors and three Labor councillors. Catherine Cummings is the Mayor for 2012–13.[17]

At the Federal Election of 2010, the ALP won Gellibrand, which includes Footscray, with 59% of the vote. The Lib/Nat parties got 23%, whilst The Greens saw a swing of +6% with 15% of the vote.[18]

Janet Rice of The Greens was elected to Maribyrnong Council in 2003, re-elected in 2005 and then elected Mayor in 2006.[19] Whilst Mayor, Janet had a Mayoral bike instead of a car.[20]

The first Vietnamese woman Mayor was Mai Ho, from 1997 to 1998.[21] Mai Ho arrived in Australia in December 1982 with two small daughters and sixteen dollars. By 1997 she was Mayor of Maribyrnong. Twelve months later her daughter, Tan Le, was voted Young Australian of the Year.[22]

Food

There are over 130 restaurants in Footscray, including; 30 Vietnamese, 20 Indian, 17 Chinese and several; African, Australian, Indonesian, Italian, Thai, Turkish and Japanese. Footscray also has one each of the following restaurants; Croatian, Korean, Malaysian and Portuguese.[23] Subway and Nandos are the only multi-national corporate foods in downtown Footscray.

Notable restaurants include the award winning Station Hotel which was winner of radio 3AW's "Pub of the Year".[24]

Lentil as Anything is a series of pay as you feel vegetarian restaurants, located at 233 Barkly Street. Whatever you choose to pay for your meal goes to a range of services that help new migrants, refugees, people with disabilities and the long-term unemployed.

The Footscray Market is a large indoor fresh produce and seafood market, with 33 food stalls and 50 general stalls,[25] catering particularly to the various ethnicities and local restaurants. It is located opposite Footscray railway station.

The Melbourne Wholesale Market on Footscray Road (often referred to as the Footscray Traders Market) will be moved to Epping by 2015.[26]

Another large market in Footscray is Little Saigon, which opened in 1992 to cater to the Asian population growth, but now has customers from all backgrounds. Little Saigon is noisy and crowded, with a wide array of tropical fruits and Asian produce.[27]

Culture

Footscray has been the setting of several Australian movies, the most notable being Romper Stomper which was filmed in and around Footscray in 1992. It deals with a fictional gang of neo-Nazi skinheads and their battle against Vietnamese immigrants. Not all scenes were filmed locally. The "Footscray Railway Station" featured in the movie has a pedestrian underpass, while the real station has an overpass for foot traffic; the station used for filming was Richmond Station. The 1994 film Metal Skin and the 2015 film Pawno are also set in and around Footscray.

Footscray has some fine 1930s Art Deco buildings, most in disrepair and hidden behind shop signs and awnings.[28]

The former Footscray Town Hall is the only American Romanesque civic building in Victoria. The outside is a mix of Art Deco, Moderne, Celtic, Spanish and Medieval.[29]

Footscray Park is one of the largest and most intact examples of an Edwardian park in Australia; characteristic features include rustic stonework, ornamental ponds and extensive use of palms. The 15-hectare park is classified as a heritage place on the Victorian Heritage Register.[30] The 'heavily indebted'[31] local Council approved a 1.8 million makeover for the park in March 2011.[32]

Groups

Footscray streetscape, prior to a multimillion-dollar street redevelopment in 2012

Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, gives aid, welfare and medical care for thousands of asylum seekers. 218 Nicholson St Footscray.

The Australian Croatian Association headquarters is located in Footscray, serving the large Croatian Community in the area. Other Ethnic Community, Migrants and Refugees groups include African, Albanian, Burmese, Chinese, Croatian or Bosnian, Ethiopian, Filipino, Greek, Harari, Hungarian, Italian, Macedonian, Multicultural, Polish, Russian, Spanish and Latin American, Sudanese, Vietnamese.[33]

The Footscray Club is a social club that has been part of Footscray since 1894. This was the original Footscray Cycle Club, when cycling became quite popular in Australia in the 19th century. By 1909 the club had build a permanent site on Paisley Street where it still stands today. Early in the last century the club evolved into a purely local social club where members of the local community meet and socialize to this day.

The Footscray Historical Society works on a number of local fronts to record and preserve the history of the area. The Society has an active membership who take part in a range of activities to assist this endeavour. Records such as rare books, business records and correspondence are held at the Society's headquarters at Ercildoune, built in 1876 as a branch of the National Bank of Australasia. The Society owns this historic building and has had the interior and exterior restored. Tours, forums and discussions are held regularly.

Footscray is at the centre of the Kariwara Scout district of Scouts Australia. The word 'Kariwara' means 'West' in a local Aboriginal dialect.[34] Started in 1909, the 1st Footscray Scout hall is a historic building next to the Footscray Police Station in Hyde Street. 3rd Footscray is the hall seen from the railway line and no longer has youth programs but is home to adult training. The 2nd Footscray Scout hall has a modern brick hall after the first hall burnt down in 1982. The group has programs for children aged 7 to 26 and meets at Guadion Park in Barkly Street. The 10th Footscray Scout group is in Essex Street next to the YMCA and has programs for 7 to 15-year olds. The 5th Footscray group is opposite Seddon railway station and has programs for 6 to 15-year olds. All are part of Scouts Australia.

Maribyrnong Truck Action Group and Less Trucks For Moore work towards cleaning the air in Footscray and surrounding suburbs.

Other groups include; Footscray Traders Association, Footscray Asian Business Association, Save Railway Place, Footscray Sings Fair Go for Footscray Rail Residents and Footscray Rotary.

Arts

Albright Performers dance studio is on Hyde St and has been running for over 70 years, it teaches all ages and levels. Classes are held in Classical Ballet, Jazz Ballet, Hip Hop, Contemporary dance, Tap Dance, Musical Theatre and Acrobatics. CSTD examinations and competitions.

Company of Others Inc a not-for-profit group conducting body, breath and voice projects.

A Snuff Puppet greets a bus in Paisley Street, Footscray

Ruffian Gallery operates at 361 Barkly Street.[35]

In 2013 the City of Maribyrnong ran a competition for a $170,000 public art installation,[36] the winner features massive rock boulders which form a circle across roads at the southern end of the Footscray Mall. The work was installed June 2013.[37]

The Dog Theatre opened in September 2008. It is one of the first site specific company/venues in Australia![38] and was the "Winner of Best Venue: Melbourne Fringe Festival Awards 2009". The venue has a funky cafe with well made coffee, snacks and cool seating under the shade of a huge willow tree. As of 2011, The Dog Theatre is no longer in residence at Albert Street, and now moves all over the western suburbs of Melbourne.[38]

Elite Crete Australia holds classes, seminars and workshops for concrete artistry, located adjacent to the Footscray Community Arts Centre, on a monthly bases.

Located on the bank of the Maribyrnong River, Footscray Community Arts Centre (FCAC) is a centre for contemporary arts, community engagement, cultural development and multicultural arts. Since its establishment in 1974, it is estimated that over 2 million community members have visited FCAC or directly participated in one or more of its many events, initiatives, projects, workshops and programs. Footscray Community Arts Centre's projects have toured nationally and internationally. FCAC aims to contribute to the transformation of contemporary Australian culture and the ongoing, dynamic debate about the place of 'art' in society.

Integrate Stretch – Workshops in movement and performance.

NICA Circus – Circus workshops for 7 – 16 yr olds including acrobatics, juggling, stilt walking, balancing and rope work, with artists from the National Institute of Circus Arts.

Phoenix Youth Theatre,[39] opened in 2014 at Phoenix Youth Centre, 72 Buckley St, Footscray.

The historic 'Footscray Drill Hall' is home to the avant garde Snuff Puppets. Their performances, often with taboo subject matter, combine larger than life puppetry with physical theatre. Snuff Puppets have toured the world, with shows and workshops throughout Australasia, Asia, Europe and South America. Snuff Puppets have been part of Footscray since 1992.

The Trocadero Art Space is located on Hopkins Street, in Footscray's heart. It comprises both interior and outdoor (street-exposed) exhibition spaces.

Ward Acting Studio – where actors abandon outdated and overly analytical acting techniques – 91 Moreland St

With One Voice Footscray - You don’t have to be a great singer to join. Singing every Thursday 6pm at the African Australian Community Centre, Red Brick Hall (behind the Bluestone Hall), 30a Pickett Street, Footscray

Women's Circus – A community arts and physical theatre company, using circuses as a tool for social change.

Music

Footscray has a rich history of music and brass bands, currently being home to the Footscray-Yarraville City Band – FYCB, which rehearses weekly and performs throughout the year locally, nationally and internationally. The FYCB conduct an annual Carols by Candlelight event each December in the Yarraville Gardens. They were the 2010 VBL State Champions.[40]

The Hyde Street Youth Band.[41] was established in 1928. The Hyde Street Youth Band contributed to the history of the region as the band played the official theme song for the Footscray Football Club (now the Western Bulldogs) while they were playing at the Whitten Oval. The FYCB is one of five A-Grade Brass bands in Victoria and has been successful in the National Championships.

JABULA! – An African Community Choir, and is run by Sudanese singer Ajak Kwai and percussionist Tawanda Gadzikwa. The choir brings together people from broad skill levels and diverse African heritages. The choir meets fortnightly on Saturdays at the Footscray Community Arts Centre.

With One Voice Footscray – A community choir made up of the friendliest, most welcoming bunch of people you could ever meet. Rehearsals are packed with music and a lot of laughs. New members always welcome. Rehearsals on Thursdays 6 – 7:15pm, African Australian Community Centre, Red Brick Hall (behind the Bluestone Hall), 30a Pickett Street, Footscray.

Festivals

Emerge in the West May 17, 2015 (http://www.multiculturalarts.com.au/events2015/emerge_west.shtml) in the City of Maribyrnong reveals emerging African arts, culture and small businesses that have been growing rapidly in Melbourne's West, marking the start of the week long Africa Day Celebrations in Melbourne.

Founded in 2011, this annual 'Emerge' event is an outcome of MAV's CCD program for emerging and refugee artists and communities, triggering the founding of the Australian-African Small Business Association in 2014 to represent the growing number of African restaurants and cafes in Melbourne's West.

The St Jerome's Laneway Festival is an annual block party held in partnership with the Footscray Community Arts Centre. 15,000 enjoyed the festival in 2015.[42]

The Western Bulldogs Community Festival and Family Day is held every summer on Whitten Oval.

Central Footscray Streets are closed for the all-day-long Chinese New Year celebrations organised by the Footscray Asian Business Association (FABA). The Quang Minh Tet Festival celebrations in neighbouring Braybrook were expanded.[43]

The Big West started in 1997 under the name MAP (Maribyrnong Arts Project), it continued for two decades. In 2011 it was attended by over 37,000 people. The last Big West Festival was in November 2015. In July 2016 the Big West board announced a plan to destroy Big West. The local arts community then set up the Save Big West group...

Town planning

The 'Liveable Melbourne' 2011 survey listed Footscray as the 37th-most-liveable suburb in Melbourne.[44]

In 2008, the State Labor Government designated Footscray as one of six Central Activities Districts.[45] Melbourne's CADs were given planning rules aimed at creating lively mixed use CBD-like districts.[46] The area, according to the local Mayor 'would soon have the second-highest skyline outside the Melbourne CBD'.[47]

Local Footscray real estate agent Darren Dean of Sweeney Estate Agents said one pocket of Footscray – bounded by Geelong Road, Ballarat Road, Victoria Street, the railway line and Moore Street – had been intended for “a mini Manhattan”.[48]

“There are cranes popping up in the skyline everywhere over here,” he said.

Hoarding sign on a building

Examples of the changing face of Footscray include:

Transport issues in Footscray:

Community initiatives

Grasslands Organic Grocery is a non-profit community initiative, established in 1997. All the produce is certified organic/biodynamic; free of animal ingredients; minimally processed/packaged; healthy to use; affordable; locally made; produced by small enterprises that have good working conditions and who are not involved in other unethical or unsustainable practices. Concession card holds get a discount when buying in store, currently only open on Thursdays.

Sport

Aussie Rules Football

Basketball

Canoeing

Cricket

Cycling

Football (Soccer)

Gridiron (American Football)

Gyms

Gymnastics

Hockey

Horse Racing

Lacrosse

Martial Arts

Rowing

Rugby

Swimming

Water Polo

Industry

While many factories and warehouses are still to be found in and around the suburb of Footscray, many former industrial sites are being transformed into modern housing estates. Perhaps the largest of these is the former Footscray Ammunition Factory in a prime elevated position overlooking the banks of the Maribyrnong River with views across to Flemington Racecourse and the Melbourne city centre.

The eastern portion of Footscray, in the fork between the Yarra River and Maribyrnong River, contains railway yards, Appleton and Swanson Docks which were the site of the 1998 Australian waterfront dispute and the Melbourne Wholesale Fruit and Vegetable Market. The market houses 400 businesses, employs 3000 people and supplies 60 per cent of Victoria's fresh produce, it is due to move to Epping in 2013–14.[91] In 2005, the State Government announced the closure of the Melbourne Wholesale Fruit and Vegetable Market to make way for an extensive redevelopment of the Port of Melbourne and the construction of new freight rail links to the area.

Lonely Planet headquarters in Footscray

The headquarters of Lonely Planet Publications are located in eastern Footscray on the banks of the Maribyrnong River], adjacent to the Hobsons Bay Coastal Trail. Lonely Planet has published over 100 million books[92] and in 2013 the BBC sold Lonely Planet to an American company for $75 Million.[93]

Notable residents

 Statue of Ted Whitten,
Statue of Ted Whitten

Educational institutions

Kindergartens

Primary

Secondary

Universities

Institutes and more

Public libraries

The Footscray Public Library is operated by the Maribyrnong City Council. Services include 'story time' for pre-schoolers, orientation tours, reference and information services to assist with research needs, internet classes, and services for those unable to visit the library. Facilities include public internet, word processing, photocopiers, study carrels, local studies/family history room, conference and discussion rooms, a baby change room and community notice boards. The library is open 7 days (closed public holidays).[100]

The Footscray Mechanics' Institute Inc. was established in 1857, and has operated a library in Nicholson Street since 1913. The library is a low cost subscription library, which is open 5 days a week, closed Weekends, Public Holidays and for 3–4 weeks over the Christmas/New Year period.

Health

The health needs of Footscray and surrounding residents are served by the Western General Hospital or WHF. The Western General is a large teaching and research hospital responsible for providing a comprehensive range of inpatient and outpatient acute health services. The hospital currently conducts research in gastroenterology, colorectal cancer, emergency care, oncology, respiratory medicine, sleep disorders, and vascular surgery.

Key services at the Western Hospital include acute medical and surgical services, intensive and coronary care, emergency services, renal services, specialist drug and alcohol services, aged care and palliative care. The hospital also serves as one of the teaching campuses for the University of Melbourne's medical program.

The Western Region Health Centre was established in 1964. Services include an African community worker, refugee health nurse, women's health nurse, dieticians, youth health nurse, diabetic educator, podiatrist, counsellors and physiotherapists. Visiting specialists include a general surgeon and paediatrician. Pathology services and dental services are co-located on site.

Places of worship

60% of Footscray residences admitted to belonging to a religion in 2011, down from 70% in 2006.[101] There are many religious organisations and places of worship in Footscray, including Anglican, Assemblies of God, Baptist, Buddhist, Catholic, Church of Christ, Evangelical Christian, Independent Christian, Lutheran, Muslim, Orthodox, Pentecostal, Presbyterian and Uniting Church.

The Heavenly Queen Temple, the largest temple of the Chinese sea-goddess Mazu in Australia, is been built on the banks of the river. Its grounds include a 16 m (52 ft) gold statue.[102][103]

Media

Two free suburban weekly newspapers are delivered in Footscray on Wednesdays:

See also

References

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Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Footscray.
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