Lara, Victoria

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Lara
GeelongVictoria
Lara is located in City of Greater Geelong
Lara
Lara
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Population 12,854 (2006)[1]
 • Density 886.5/km2 (2,296/sq mi)
Postcode(s) 3212
Area 14.5 km2 (5.6 sq mi)
LGA(s) City of Greater Geelong
State electorate(s) Lara
Federal Division(s) Corio
Localities around Lara:
Anakie Little River Little River
Anakie Lara Avalon
Lovely Banks Corio Avalon

Lara is a residential Town, 18 km north-east of Geelong, inland from the Princes Freeway to Melbourne.

History

File:Greater Geelong.png
Landsat 7 imagery of the greater Geelong area. Lara is visible in the north.

The explorers Hume and Hovell arrived at Lara on December 16, 1824, believing that they had reached Westernport Bay. They recorded that the Aboriginals described the bay as Jullong and land as Corago, suggesting origins for the names of Geelong and Corio.

The area was originally named Kennedy's Creek but was also given several different names including Duck Ponds, Hovell's Creek, Cheddar, Swindon and Lara Lake. The area of Lara was no more than a few farms at this time.

The railway though the town was opened in 1857 along with the local railway station,[2] with several subdivisions then announced. A Post Office opened on 1 March 1858 as Duck Ponds, renamed Hovell's Creek in 1872, and finally Lara in 1884.[3] The population grew to a few hundred by 1890, and several facilities like schools and churches were built, but a municipal water supply was not completed until 1947.

In January 1969, 17 people were killed in bushfires which ravaged Lara. Most of the victims were trapped by the fast-moving grass fire while travelling on the Princes Highway.

Several scenes from the 1979 feature film Mad Max were shot on location around Lara, as well as several scenes from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation mockumentary We Can Be Heroes: Finding The Australian of the Year, in which the town carried the fictional name "Dunt".

The town's history is being preserved at the Lara Museum and Historical Centre on the corner of Forest and Canterbury Roads. This historic property, formerly the Lake Bank Hotel (circa 1860), was renovated by local businessman Lino Bisinella and provided in 2013 to the community group which runs the museum, Lara Heritage and Historical Inc.

Heritage listed sites

Lara contains a number of heritage listed sites, including:

Geography

Hovell's Creek runs through Lara and ends at Limeburners Bay, a small inlet of Corio Bay. Owing to the poor soils and low runoff inherent in Australian streams, along with the fact the region is the driest in southern Victoria because of the Otway Ranges’ rain shadow (receiving about 425 millimetres (17 in) per year), the creek is basically ephemeral and is not useful as a water source. Granite peaks known as the You Yangs, 4 kilometres north of Lara, rise dramatically to a height of 352m and can be seen from most areas of Geelong.

Education

Lara offers education through its three primary schools; St. Anthony's Primary School, Lara Lake Primary School and Lara Primary School. The town also has the recently opened Lara Secondary College, which accommodates years 7 - 12 and the VCE since 2008. Lara is also home to Avalon college, a school for International Students preparing them for traditional schools.

Industry

In the Lara outskirts are industry parks and two prisons – the maximum security HM Prison Barwon, opened in January 1990, and the medium security Marngoneet Correctional Centre, opened 3 March 2006. The former Pirra Girls' Home, a female juvenile detention centre, closed during the 1980s.

Lara is also home to St. Laurence Park, which is set on 42 acres (170,000 m2) of parkland and houses 86 self-contained cottages and 22 flats for the elderly.[7]

Ford Motor Company of Australia operates a proving grounds for automotive testing and evaluation.

Transport

Lara has regular V/Line passenger train services on the Geelong line to Melbourne and Geelong to cater for the many residents who commute to work each day via the Lara railway station. Lara has become a popular place to live for those wishing to work in Melbourne and have ties to Geelong. With the extension of Myki ticketing to the Geelong line in 2013, Lara became a Metro Zone 2 station.[8]

Benders Busways operates public transport services between Lara and the Geelong city centre (GTS/Viclink[9] via Corio & Thompson Rd). Taxis are also available.

Amenities

Lara has a post office, two banks, a clothing/gifts store, a butchers and a Coles supermarket. On 22 April 2015, The dated Woolworth's supermarket was closed for a $15–20m redevelopment, expected to take 18 months to complete. The Coles supermarket was built as part of the Town Centre Expansion on the site of Austin park, as well as a re-alignment of Waverley road to create a more spacious site for the supermarket and the re-configuration of the park. There are four real estate agencies and one news agency. The Lara Library opened in 2011.

Lodging and entertainment are provided by a pub/hotel, sports club, and lawn bowls.

As well as several eat-in bakery/coffee/cake shops, there are a Thai restaurant, two Indian restaurants, five pizza shops, three fish and chip shops, and other take-aways. There are two petrol stations, both of which are open for business 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

The town has an Australian rules football team competing in the Geelong Football League.

Lara has two soccer clubs: North Geelong Warriors FC and Lara Soccer Club. North Geelong play in the National Premier Leagues Victoria and Lara Soccer club who play Geelong Premier Division the GRFA 1 the 9th tier in Australian football who are currently the Champions of the Premier division of 2011.

Golfers play at the course of the Elcho Park Golf Club on Elcho Road, Lara.[10]

See also

References

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  7. St. Laurence.org.au
  8. [1] Geelong Advertiser: V/Line commuters to feel myki's touch by July
  9. Route 12
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links