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Ballarat

Ballarat (/ˌbæləˈræt/ BAL-ə-RAT)[3] is a city in the Central Highlands of Victoria, Australia. At the 2021 Census, Ballarat had a population of 116,201,[4] making it the third largest city in Victoria.[5][6]

Ballarat
Victoria
Aerial view of Ballarat Central with Mt. Warrenheip on the horizon
Ballarat
Coordinates37°33′39″S 143°50′51″E / 37.56083°S 143.84750°E / -37.56083; 143.84750Coordinates: 37°33′39″S 143°50′51″E / 37.56083°S 143.84750°E / -37.56083; 143.84750
Population116,201 (2021)[1] (19th)
 • Density338.19/km2 (875.90/sq mi)
Established1838
Postcode(s)3350
Elevation435–630 m (1,427–2,067 ft) AHD
Area343.6 km2 (132.7 sq mi)[2] (2016 census – SUA)
Time zoneAEST (UTC+10)
 • Summer (DST)AEDT (UTC+11)
Location
LGA(s)City of Ballarat
State electorate(s)
Federal division(s)Ballarat
Mean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall
17.7 °C
64 °F
6.6 °C
44 °F
689.4 mm
27.1 in

Within months of Victoria separating from the colony of New South Wales in 1851, gold was discovered near Ballarat, sparking the Victorian gold rush. Ballarat subsequently became a thriving boomtown that for a time rivalled Melbourne, the capital of Victoria, in terms of wealth and cultural influence. In 1854, following a period of civil disobedience in Ballarat over gold licenses, local miners launched an armed uprising against government forces. Known as the Eureka Rebellion, it led to the introduction of male suffrage in Australia, and as such is interpreted as the origin of Australian democracy. The rebellion's symbol, the Eureka Flag, has become a national symbol. It was on display at Ballarat's Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka (MADE) from 2013 until MADE closed in 2018.

Proclaimed a city in 1871, Ballarat's prosperity, unlike that of many other gold boomtowns, continued until the late 19th century, as the city's fields experienced sustained high gold yields for many decades. By the turn of the century, Ballarat's importance relative to Melbourne rapidly faded with the slowing of gold extraction. It has endured as a major regional centre and is the commercial capital and largest city of the Central Highlands, as well as a significant tourist destination. Ballarat is known for its history, culture and well-preserved colonial-era heritage, with much of the city subject to heritage overlays.

History

Prehistory and European settlement

The Ballarat region was first populated by the Wadawurrung people, an Indigenous Australian people.[7] The first Europeans to sight the area were an 1837 party of six mostly Scottish squatters from Geelong, led by Somerville Learmonth and Brendan Birch, who were in search of land less affected by the severe drought for their sheep to graze. The party scaled Mount Buninyong; among them were Somerville's brother Thomas Livingstone Learmonth, William Cross Yuille and Henry Anderson, all three of whom later claimed land in what is now Ballarat.

The Yuille family, Scottish settlers Archibald Buchanan Yuille and his brother William Cross Yuille, arrived in 1837 and squatted a 10,000-acre (4,000 ha) sheep run. The first houses were built near Woolshed Creek by William Yuille and Anderson (Sebastopol), while Yuille erected a hut at Black Swamp (Lake Wendouree) in 1838. Outsiders originally knew of the settlement as Yuille's Station and Yuille's Swamp. Archibald Yuille named the area "Ballaarat". Some claim the name is derived from a local Wathaurong Aboriginal word for the area, balla arat. The meaning of this word is not certain; however several translations have been made and it is generally thought to mean "resting place". In some dialects, balla means "bent elbow", which is translated to mean reclining or resting and arat meaning "place".[8] Another claim is that the name derives from Yuille's native Gaelic Baile Ararat (Town of Ararat), alluding to the resting place of Noah's Ark.[citation needed] The present spelling was officially adopted by the City of Ballarat in 1996.

Gold rush era

 
Painting by Eugene von Guerard of Ballarat's tent city in the summer of 1853–54.

The first publicised discovery of gold in the region was by Thomas Hiscock on 2 August 1851, in Buninyong to the south.[9] The find brought other prospectors to the area and on 19 August 1851, more gold was found at Poverty Point.[10] Within days, a gold rush began, bringing thousands of prospectors to the Yarrowee Valley, which became known as the Ballarat diggings. Yields were particularly high, with the first prospectors in the area extracting between half an ounce[11] (which was more than the average wage of the time) and up to five ounces of alluvial gold per day. As news of the Victorian gold rush reached the world, Ballarat gained an international reputation as a particularly rich goldfield. As a result, a huge influx of immigrants occurred, including many from Ireland and China, gathering in a collection of prospecting shanty towns around the creeks and hills. Within a few months, numerous alluvial runs were established, several deep mining leads began, and the population had swelled to over 1,000 people.[12]

The first post office opened on 1 November 1851, the first to open in a Victorian gold-mining settlement.[13] Parts of the district were first surveyed by William Urquhart[14] as early as October 1851.[15] By 1852 his grid plan and wide streets for land sales in the new township of West Ballarat,[16] built upon a plateau of basalt, contrasted markedly with the existing narrow unplanned streets, tents, and gullies of the original East Ballarat settlement. The new town's main streets of the time were named in honour of police commissioners and gold commissioners of the time, with the main street, Sturt Street, named after Evelyn Pitfield Shirley Sturt; Dana Street named after Henry Dana; Lydiard Street after his assistant; Doveton Street after Francis Crossman Doveton, Ballarat's first gold commissioner; Armstrong after David Armstrong; and Mair Street after William Mair.[17] These officials were based at the government encampment (after which nearby Camp Street was named), which was strategically positioned on an escarpment with an optimal view over the district's diggings.

The first newspaper, The Banner, published on 11 September 1853, was one of many to be distributed during the gold-rush period. Print media played a large role in the early history of the settlement.[18] Ballarat attracted a sizable number of miners from the Californian 1848 gold rush, and some were known as Ballafornians.[19]

 
Troopers storm the rebels' stockade during the 1854 Eureka Rebellion.

Civil disobedience in Ballarat led to an armed civil uprising, the Eureka Rebellion (colloquially referred to as the "Eureka Stockade") which took place in Ballarat on 3 December 1854. The event, in which 22 miners were killed, is considered to be a defining moment in Australian history.

The city earned the nickname "The Golden City" in the 1850s.[20] The gold rush population peaked at almost 60,000, mostly male diggers, by 1858.[21] However the early population was largely itinerant. As quickly as the alluvial deposits drew prospectors to Ballarat, the rate of gold extraction fluctuated and, as they were rapidly worked dry, many quickly moved to rush other fields as new findings were announced, particularly Mount Alexander in 1852, Fiery Creek[22] in 1855, and Ararat in 1857. By 1859, a smaller number of permanent settlers numbering around 23,000,[23] many of whom had built personal wealth in gold, established a prosperous economy based around a shift to deep underground gold mining.

Confidence of the city's early citizens in the enduring future of their city is evident in the sheer scale of many of the early public buildings, generous public recreational spaces, and opulence of many of its commercial establishments and private housing. A local steam locomotive industry developed from 1854 with the Phoenix Foundry operating until 1906.[24] The railway came to the town with the opening of the Geelong–Ballarat line in 1862 and Ballarat developed as a major railway town.[25] As the city grew the region's original indigenous inhabitants were quickly expelled to the fringe and by 1867 few remained.[7]

Post gold rush

 
The intersection of Lydiard and Sturt streets, c. 1905, shows a bustling city of trams, horses and pedestrians.

From the late 1860s to the early 20th century, Ballarat made a successful transition from a gold rush town to an industrial-age city. The ramshackle tents and timber buildings gradually made way for permanent buildings, many impressive structures of solid stone and brick mainly built from wealth generated by early mining.

Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh visited between 9 and 13 December 1867 and as the first royal visit, the occasion was met with great fanfare.[26] The Prince Room was prepared at Craigs Royal Hotel for his stay.[27] The city's first civic centre—Prince Alfred Hall—erected over the Yarrowee between the two municipalities, was named in his honour during his visit. The later attempt by Ballaratian Henry James O'Farrell to assassinate the Prince was met with shock and great horror from locals.[26]

Ballarat was proclaimed a city in 1871. Gong Gong dam was built in 1877 to alleviate flooding and to provide a permanent water supply. A direct railway to Melbourne was completed in December 1889.[28] Many industries and workshops had been established as a result of manufacturing and servicing for the deep lead mining industry.

20th century

 
Development of the Ballarat North Workshops was a major initiative to capitalise on the city's burgeoning role as a railway town and transition from a declining gold mining industry.

Local boosterists at the start of the 20th century adopted the nickname "Athens of Australia", first used to describe Ballarat by the jurist and politician Sir John Madden.[29][30][31][32] The first electricity supply was completed in 1901, and that year a bluestone power station was built at the corner of Ripon Street and Wendouree Parade with the main aim of electrifying the city's tramway network.[33] Despite such advancements, mining activity slowed at this time and Ballarat's growth all but stopped, leading to a decades-long period of decline. The Sunshine rail disaster in 1908 resulted in the death of dozens of Ballarat residents,[34] and in August 1909, a great storm lashed the city, resulting in the death of one person and the injury of seven others, as well as the destruction of numerous homes.[35][36]

Ballarat's significant representation in World War I resulted in heavy human loss. Around this time, it was overtaken in population by the port city of Geelong, further diminishing its provincial status.[37] In response, local lobbyists continually pushed the Victorian government for decentralisation, the greatest success being the Victorian Railways opening the Ballarat North Workshops in April 1917.[38] The Great Depression proved a further setback for Ballarat, with the closure of many institutions and causing the worst unemployment in the city's history, with over a thousand people in the dole queue.[26]: 38 

The city's two municipalities, Ballarat East and West Town Councils, finally amalgamated in 1921 to form the City of Ballarat.[26]: 32 

While deep, the depression was also brief. The interwar period proved a period of recovery for Ballarat with a number of major infrastructure projects well underway including a new sewerage system. In 1930, Ballarat Airport was established. By 1931, Ballarat's economy and population was recovering strongly with further diversification of industry, although in 1936 Geelong displaced it as the state's second largest city.[39] During World War II an expanded Ballarat airport was the base of the RAAF Wireless Air Gunners' School as well as the base for USAAF Liberator bomber squadrons. In 1942, Ballarat became connected to the state electricity grid by a 66,000 kV line.[33] Prior to this, power supply was generated locally.

During World War II, Ballarat was the location of RAAF No.1 Inland Aircraft Fuel Depot (IAFD), completed in 1942 in the defence of Australia against a Japanese invasion and decommissioned on 29 August 1944. Usually consisting of four tanks, 31 fuel depots were built across Australia for the storage and supply of aircraft fuel for the RAAF and the US Army Air Forces at a total cost of £900,000 ($1,800,000).[40]

In the post-war era, Ballarat's growth continued. In response to an acute housing shortage, significant suburban expansion occurred. An extensive Housing Commission of Victoria estate was built on the former Ballarat Common (today known as Wendouree West).[41] The estate was originally planned to contain over 750 prefabricated houses. While planning for the estate began in 1949, main construction occurred between 1951 and 1962.

The 1950s brought a new optimism to the city. On 17 April 1952 it was announced that Lake Wendouree was to be the venue for rowing events of the 1956 Summer Olympics,[26] and work soon began on an Olympic village in Gillies Street. A new prefabricted power terminal substation at Norman Street Ballarat North was constructed between 1951 and 1953 by the State Electricity Commission.[42] The first Begonia Festival, a highly successful community celebration, was held in 1953. Elizabeth II visited on 8 March 1954.[26] The Civic Centre, Prince Alfred Hall had burned down suspiciously that year; however a new Civic Hall was constructed and opened in March 1955. On 23 November 1956, the Olympic torch was carried through the city, and the following day the rowing events were held at the lake.[26] On 2 March 1958 the Queen Mother visited Ballarat.

During the following decades, the city saw increased threats to its heritage. In 1964, the Ballarat City Council passed laws banning pillar-supported verandahs in the CBD, which threatened the removal of historic cast iron verandahs in the city. The by-law was met by staunch opposition from the National Trust, which had begun campaigning to protect some of the city's most historic buildings.[26]: 58  By the 1970s, Ballarat began to officially recognise its substantial heritage, and the first heritage controls were recommended to ensure its preservation. With the opening of Sovereign Hill, the city made a rapid shift to become a major cultural tourist destination, visited by thousands each year.

During the 1970s, a further 300 houses were constructed at Wendouree West. Private housing in the adjacent suburb of Wendouree closely matched and eventually eclipsed this by the mid-1960s. The suburb of greater Wendouree and Wendouree West had evolved as the suburban middle-class heart of the city. Charles, Prince of Wales visited Ballarat on 28 October 1974 during which he toured Sovereign Hill, the Ballarat College of Advanced Education's new Mt Helen Campus and the White Swan Reservoir and spoke at Civic Hall.[43]

Ballarat played an important role in the Stolen Generation throughout the 20th century, where the Ballarat Orphanage saw Aboriginal children who had been taken from their families. The Ballarat and District Aboriginal Co-operative (BADAC) was established by members of the Ballarat and district Aboriginal community in 1979. It became a co-operative to deliver health, social, welfare and community development programs to local Aboriginal people. In 2017, local Aboriginal community elder Ted Lovett was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for services to the indigenous community and for his works in eliminating racism in sports in south-west Victoria. Karen Heap and Ted Lovett were listed on the Victoria's Aboriginal Honour Role both in part for their work at BADAC.[44]

21st century

 
View of central Ballarat from St Peter's Anglican Church

The city continued to grow at the national average throughout the late 20th century and early 21st century. In 2008 the City of Ballarat released a plan directing that growth of the city over the next 30 years is to be concentrated to the west of the city centre. The Ballarat West Growth Area Plan was approved by the city and state government in 2010, planning an extensive fringe development consisting of 14,000 new homes and up to 40,000 new residents including new activity centres and employment zones.[45][46]

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse final report, published on 15 December 2017, found that 139 people made a claim of child sexual abuse to the Diocese of Ballarat between 1980 and 2015, and 21 alleged perpetrators were identified in these claims. Seventeen of the 21 alleged and convicted perpetrators were priests, which is 8.7% of the priests who ministered during this period.[47] About 45 victims are estimated to have committed suicide.[48]

Geography

 
Ballarat's skyline is hidden from this view of the city looking east across Lake Wendouree to Mount Warrenheip.
 
Mount Warrenheip dominating the skyline from Dawson Street, with the town hall clock tower on the right.

Ballarat lies at the foothills of the Great Dividing Range in Central Western Victoria. Also known as the Central Highlands, it is named so because of its elevated position and moderate hills and terrain with a lack of any alpine mountains that are situated a few hundred kilometres NE. The city lies within a mostly gently undulating section of the midland volcanic plains which stretch from Creswick in the north, to Rokewood in the south, and from Lal Lal in the south-east to Pittong in the west.

Geologically, the area consists of alluvial sediment and volcanic flows originating from now-extinct volcanoes such as nearby Buninyong (750m, 2460 ft) and Warrenheip (746m, 2446 ft), which are the area's tallest peaks. As a result, the basin contains large areas of fertile agricultural soil.[49] Ballarat itself is situated on an alluvial basin of the Yarrowee catchment and its tributary creeks, penetrated by sub-ranges of schists composed of granites and quartz. Along with the visible river and creeks, the catchment basin has numerous active and inactive aquifers and natural wetlands, which are used for urban water supply, agriculture and recreation.

There are numerous densely forested areas around Ballarat; however due to historic wood milling and land clearing there remain no old-growth forests. The major natural bodies of water are in the west and include the former shallow swamps of Lake Wendouree which is central to the city's western suburbs and beyond Winter's Swamp and the large Lake Burrumbeet wetland complex. Almost all of the other numerous bodies of water have been created artificially and include several reservoirs, the largest being the White Swan Reservoir and smaller suburban lakes such as Lake Esmond.

The contiguous urban area of Ballarat covers approximately 90 km2 (35 sq mi) of the local government area's 740 km2 (286 sq mi).[50] Approximately 90% of the urban area's land use is residential and suburban.[50] From the city centre this area extends approximately 6 kilometres (4 miles) north to the hills around Invermay, approximately 7.5 km (4.7 mi) east to Leigh Creek in the foothills of Mount Warrenheip, approximately 7 km (4 mi) west along the plains to Lucas and approximately 8.5 km (5.3 mi) south along the Yarrowee River and Canadian Creek valley to the fringe of Buninyong.[17] The central city is situated low in the valley of the Yarrowee River and surrounded by hills such that the city skyline is visible only from the hills and the lower lying inner eastern suburbs. The reach of the Yarrowee River toward Ballarat Central becomes a stormwater drain and is completely covered over as it flows under the CBD.

Urban structure

 
Map of the urban area (grey) and the extent of the municipal area

The city is home to nationally significant heritage structures. These include the Ballarat Botanical Gardens (established 1857),[51] with the greatest concentration of public statuary,[52] the official Prime Ministers Avenue, the longest running lyric theatre building (Her Majesty's Theatre, established 1875),[53] the first municipal observatory, established 1886,[54] and the earliest and longest war memorial avenue (the Avenue of Honour, established between 1917 and 1919).[55]

Ballarat is a primarily low-rise city. The City of Ballarat defines two Major Activity Centres within the urban area – the Central Business District (CBD) and Wendouree with a high concentration of business, retail and community function based primarily on the Melbourne 2030 planning model and a further 11 neighbourhood activity centres.[56] The tallest building in urban Ballarat is the seven-storey Henry Bolte wing of the Ballarat Base Hospital (1994). Beyond the central area, urban Ballarat extends into several suburban areas with a mixture of housing styles. Predominant styles are 19th-century villas, Victorian terraces,[57] Federation homes and Georgian red brick homes. Settlement patterns around Ballarat consist of small villages and country towns, some with less than a few thousand people.

The Central Business District (located in Ballarat Central) is a large mixed-use office and retail district bounded to the north by railway lines, to the west by Drummond Street, to the south to Grant street and to the east by Princes Street and spanning the floodplain of the Yarrowee River. Lydiard, Sturt Streets, Armstrong, Doveton, Dana Street and Bridge Street (known as Bridge Mall) along with the historic centre of East Ballarat—Main Street and Bakery Hill have retained stands of commercial and civic buildings of state and national heritage significance.

The inner established suburbs were initially laid out around the key mining areas and include Ballarat East, Bakery Hill, Golden Point, Soldiers Hill, Black Hill, Brown Hill, Eureka, Canadian, Mount Pleasant, Redan, Sebastopol and Newington.

The post gold rush era has seen a boom in expansion, extending the conurbation north, south and west. To the west, Ballarat has expanded West to Lucas, Alfredton, Delacombe To The North West Wendouree, Wendouree West and Miners Rest To the north it has expanded to Ballarat North, Invermay Park,[58] Invermay, Victoria[59] Invermay and Nerrina; to the east to Warrenheip and south to Sebastopol, Mount Clear and Mount Helen with the urban area encroaching the large town of Buninyong.

Wendouree is currently the only major suburban activity centre with a large indoor shopping mall—Stockland Shopping Centre (expanded in 2007[60]) and also has a number of surrounding retail parks including a strip shopping centre along Howitt Street including the large retail chain Harvey Norman. Elsewhere are small suburban hubs with supermarkets such as IGA (supermarkets) and small stretches of shopfronts.

Unlike Melbourne, Ballarat does not have a defined urban growth boundary.[61] This has put continuing pressure on the city council to approve development applications for subdivisions outside of the city fringe. In response to lobbying by landholders, the Ballarat West Growth Area Plan, a major greenfield land development plan, was prepared and has approved by the city and state government to allow for planned fringe communities consisting of 14,000 new homes and up to 40,000 new residents, effectively doubling the city's urban area by extending the urban sprawl from Sebastopol, Delacombe and Alfredton west toward Bonshaw, Smythes Creek and Cardigan[45][46] with a new suburb to be known as Lucas to be created.[62] New activity centres have been developed at Delacombe and Alfredton.

Architecture

 
Victorian era buildings

Ballarat is renowned for its Victorian architectural heritage. In 2003 Ballarat was the first of two Australian cities to be registered as a member of the International League of Historical Cities and in 2006 hosted the 10th World League of Historical Cities Congress.[63] The city's history is a major focus of the Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History, part of Federation University Australia, and is located at old Ballarat Gaol.

The legacy of the wealth generated during Ballarat's gold boom is still visible in a large number of fine stone buildings in and around the city, especially in the Lydiard Street area. This precinct contains some of Victoria's finest examples of Victorian era buildings, many of which are on the Victorian Heritage Register or classified by the National Trust of Australia. Notable civic buildings include the Town Hall (1870–72), the former Post Office (1864), the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery (1887), the Mechanics' Institute (1860, 1869), the Queen Victoria Wards of the Ballarat Base Hospital (1890s) and the Ballarat railway station (1862, 1877, 1888). Other historic buildings include the Provincial Hotel (1909), Reid's Coffee Palace (1886), Craig's Royal Hotel (1862–1890) and Her Majesty's Theatre (1875), the oldest intact and operating lyric theatre in Australia[53] and Ballarat Fire Station (1864, 1911) one of Victoria's oldest fire fighting structures[64] and the Jewish synagogue (1861) the oldest surviving synagogue on the Australian mainland.[65]

 
Streetscape with the former Post Office at the rear
 
Ballarat East Fire Station, the oldest continually operating fire station in the Southern Hemisphere, and the site of the first operational telephone, made by Henry Sutton.

Restoration of historic buildings is encouraged including a low interest council Heritage Loans Scheme.[66] and the prevention of demolition by neglect discouraged by council policies.[67] Since the 1970s,[68] the local council has become increasingly aware of the economic and social value of heritage preservation.[69] This is in stark contrast to the 1950s and 60s when Ballarat followed Melbourne in encouraging the removal of Victorian buildings, verandahs in particular. Recent restoration projects funded by the Ballarat include the reconstruction of significant cast iron lace verandahs including the Mining Exchange, Art Gallery (2007), Mechanics institute (2005–)[70] on Lydiard Street and in 2010 the restoration of the Town Hall and the long neglected Unicorn Hotel façade on Sturt Street.[71]

Ballarat Citizens for Thoughtful Development formed in 1998 and was incorporated as Ballarat Heritage Watch in 2005 to ensure that the city's architectural heritage is given due consideration in the planning process.[72]

The Ballarat Botanical Gardens (established in 1858) are recognised as the finest example of a regional botanical gardens in Australia and are home to many heritage listed exotic tree species and feature a modern glasshouse and horticultural centre and the Prime Ministers Avenue which features bronze busts of every past Australian Prime Minister.

Ballarat is notable for its very wide boulevards. The main street is Sturt Street with over 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) of central gardens known as the Sturt Street Gardens featuring bandstands, fountains, statues, monuments, memorials and lampposts. Ballarat is home to the largest of a collection of Avenues of Honour in Victoria. The 15-kilometre-long (9.3-mile) Ballarat Avenue of Honour consists of a total of approximately 4,000 trees, mostly deciduous which in many parts arch completely over the road. Each tree has a bronze plaque dedicated to a soldier from the Ballarat region who enlisted during World War I. The Avenue of Honour and the Arch of Victory are on the Victorian Heritage Register and are seen by approximately 20,000 visitors each year.

The city also has the greatest concentration of public statuary in any Australian city with many parks and streets featuring sculptures and statues dating from the 1860s to the present. Some of the other notable memorials located in the Sturt Street Gardens in the middle of Ballarat's main boulevard include a bandstand situated in the heart of the city that was funded and built by the City of Ballarat Band in 1913 as a tribute to the bandsmen of the RMS Titanic, a fountain dedicated to the early explorers Burke and Wills, and those dedicated to monarchs and those who have played pivotal roles in the development of the city and its rich social fabric. These include, Robert Burns, Peter Lalor, Sir Albert Coates, Harold Edward Elliott (Pompey Elliot), William Dunstan, King George V, Queen Victoria and more.

Ballarat has an extensive array of significant war memorials, the most recent of which is the Australian Ex Prisoner of War Memorial. The most prominent memorial in the city is the Ballarat Victory Arch that spans the old Western Highway on the Western approaches of the city. The archway serves as the focal point for the Avenue of Honour. Other significant individual monuments located along Sturt Street include those dedicated to the Boer War (1899–1901), the World War II (1939–1945) cenotaph, and Vietnam (1962–1972) (located adjacent to the Arch of Victory).

Climate

Ballarat has a moderate oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification Cfb)[73][74] with four distinct seasons. Its elevation, ranging between 400 and 630 metres (1,310 and 2,070 feet) above sea level, causes its mean monthly temperatures to tend to be on average 3 to 5 °C (5 to 9 °F) below those of Melbourne, especially in winter.[citation needed] The mean daily maximum temperature for January is 25.1 °C (77 °F),[75] while the mean minimum is 10.9 °C (52 °F).[75] In July, the mean maximum is 10.0 °C (50 °F); average July minimum is 3.2 °C (38 °F). Ballarat has 55.2 clear days annually.[75]

The city has a well known reputation for unpredictable and extreme weather, ranging from snowfall to intense heatwaves.[76] Perhaps the most infamous feature of Ballarat's climate is the chilly winter, often accentuated by driving winds.[77]

 
Fog is common on autumn and winter mornings but usually dissipates by mid-morning.

Temperatures can dip below freezing from May to September, however a low of 0-2 C° is more common - widespread frosts and fog are a regular sight. Snowfall typically falls on nearby Mount Buninyong and Mount Warrenheip a few times a year, but in the urban area only once or twice, particularly during heavy winters. Snow has been known to fall heavily with several inches accumulating even in the CBD. Heavy snow seasons occurred in 1900–1902 and 1905–1907 (with record falls in 1906), and moderate snow seasons were recorded during the 1940s and 1980s. Snowfalls in the urban area have occurred in recent years: November 2006 (light),[78] July 2007 (heavy),[79][80] June 2008 (light),[81] August 2008 (light),[82] August 2014 (moderate)[83] and June 2016 (light),[84] July 2017 (light), June 2018 (moderate), May 2019 (light),[85] and August and September 2020 (light and heavy).[86]

 
Snowy scene in Sturt Gardens in 1905

The mean annual rainfall is 693 millimetres (27.3 inches),[75] with August being the wettest month (75 mm or 3.0 in). There are an average of 198 rain-free days per year.[75] Like much of Australia, Ballarat experiences cyclical drought and heavy rainfall. Flooding of the Yarrowee catchment occurs occasionally. In 1869 a serious flood of the Yarrowee River put most of the lower section of business district including Bridge and Grenville streets under water and caused the loss of two lives.[87] Prolonged drought (an average annual rainfall with falls averaging as low as 400 mm (16 in) per year since 2001) caused Lake Wendouree to dry up completely for the first time in its history between 2006 and 2007. More recently higher rainfall levels have been recorded including 95.0 mm (3.74 in) in the 24 hours to 9 am on 14 January 2011,[88] ending a four-day period of flooding rains across much of Victoria and Tasmania,[89][90][91] and contributing to the wettest January on record, with a total of 206.0 mm (8.11 in) of rain for the month.[88][92]

The city's mean daily wind run is 470 km,[93] almost twice that of Melbourne, making it one of the windiest cities in Australia. This in turn causes warm summers to feel substantially cooler and near freezing winter days to have a far below zero wind chill.[94]

Ballarat's highest maximum recorded temperature was 44.1 °C (111 °F) on 7 February 2009 during the 2009 southeastern Australia heat wave.[95] This was 2.1 °C (3.8 °F) above the previous record of 42.0 °C (108 °F), set on 25 January 2003. The lowest-ever recorded minimum was −6.3 °C (21 °F) at sunrise on 19 July 2015.[96]

Climate data for Ballarat (Ballarat Aerodrome: averages 1991–2020, records 1957–2021)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 42.0
(107.6)
44.1
(111.4)
37.9
(100.2)
32.2
(90.0)
26.1
(79.0)
21.6
(70.9)
19.1
(66.4)
23.0
(73.4)
27.9
(82.2)
33.4
(92.1)
37.3
(99.1)
43.5
(110.3)
44.1
(111.4)
Average high °C (°F) 26.2
(79.2)
25.7
(78.3)
22.9
(73.2)
18.4
(65.1)
14.2
(57.6)
10.9
(51.6)
9.9
(49.8)
11.3
(52.3)
14.1
(57.4)
17.3
(63.1)
20.4
(68.7)
23.5
(74.3)
18.0
(64.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 18.1
(64.6)
18.4
(65.1)
16.2
(61.2)
12.6
(54.7)
9.8
(49.6)
7.3
(45.1)
6.6
(43.9)
7.4
(45.3)
9.1
(48.4)
11.1
(52.0)
13.9
(57.0)
15.9
(60.6)
12.2
(54.0)
Average low °C (°F) 11.0
(51.8)
11.5
(52.7)
9.9
(49.8)
7.0
(44.6)
5.1
(41.2)
3.6
(38.5)
3.0
(37.4)
3.1
(37.6)
4.4
(39.9)
5.9
(42.6)
7.9
(46.2)
9.5
(49.1)
6.9
(44.4)
Record low °C (°F) 0.7
(33.3)
−1.4
(29.5)
−0.6
(30.9)
−4.1
(24.6)
−4.5
(23.9)
−4.6
(23.7)
−6.3
(20.7)
−5.0
(23.0)
−4.6
(23.7)
−3.6
(25.5)
−1.0
(30.2)
−1.0
(30.2)
−5.6
(21.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 39.7
(1.56)
31.2
(1.23)
35.9
(1.41)
43.4
(1.71)
52.2
(2.06)
61.9
(2.44)
62.0
(2.44)
72.3
(2.85)
68.4
(2.69)
59.1
(2.33)
56.6
(2.23)
52.2
(2.06)
635.4
(25.02)
Average rainy days 7.7 6.9 8.5 11.7 15.8 18.2 19.9 18.6 16.8 14.5 11.8 10.5 160.9
Average afternoon relative humidity (%) 44 43 46 55 69 77 76 72 65 60 56 48 59
Source: [97][98]

Environment

Natural reserves and commons

 
Ballarat Town Common in autumn 2018

While there are no national parks in Ballarat's proximity, Ballarat is bordered by extensive bushland to the north, south and south west and sensitive wetlands to the east. The most central park to the city is the 130 ha Victoria Park, with a plethora of ovals and fields, playgrounds, walking tracks and quiet roads. There are a number of nearby state parks and large reserves including the Enfield State Park,[99] Creswick Regional Park, Mount Warrenheip Flora Reserve, Mount Buninyong Reserve and Lake Burrumbeet park. There are also smaller parks, like Black Hill, Victoria Park, Pioneer Park and Yarowee Reserve, located within walking distance of the city centre.

Ballarat is unique in Australia—and internationally—for having retained much of its commons land, which can be used by any resident of Ballarat. Ballarat Town Common, Ballarat West Town Common and Ballarat Common are located to the west of the city. Ballarat Town Common can be accessed via Howe Street in Miners Rest and is used by dog walkers and ramblers, especially because of its open grass fields and native wetland. Ballarat West Town Common is presently farmed on by licensed farmers.[100] The commons were reduced in size during the 20th century for property development.[101]

The region is home to a large koala population with protected areas established in the city's outer southern and eastern settlements.[102][103]

Pollution

Air quality in Ballarat is generally good,[104] however dust is sometimes an issue in the summer months[105] and woodsmoke from fireplaces contributes to reductions in visibility in the winter months.[106] Ballarat's waterways have historically been affected by heavy pollution from both mining and industry.[107]

The Ballarat Environment Network formed in 1993 to provide a voice for environmental and nature conservation issues in Ballarat and its surroundings.[108] Another large lobby group for sustainability in the city is the Ballarat Renewable Energy And Zero Emissions (BREAZE) formed in 2006.[109] The City of Ballarat released an Environment Sustainability Strategy for the city in 2007.[110]

Many parts of urban Ballarat have been affected by the introduction of exotic species, particularly introduced flora. Common gorse is one such problem which has prompted the formation of an official Ballarat Region Gorse Task Force in 1999 to control.[111] European rabbits[112] and red foxes[113] cause significant environmental damage in the region's agriculture areas.

Economy

The economy of Ballarat is driven by all three economic sectors, though contemporary Ballarat has emerged as a primarily service economy with its main industry being the service industry and its key areas of business including tourism, hospitality, retail, professional services, government administration and education. Secondary sector including manufacturing, which had grown in the 20th century remains an important sector. The city's historic primary sector roots including mining and agriculture continue to play a role, though one that has declined since the 20th century. Industries emerging this century include information technology service sector and renewable energy.

Service industries

As a major service centre for the populous goldfields region, Ballarat has large sectors of employment in business including retail, professional services and trades as well as state and federal government branch offices for public services and health care and non-government service organisations. Collectively these industries employ more than half of the city's workforce and generate the bulk of the city's economic activity.

Ballarat is the main retail economy in the region. The city has several key retail districts including a pedestrian mall known as Bridge Mall comprising over 100 traders. There are also indoor shopping malls including Central Square Shopping Centre and Stockland Wendouree. better known as Wendouree Village, with a large number of specialty stores. Major department stores include Myer, Target, Big W, Kmart, Harvey Norman and Harris Scarfe.[114] Additionally each of the major supermarkets (Coles, Woolworths, IGA and Aldi) are represented. Servicing the financial sector are branches of the big four Australian retail banks (National Australia Bank, ANZ, Commonwealth Bank and Westpac) along with Bendigo & Adelaide Bank and St George Bank and a number of smaller independent financial services firms.

Federation University Australia exports education through a large international students program and throughout Australia through distance education programs.

In recent years, a large technology park, the Ballarat Technology Park with communications centre has been established, with tenants including IBM and employing over 1,400 people.[115]

Ballarat West Employment Zone (BWEZ) is located on the north-west fringe of Ballarat, adjacent to the Ballarat Airport, existing rail infrastructure and the Ballarat Western Link Road.[116] Ballarat West Employment Zone (BWEZ) will become the engine room for jobs and economic growth in Ballarat over the next 20 years. The project involves the development of surplus Crown Land for industrial, wholesale, logistics, construction, commercial and residential uses, encouraging employment growth in Ballarat and the surrounding region. BWEZ will also include a freight hub, secure infrastructure and access to road, rail and ports.[116] Businesses located un BWEZ include CHS Broadbent, Westlab Pty Ltd, Agrimac, Milestone Benchtops, Kane Transport and Office Vision.

Tourism and hospitality

 
Main Street in Sovereign Hill, a large open-air gold mining museum, is Ballarat's most famous attraction.

Ballarat attracts 2.2 million visitors a year[117] and the tourism and hospitality industry is a A$480 million a year sector which accounts for around 15% of Ballarat's economy and employs around 2,870 people.[118] Tourism in Ballarat is promoted by Ballarat Regional Tourism.[119]

A significant heritage tourism industry has not grown substantially in Ballarat since the 1960s. Ballarat is most notable for the award-winning open-air museum known as Sovereign Hill, a recreated 1850s gold mining settlement opened in 1970. Sovereign Hill is Ballarat's biggest tourism drawcard and is consistently rated among the best outdoor museums in the world and continues to expand. Sovereign Hill accounts for over half a million of Ballarat's visitors and $40 million in tourism revenue.[120]

Several businesses and attractions have capitalised on Ballarat's gold mining history. They include Kryal Castle (1972), "Gold Rush Mini Golf" (2002) featuring the "Big Miner" (2006) one of Australia's big things (although the original proposal appeared larger and for the miner to hold the Eureka Flag)[121] at Ballarat's eastern entrance.

Other tourist attractions include the Eureka Centre; The Gold Museum, Ballarat;[122] Ballarat Botanic gardens and Lake Wendouree; the Museum of Australian Democracy; the Ballarat Tramway Museum and Ballarat Ghost Tours and Ballarat Wildlife Park. A large number of Ballarat hotels, motels and restaurants service the tourism industry. The Ballarat Tourist Association is an industry based non-profit, membership organisation representing the city's tourism industry.

Ballarat honours its rich history by hosting a number of annual festivals with historical and cultural focus including the Ballarat Begonia Festival, Ballarat Heritage Weekend and Ballarat Beat Rockabilly Festival.[123]

Manufacturing

According to the 2006 Australian Census, manufacturing is Ballarat's third largest employment sector, accounting for 14.8% of all workers.[124]

Ballarat attracts investment from several international manufacturers. The Australian headquarters of Mars, Incorporated was established in Ballarat in 1979 with the main Ballarat factory producing popular confectionery including Mars bars,[125] Snickers and M&M's for the Australian market as well as expanding in 2013 to produce Maltesers.[126] McCain Foods Limited Australian headquarters was established in Ballarat in 1970 and the company continues to expand its operations.[127] The Ballarat North Workshops is a major manufacturer of public transportation products with current investment from Alstom.[128]

Ballarat also has a large number of home-grown companies producing textiles, general industrial engineering, food products, brick and tiles, building components, prefabricated housing components and automotive components. Brewing was once a large-scale operation, with many large businesses including the public company Phoenix Brewery, and although large-scale brewing has ceased, the city retains a substantial microbrewery industry.[129]

Primary sector

 
Replica of the "Welcome Nugget", found at Ballarat, the second-largest gold nugget discovered in recorded history

Though historically an important sector, the production of Ballarat's primary sector declined for many decades, recovering only marginally since 2006.[130] Where historically the mining industry supported tens of thousands of workers or the majority of the population, today agriculture dominates the sector, though collectively both industries employ less than thousand people or just over 2% of the City of Ballarat's total workforce.[131]

Ballarat rose to prominence as a goldrush boomtown, though gold no longer plays a pivotal role in the economy of the city. Nevertheless, deep underground mining continues to the present date with a single main mine operating. There are still thought to be large, undiscovered gold reserves in the Ballarat region, with investigations being made by local and national companies.[132] Lihir Gold invested in Ballarat Goldfields in 2006,[133] however it downscaled its operations in 2009 due to the expense of extraction[134] before selling its stake in 2010 to Castlemaine Goldfields.[135] Along with gold, lignite (coal), kaolin (clay) and iron ore have also been mined in the Ballarat region and nearby Lal Lal however many of the resource deposits have since been exhausted. An active quarrying industry with large enterprises including Boral Limited[136] extracts and manufactures building materials from the Ballarat region, including clays, aggregates, cements, asphalts.

Approximately half (38,000 hectares or 94,000 acres) of the municipality's area is rural with optimal conditions for agriculture including rich volcanic soils and climate.[130] This area is used primarily for agriculture and animal husbandry and generates more than $37 million in commodities.[137] The region supports an active potato growing industry that has supplied local food manufacturers including McCain, though more recently has been threatened by cheaper imports.[138] Other large crops include grains, vegetables, grapes and berries. Cattle and poultry stocks, including sheep, cows and pigs, support an active local meat and dairy industry. The Ballarat Livestock Selling Centre is the largest cattle exchange in regional Victoria.[139] The Ballarat Agricultural and Pastoral Society formed in 1856[140] and has run the Ballarat Show annually since 1859.[141]

A$7.5 million[142] forestry industry is active in nearby state forests as well as on a small scale in the urban area along the Canadian Valley around the suburbs of Mt Clear and Mt Helen areas with pine plantations and sawmill operations.[143]

Renewable energy

 
Part of the Waubra Wind Farm

The Ballarat region has a rapidly growing renewable energy industry, in particular due to its abundant wind energy, attracting significant investment and generating revenue for local landholders and local councils. The region is also a source of bountiful geothermal energy,[144] solar power[144] and biomass[145][146] although to date, only its wind, solar and hydroelectricity has been harvested commercially. All local commercially produced electricity is sent to the National Electricity Market.

Wind energy is generated by local wind farms. The largest, Waubra Wind Farm, completed in 2009, is capable of producing enough electricity to power a city 3 to 4 times the size of Ballarat.[147] Other significant nearby wind farms include Mount Mercer, completed 2014, which produces enough energy to power 100,000 homes, equivalent to Ballarat's population.[148][149] The first community-owned wind farm in Australia, the Hepburn Wind Project at Leonards Hill, completed in 2011, produces the equivalent amount of electricity used by the town of Daylesford.[150]

Hydroelectricity is generated at White Swan reservoir micro hydro plant established in 2008 and producing the equivalent electricity needs of around 370 homes.[151] Ballarat Solar Park, opened in 2009 at the Airport site in Mitchell Park, is Victoria's first ground-mounted, flat-plate and grid-connected photovoltaic farm. Built by Sharp Corporation for Origin Energy, it is 14,993 m2 (161,380 sq ft) and generates the equivalent electricity needs of around 150 homes.[152]

Demographics

 
St Peter's Anglican Church, which represents the second most common religious affiliation in Ballarat

Ballarat is the 4th largest inland city in Australia, and the 3rd largest Victorian city behind Melbourne and Geelong. The 2016 Australian national census indicated that the permanent population of the urban area was 101,588[153] out of the City of Ballarat's population of 104,355 and a total of 45,653 households.[154]

The population of Ballarat has increased moderately to 105,471 in June 2018,[5] having an annual growth year-on-year of 1.78% since June 2013 (slightly faster than the national rate of 1.56% during the same period).[5] The recently accelerated growth rate has been attributed by demographers to increased commuter activity arising from surging house and land prices in Melbourne coupled with public transport improvements between Ballarat and Melbourne.[citation needed] While most of the city's population can trace their ancestry to Anglo-Celtic descent, 8.2% of the population are born overseas.[155] Of them, the majority (4.2%) come from North East Europe.[155] 3.4% speak a language other than English.[155] 14.4% of the population is over the age of 65.[155] The median age in Ballarat is 35.8 years.[156]

Ballarat's ethnic make up is partly the result of the mid 19th Century gold rush, where people of Celtic, Anglo-Saxon and East Asian descent emigrated here in the hope of landing a fortune.

The average income of Ballarat, while lower than Melbourne, is higher than average for regional Victoria.[157] Ballaratians in the 2007/08 financial year earned on average A$38,850 a year.[157] The highest earners living in the city's inner suburbs with a mean of $53,174 a year,[158] while the lower earners are centred on the city's southern suburbs.[157] According to the 2006 Census, Ballarat's working population is largely white collar 52.1% consisting of Management, Professionals, Clerical and Administrative Workers and Sales Workers, while 32.9% are blue collar working in Technicians and Trades, Labouring or Machinery Operation.[155] 56.5% of households had access to the Internet in 2006.[155] The unemployment rate as of June 2011 was 7.8%.[159]

50.3% of the population have completed further education after high school.[155]

Christianity is the most common religion in Ballarat. 56.3% indicated that they were Christian while 36.9% stated they had no religion and a further 9.1% did not answer the question. Catholics (24.3%), Anglicans (10.6%) and the Uniting Church (6.8%) were the largest Christian denominations.[160]

Governance

 
Ballarat Town Hall

Council Chamber in Ballarat Town Hall, Sturt Street, is the seat of local government for the City of Ballarat. The council was created in 1994 as an amalgamation of a number of other municipalities in the region. The city is made up of 3 wards, each represented by three councillors elected once every four years by postal voting.[161] The Mayor of Ballarat, currently Daniel Moloney, is elected from these councillors by their colleagues for a one-year term. The Town Hall and annexe contains some council offices, however the council's administrative headquarters are located at the council owned Phoenix Building and the leased Gordon Buildings on the opposite side of Bath Lane.[162]

In state politics, Ballarat is located in the Legislative Assembly districts of Buninyong and Wendouree, with both of these seats currently held by the Australian Labor Party.[163] In federal politics, Ballarat is located in a single House of Representatives division—the Division of Ballarat. The Division of Ballarat has been a safe Australian Labor Party seat since 2001,[164] and was the seat of the second Prime Minister of Australia, Alfred Deakin.

Law enforcement is overseen from regional police headquarters at the law complex in Dana Street with a single local police station operating in Buninyong. Due to an increase in crime rates and population, two additional local police stations were proposed in 2011 one each for the suburbs of North Ballarat and Sebastopol.[165] Justice is conducted locally overseen through branches of the Supreme, County, Magistrates and Children's Court of Victoria which operate out of the Ballarat courts Complex adjacent police headquarters in Dana Street.[166] Corrections, at least in the longer term are no longer handled locally since the closure of the Ballarat Gaol in 1965. Offenders can be detained in 25 available cells at the police complex though are commonly transferred to nearby Corrections Victoria facilities such as the Hopkins Correctional Centre in Ararat.[167]

Public safety and emergency services are provided by several state funded organisations including local volunteer based organisations. Storms and flooding are handled by the State Emergency Service (SES) Mid West Region Headquarters at Wendouree. Bushfires are handled by the Country Fire Authority District 15 Headquarters and Grampians Region Headquarters at Wendouree[168] and urban structure fires are handled by multiple urban fire brigades operating at fire stations including the Ballarat Fire Brigade at Barkly Street Ballarat East, Ballarat City Fire Brigade at Sturt Street Ballarat Central and suburban stations including Wendouree and Sebastopol. Medical emergency and paramedic services are provided through Ambulance Victoria and include the Rural Ambulance Victoria, St. John Ambulance and Ballarat Base Hospital ambulance services.[169] City of Ballarat is responsible for coordinating the Municipal Emergency Management Planning Committee (MEMPC) which prepares the Municipal Emergency Management Plan which is actioned in conjunction with local police.[170]

Media

Newspapers

Ballarat has two local newspapers, one owned by Australian Community Media and one a private equity. The Courier is a daily and The Ballarat Times News Group is a free weekly. The latter is distributed across most of the city on Thursday and contains news of community events, advertisements for local businesses, and a classifieds section. Ballarat was the hub of Australian Community Media's Victoria production and manufacturing with all printed material for the state coming from the Wendouree print site until it closed in September 2020.

Radio stations

 
Radio House, Lydiard Street North. Home to 3BA and Power FM

Local radio stations include 3BA, Power FM and several community radio stations. There is also a Ballarat branch of ABC Local Radio's national network.

  • 102.3 FM – 3BA (local "classic hits" commercial radio station)
  • 103.1 FM – Power FM 103.1 FM (local "top-40" commercial radio station)
  • 99.9 FM – Voice FM 99.9 – formerly known as 3BBB (local community radio station)
  • 107.9 FM – ABC Ballarat (government-funded local news, current affairs, light entertainment and talkback)
  • 103.9 FM – Good News Radio 103.9 (Christian community-based radio station)

Television

Television station BTV Channel 6 Ballarat commenced transmission of test patterns on 17 March 1962. Today Ballarat is serviced by numerous "free to air" High Definition and Standard Definition Digital television services. Two television broadcasting stations are located in the city, including WIN, WIN HD, 9Life, 9Go! and 9Gem (sub-licensees of the Nine Network) and Prime7, Prime7 HD, 7Two, 7mate, and 7flix (a sub-licensee of Seven Network). These two stations broadcast relayed services throughout regional Victoria. The city also receives Southern Cross 10, 10HD, 10 Peach, 10 Bold, 10 Shake and Sky News Regional (sub-licensees of Network 10) which is based in Bendigo but operates a local office.

Ballarat television maintains a similar schedule to the national television network but maintains local commercials and regional news programming.

  • WIN previously presented a 30-minute local WIN News bulletin from its studios in the city, where WIN News bulletins for Albury, Bendigo, Gippsland, Shepparton and Mildura were also broadcast. In 2015, the Ballarat studios closed with production of the regional Victorian news bulletins being relocated to Wollongong in New South Wales, where they now originate from.[171] WIN retains reporters and camera crews for its Ballarat bulletin in the city.
  • Southern Cross 10, airs short local news updates like Prime7 throughout the day, broadcast from its Hobart studios.
  • Prime7 airs short local news and weather updates throughout the day, broadcast from its Canberra studios with an office in the city.

In addition to commercial television services, Ballarat receives Government ABC (ABC1, ABC2, ABC3, ABC News 24) and SBS (SBS One and Two) television services.

On 5 May 2011, analog television transmissions ceased in most areas of regional Victoria and some border regions including Ballarat and surrounding areas. All local free-to-air television services are now broadcasting in digital transmission only. This was done as part of the federal government's plan for digital terrestrial television in Australia, where all analogue transmission systems are gradually turned off and replaced with modern DVB-T transmission systems.

Subscription television services are provided by Neighbourhood Cable, Foxtel and SelecTV.

Education

 
Federation University Australia's SMB campus is set among heritage buildings, including the former School of Mines and Industry (left).
 
Ballarat Mechanics' Institute

Ballarat has two universities, Federation University and a campus of the Australian Catholic University.

Formerly the University of Ballarat, Federation University Australia was opened in 2014. It originated as the Ballarat School of Mines, founded in 1870, and was once affiliated with the University of Melbourne. The main campus is located in Mount Helen, approximately 6 kilometres (3.7 miles) southeast of the city. The university also has campuses in the Ballarat CBD, Horsham, Berwick, Brisbane, Churchill, Ararat and Stawell.

The Australian Catholic University's Ballarat campus is located on Mair Street. It was formerly the Aquinas Training College, run by the Ballarat East Sisters of Mercy in 1909. It is ACU's only campus located outside of a capital city.

Ballarat has five State Government-operated secondary schools of which Ballarat High School (established in 1907) is the oldest. Ballarat High School and Mount Clear College are the only state school members of the Ballarat Associated Schools. The three remaining schools are Phoenix College and the two newly formed schools Mount Rowan Secondary College and Woodmans Hill Secondary College which emerged from the old Ballarat Secondary College.[172] Phoenix College was formed in 2012 as an amalgamation of Sebastopol College and Redan Primary School.[173]

The city is well serviced by Catholic schools, with eight primary schools and three secondary colleges which include the all-boys St Patrick's College,[174] the all-girls Loreto College and the co-educational Damascus College, which was formed by the amalgamation of St Martin's in the Pines, St Paul's College and Sacred Heart College in 1995.

Ballarat has three other non-government secondary schools: Ballarat Christian College, Ballarat Clarendon College and Ballarat Grammar School. The later two schools are day and boarding schools who provide education from Preschool to Year 12. Both of these co-educational schools are classified as academically excellent as the only Ballarat schools to be ranked on the tables of the top 100 Victorian schools based on median VCE scores and percentage of scores of 40 and above. In 2015, Clarendon was placed at 9th best VCE results in the State, above Melbourne Grammar, Geelong College, Scotch College, Trinity Grammar School (Victoria), Xavier College, and Haileybury College. Ballarat Grammar was placed at 82nd, above Wesley College, Geelong Grammar and Tintern.[175]

The City of Ballarat has three public libraries, the largest and most extensive of which is the City of Ballarat Library, run by the City of Ballarat and located on Doveton Street North.[176] Another library service is provided by the Ballarat Mechanics' Institute in Sturt Street, which is the oldest library in the city and a significant heritage site; it contains a collection of historic, archival and rare reference material as well as more general books.

Arts and culture

 
Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, the oldest and largest art gallery in regional Australia

The Ballarat Fine Art Gallery houses one of Australia's oldest and most extensive collections of early Australian works. It is considered to have the best Australian collection outside any capital city in Australia.

Federation University Australia operates the Post Office Gallery in the Wardell designed former Post Office on the corner of Sturt and Lydiard Streets.[177]

Events and festivals

Ballarat is home to many annual festivals and events that attract thousands of visitors. The oldest large annual event is the Ballarat Agricultural Show (since 1859), currently held at the Ballarat Showgrounds and has attracted attendances of up to 30,000 and is an official public holiday for residents of the city.[178][179]

Lake Wendouree is featured in many including the biggest and most prominent is the Begonia Festival (held annually since 1953).[180] SpringFest (held annually since 2001) attracts more than 15,000 people from around Victoria[181][182] and features market stalls and activities around the lake.

 
Annual Agricultural Society Show at Ballarat Showgrounds, Wendouree

The controversial Ballarat Swap Meet (formerly the Super Southern Swap Meet and held annually since 1989) attracts 30,000 visitors a year.[183] Ballarat Heritage Weekend (held annually since 2006) celebrates the city's heritage with activities such as historic vehicles and displays in and around the CBD and has attracted as many as 14,500 visitors a year from around Victoria.[184][185][186] The Ballarat Beer Festival at the City Oval (since 2012) has attracted more than 4,000 visitors.[187] The Ballarat Airport Open Day (Ballarat's unofficial air show, held annually since 2009) also attracts thousands.[188]

Other minor cultural festivals include the Ballarat Writers Festival, Ballarat International Foto Biennale and the Goldfields Music Festival.

Entertainment

 
Her Majesty's Theatre, built in 1875

Ballarat has a lively and well established theatrical community with several local ensembles as well as a number of large performing arts venues. Major performing arts venues include the 900 capacity Her Majesty's Theatre, the Wendouree Centre for Performing Arts, Mary's Mount Theatre and the Post Office Box Theatre.

The Ballarat Civic Hall is a large public building constructed in 1958 as a general purpose venue. Its stripped classical design was heavily criticised during its planning, however it has gained some cultural significance to the city with its cavernous spaces holding many significant events over the years. Civic Hall was closed in 2002 and public pressure forced the council to redevelop it in 2018[189] as a modern performing arts and exposition centre. The refurbished building is a modern interpretation of its original 1950s built form and features a 1000 capacity main hall capable of use for concerts, meetings and civic events.

Ballarat has its own symphony orchestra, the Ballarat Symphony Orchestra which was formed in 1987. Some notable theatre organisations in Ballarat include BLOC (Ballarat Light Opera Company) founded in 1959.[190] Ballarat is also the home to Australia's oldest and largest annual performing arts eisteddfod. The Royal South Street Eisteddfod is an all-encompassing performing arts festival and competition event that is conducted over twelve weeks annually.[191]

In the 1970s the Ballarat urban area contained no less than 60 hotels. The introduction of gaming machines in the early 1990s has brought about significant change in the city entertainment precincts. By 2006 at least 20 hotels had closed and some of those that remain have been redeveloped as dining and/or gaming venues. Gaming machines have brought significant revenue to the remaining hotels, sports and social clubs which has enabled many to expand and modernise. The city has several dance clubs as well as a highly active live music and jazz scene. Hotels are popular meeting places for young people. The city has many fine restaurants, wine bars and eateries as well as themed restaurants. A large cinema complex consisting of several theatres is located behind the façade of the old Regent cinemas in the heart of the city. Dance parties are popular within the Ballarat area; BTR is an organisation founded in 2006 that has begun hosting dance events in Ballarat.

Cultural depictions

Ballarat has inspired many visual artists. Eugene von Guerard documented the city's establishment as a gold digging settlement, while Albert Henry Fullwood and Knut Bull depicted the city's boom era streetscapes.[192][193] Ballarat features prominently in literature and fiction, including "The Boscombe Valley Mystery", a short story from Arthur Conan Doyle's The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1891); King Billy of Ballarat and Other Stories (1892) by Morley Roberts; The Fortunes of Richard Mahony (1917) by Henry Handel Richardson; Murder on the Ballarat Train (1993) by Kerry Greenwood; and Illywhacker (1985) by Peter Carey.

Ballarat is also a popular filming location.[194] Australia's second oldest feature film, Eureka Stockade (1907), is the first in a line of films about the historic Ballarat event. The city makes cameos in Dogs in Space (1986), My Brother Jack (2001), Ned Kelly (2003) and The Writer (2005).[195] The television series The Doctor Blake Mysteries (2012–2017) is set in Ballarat and also mostly shot there.[196][197] The series was picked by the Seven Network, which proposes to make several telemovies without the Blake character, picking up the story line after his death, leaving his widow Jean.[198][199]

Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Ballarat after the city, the corvette HMAS Ballarat (J184) and the frigate HMAS Ballarat (FFH 155).

Sport and recreation

 
Ballarat Football Club, 1889. The club was founded in 1860 and is one of the oldest football clubs in the world.

Australian rules football is the most popular spectator and participation sports in Ballarat. It has its own dedicated stadium, Eureka Stadium, which serves as a venue of the Australian Football League (AFL), as well as the home ground of the semi-professional North Ballarat Roosters, which formerly competed in the Victorian Football League (VFL). The Ballarat Football League, established in 1893, features six local teams, including the Ballarat Football Club, which was founded in 1860 and remains one of the world's oldest football clubs. Other Ballarat-based teams compete in the regional Central Highlands Football League.

Cricket is Ballarat's second most-popular sport. It has three international standard cricket ovals, including Eastern Oval, which was one of the host venues of the 1992 Cricket World Cup. The Ballarat Cricket Association is the city's principle cricket competition. Soccer is also popular in Ballarat. Based at Morshead Park Stadium,[200] the semi-professional Ballarat City FC competes in the National Premier League, the third tier competition of Australian soccer. Melbourne's Western United FC plays four A-League matches per year at Eureka Stadium.[201] Basketball is played in Ballarat with the Ballarat Sports Events Centre hosting South East Australian Basketball League matches involving the Ballarat Miners and Ballarat Rush. Netball is similarly popular, with many netball clubs affiliated with local Australian rules clubs.

Athletics is and has historically been very popular with 4 local clubs competing at the BRAC[202] (Ballarat Regional Athletics Centre) located at the Llanberis Athletics Track in Golden Point, 5 minutes from the CBD. The city features a rich and decorated athletics history with Australia's most successful track and field athlete (Jared Tallent - Racewalker), and many other Olympians (Steve Moneghetti, Greg Smith (Paralympian)) having been born in Ballarat.

 
Lake Wendouree hosted the rowing and canoeing events for the 1956 Summer Olympics.

Rowing and kayaking is centred on Lake Wendouree, which hosts the Victorian Schools Rowing Championships as well as the annual "Head of the Lake" rowing regatta. The city hosted rowing events for the 1956 Summer Olympic Games. Horse racing and greyhound racing are also popular, with dedicated facilities. The Ballarat Turf Club schedules around 28 race meetings a year including the Ballarat Cup meeting in mid-November.[203] Athletics facilities include an international standard athletics track at Golden Point. Swimming and water sport is facilitated at two Olympic-sized pools as well as an indoor 25-metre (82-foot) competition short course pool. The main facility is the Ballarat Aquatic Centre located in Lake Gardens. Baseball was first organised in Australia at Ballarat in 1857,[204] and three local teams compete in the Geelong Baseball Association.

Golf is played at four main venues which include the Ballarat Golf Course in Alfredton, home to the Ballarat Golf Club.[205] The Ballarat Roller Derby League was formed in 2008, and held their first match in 2009. They have two teams who compete in local events, and a combined travelling team, the Rat Pack, who compete in interleague roller derby competitions.[206]

Ballarat, along with other cities in regional Victoria, will host the 2026 Commonwealth Games with Eureka Stadium flagged to host athletics, the Eastern Oval T20 cricket, and Selkirk Stadium to host boxing.

Infrastructure

Health

 
Ballarat Base Hospital's Henry Bolte wing

Ballarat has two major hospitals. The public health services are managed by Ballarat Health Services[207] including the Ballarat Base which services the entire region and the Queen Elizabeth Centre for aged care on Ascot Street Sth. The St John of God Health Care centre also on Drummond Street Nth, established in 1915 is currently the largest private hospital in regional Victoria.[208]

The Ballarat Regional Integrated Cancer Centre (BRICC) on the corner of Drummond and Sturt Street includes a number of facilities focused on cancer treatment.[209]

The Heart Foundation did a study in 2014 that Ballarat had the highest level of physical inactivity (85.3 per cent) in Australia and that 32.9 per cent of residents were deemed obese.[210]

Utilities

Ballarat's residents are serviced by a wide range of public utilities including water, gas and electricity, telephony and data communications supplied, overseen and regulated by state based authorities and private enterprise and local council.

Water supply as well as sewage collection and disposal are provided by Central Highlands Water.[211] Drinking water is sourced from a network reservoirs all located in the highlands to the east, however the majority is sourced from two main reservoirs—Lal Lal and White Swan. The Lal Lal Reservoir (built in 1970[212] with a capacity of 59,500 megalitres (1.57×1010 US gallons)[213]) is Ballarat's largest water catchment accounting for approximately two-thirds of the city's water usage.[214] The White Swan reservoir (built in 1952[212] with a 14,100 Ml (3.7×109 US gal) capacity) supplies most of the remainder.[213] Since May 2008, the White Swan has been topped up by water from Bendigo's Sandhurst Reservoir through the Goldfields Superpipe with water originally sourced from the Goulburn River system.[215] Kirks Reservoir (built between 1860 and 1862 with a capacity of 400 Ml (110,000,000 US gal)) and Gong Gong Reservoir (built in 1877 at Gong Gong, Victoria[216] with a capacity of 1,902 Ml (502,000,000 US gal)[213]) are historic main water supplies now maintained for emergency use.[217] Other reservoirs supplying Ballarat include Moorabool reservoir (located in Bolwarrah, Victoria[218] with a capacity of 6,738 Ml (1.780×109 US gal)), Wilson's Reservoir (located in the Wombat State Forest with a capacity of 1,013 Ml (268,000,000 US gal)), Beales reservoir (built 1863[219] located at Wallace with a capacity of 415 Ml (110,000,000 US gal)) and Pincotts reservoir (built 1867[219] located at Leigh Creek, Victoria[220] with a capacity of 218 Ml (58,000,000 US gal)).[221] Sewage is managed by two plants—the Ballarat North Wastewater Treatment Plant and the Ballarat South Waste Water Treatment Plant.[222]

Residential electricity is supplied by Victorian electricity distributor Powercor, while residential natural gas is supplied by AGL Energy.

Telephone services are provided via the Doveton Street (BRAT) telephone exchange[223] which was originally built by the Australian Telecommunications Commission (now known as Telstra) who remains its owner, though Optus now also operates services from this facility. The city's cellular network currently uses Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (UMTS). Telstra has provided mobile telecommunications to Ballarat since 2003 (initially as CDMA). Optus provided competition with its entrance to the market in 2003 along with significant service upgrades in 2004[224] followed by Vodafone in mid-2009.[225]

Data communications are provided by several companies. Telstra was the first company to provide dial-up Internet access via the Ballarat exchange, however the first network for broadband Internet access available in the city was a hybrid optical fiber cable and coaxial cable built by Neighbourhood Cable in 2001.[226] Since then, Telstra and Optus have entered the Ballarat market, providing Asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL) services for residential Internet access from four main exchanges—Ballarat, Wendouree (Howitt Street), Sebastopol (Skipton Street) and Alfredton (Cuthberts Road). These companies also provide mobile data access Evolved HSPA and since late 2011 3GPP Long Term Evolution (4G). Ballarat's rollout of the National Broadband Network (NBN) is seen as vital for the city's growing IT industry.[227][228] During Ballarat's first stage NBN rollout in 2012, 17,800 homes will be directly connected to the network via optical fibre cable.[229]

Transportation

 
Arch of Victory over the Avenue of Honour

The motor vehicle is the main form of transport in Ballarat. A network of state highways radiate from Ballarat and the Western Freeway (A8) dual carriageway bypasses the central city to the north of the urban area, providing a direct road connection to Melbourne (approximately 90 minutes), westward to Ararat (approximately 75 minutes) and Horsham. Five freeway interchanges service the urban area, East Ballarat (half diamond) interchange at Victoria Street (C805); Brown Hill interchange (full diamond) at Daylesford-Ballarat Road (C292), Creswick Road interchange (full diamond) at Wendouree (A300); the Mount Rowan interchange (half diamond) at Gillies Road, Wendouree (C307) and the Mitchell Park interchange (full diamond) at Howe Street (C287). The Midland Highway is a dual carriageway which runs north along Creswick Road to the Western Freeway interchange but becomes a single carriageway north of Ballarat to Creswick (approximately 25 minutes) and runs south as the dual carriageway of Skipton Road to Magpie before becoming a single carriageway to Geelong (approximately 87 minutes). The Glenelg Highway connects directly to Mount Gambier and the Sunraysia Highway west of Ballarat which connects directly to Mildura. Sturt Street and Victoria Street, both dual carriageways carry the bulk of the east-west CBD traffic, while Mair Street is planned to become a four lane dual carriageway to relieve pressure on these main streets.[230] Other dual carriageway main roads in the west include Howitt Street and Gillies Street.[231] The busiest roads by far are located in the west and south at Albert Street in Redan, Sturt Street in Newington and Gillies Street in Lake Gardens which carry 22,400, 22,000 and 21,500 vehicles per day respectively and all have 4 traffic lanes.[231]

Rail

 
A V/Line train arriving at Ballarat station

Ballarat is a major rail transport hub in Victoria. Situated at the junction of the Ballarat line, Ararat line and Mildura lines, it currently has several connections for both passenger rail services and freight rail. The city has two passenger railway stations, the hub of Ballarat railway station and suburban Wendouree railway station.[232] From Ballarat station, V/Line operates VLocity trains to Melbourne, west to Ararat and north to Maryborough. Since the controversial removal of "flagship" express services in 2011, successive timetable changes have slowed peak hour services to Southern Cross, with the current journey taking a minimum of 73 minutes.[233][234] Patronage however has continued to grow.[235][236] The Regional Rail Link project was built in 2015 to separate Ballarat trains from Melbourne's suburban rail network.[237] Interurban services (Ballarat-Melbourne) now run half-hourly during weekday peak and hourly during weekday non-peak and on weekends from Ballarat station. A twice daily (thrice daily on weekdays) (57 minute) service connects Ballarat to Ararat (stopping at Beaufort) while there is a (53 minute) service to and from Maryborough (stopping at Creswick, Clunes, and Talbot) once a day (twice a day on weekdays) each way.[238] Victoria's electronic ticketing system, Myki, was implemented on rail services between Wendouree and Melbourne on 24 July 2013.[239] Ballarat is connected to Geelong by rail via the Geelong-Ballarat railway line, which currently operates only for freight.

Bus

CDC Ballarat operates the bus network covering the city centre, Ballarat and Wendouree stations, and most surrounding suburbs, contracted by Public Transport Victoria.[240]

Tram

 
A tourist tram on Wendouree Parade

The once extensive Ballarat tramway network operated between 1887 and 1971 with a small section of remaining track being utilised as a tourist and museum tramway.[241] There have been proposals to extend the network, particularly as a major tourist facility but also to connect it to the railways and return it as a viable component of the Ballarat public transport system, including a strong lobby in 2001–2002,[242][243][244][245] 2010–11 and 2014,[246] however Ballarat City Council and federal member of parliament have dismissed recent proposals.[247][248][249]

Airport

Ballarat Airport located 8 km (5 mi) north-west of the CBD consists of two sealed runways (each approximately 1,400 m (4,600 ft) long and 30 m (98 ft) wide) as well as extensive sealed aprons, night lighting and NDB navaid. Master Plans for the Airport were completed in 2005 and subsequently 2013.[250] The report made a series of recommendations and forecasts that included lengthening, widening and strengthening of the existing main runway, consideration for expansion of the passenger terminal, recommendations for future use of aprons, and development of future structures supporting larger aircraft that would result from the forecast increased frequent usage. In 2020, initial Federal funding was provided to enable the re-building and re-instatement of the main north–south runway to 1900m (6233 feet).

Cycling and walking

Ballarat has a long history of cycling as a form of transport and recreation. The current cycling network continues to grow and consists of several marked on-road routes and 50 kilometres (31 miles) of segregated bicycle facilities including several main routes: the Ballarat–Skipton Rail Trail and the Yarrowee River Trail with connections to the Gong Gong Reservoir.[216] Buningyong Trail, Sebastopol Trail, and the Lake Wendouree shared path.[251] The Ballarat Bicycle Users Group provides advocacy for the growing number of cyclists in the city.[252] The popularity of cycling in Ballarat is also demonstrated by the large number of spectators and participants drawn to cycling sporting events held in the city.[253]

Crime

In 2014, the city was one of a number of Australian regional centres examined by an ABC Four Corners report on the use of methamphetamine, along with Devonport, Burnie, Castlemaine and St Arnaud.[254][255]

See also

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Bibliography

History books

  • Bate, Weston. Lucky City: The First Generation of Ballarat 1851–1901 (1978)
  • Bate, Weston. Life After Gold: Twentieth-Century Ballarat Melbourne University Press (1993)
  • Carboni, Raffaello. The Eureka Stockade (1980) first published (1855)
  • Goodman, David. Gold Seeking: Victorian and California in the 1850s (1994)
  • Jacobs, Wendy. Ballarat: A Guide to Buildings and Areas 1851–1940 Jacob Lewis Vines Conservation Architects and Planners (1981)
  • Lynch, John. The Story of the Eureka Stockade: Epic Days in the early fifties at Ballarat, (1947?)
  • Flett, James. The History of Gold Discovery in Victoria
  • Molony, John. Eureka, (1984)
  • Molony, John. By Wendouree, (2010)
  • Serle, Geoffrey. The Golden Age: A History of the Colony of Victoria, 1851–1860, (1963)
  • Freund, Peter, with Val Sarah. Her Maj: A History of Her Majesty's Theatre, Ballarat (2007)
  • Ballarat City Council
  • Victorian Heritage Register, Heritage Victoria

External links

  • Ballarat City Council
  • Visit Ballarat – Ballarats Official Tourism website
  • Ballarat – Tourism Victoria – Government tourism site.
  • Ballarat TV Guide – All channels currently broadcasting in Ballarat and surrounding areas

ballarat, this, article, about, australian, city, other, uses, disambiguation, ballaarat, redirects, here, locomotive, ballaarat, steam, engine, city, central, highlands, victoria, australia, 2021, census, population, making, third, largest, city, victoria, vi. This article is about the Australian city For other uses see Ballarat disambiguation Ballaarat redirects here For the locomotive see Ballaarat steam engine Ballarat ˌ b ae l e ˈ r ae t BAL e RAT 3 is a city in the Central Highlands of Victoria Australia At the 2021 Census Ballarat had a population of 116 201 4 making it the third largest city in Victoria 5 6 Ballarat VictoriaAerial view of Ballarat Central with Mt Warrenheip on the horizonBallaratCoordinates37 33 39 S 143 50 51 E 37 56083 S 143 84750 E 37 56083 143 84750 Coordinates 37 33 39 S 143 50 51 E 37 56083 S 143 84750 E 37 56083 143 84750Population116 201 2021 1 19th Density338 19 km2 875 90 sq mi Established1838Postcode s 3350Elevation435 630 m 1 427 2 067 ft AHDArea343 6 km2 132 7 sq mi 2 2016 census SUA Time zoneAEST UTC 10 Summer DST AEDT UTC 11 Location110 km 68 mi NW of Melbourne82 km 51 mi NW of Geelong95 km 59 mi SW of BendigoLGA s City of BallaratState electorate s EurekaRiponWendoureeFederal division s BallaratMean max temp Mean min temp Annual rainfall17 7 C 64 F 6 6 C 44 F 689 4 mm 27 1 inWithin months of Victoria separating from the colony of New South Wales in 1851 gold was discovered near Ballarat sparking the Victorian gold rush Ballarat subsequently became a thriving boomtown that for a time rivalled Melbourne the capital of Victoria in terms of wealth and cultural influence In 1854 following a period of civil disobedience in Ballarat over gold licenses local miners launched an armed uprising against government forces Known as the Eureka Rebellion it led to the introduction of male suffrage in Australia and as such is interpreted as the origin of Australian democracy The rebellion s symbol the Eureka Flag has become a national symbol It was on display at Ballarat s Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka MADE from 2013 until MADE closed in 2018 Proclaimed a city in 1871 Ballarat s prosperity unlike that of many other gold boomtowns continued until the late 19th century as the city s fields experienced sustained high gold yields for many decades By the turn of the century Ballarat s importance relative to Melbourne rapidly faded with the slowing of gold extraction It has endured as a major regional centre and is the commercial capital and largest city of the Central Highlands as well as a significant tourist destination Ballarat is known for its history culture and well preserved colonial era heritage with much of the city subject to heritage overlays Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory and European settlement 1 2 Gold rush era 1 3 Post gold rush 1 4 20th century 1 5 21st century 2 Geography 2 1 Urban structure 2 2 Architecture 3 Climate 4 Environment 4 1 Natural reserves and commons 4 2 Pollution 5 Economy 5 1 Service industries 5 1 1 Tourism and hospitality 5 2 Manufacturing 5 3 Primary sector 5 3 1 Renewable energy 6 Demographics 7 Governance 8 Media 8 1 Newspapers 8 2 Radio stations 8 3 Television 9 Education 10 Arts and culture 10 1 Events and festivals 10 2 Entertainment 10 3 Cultural depictions 11 Sport and recreation 12 Infrastructure 12 1 Health 12 2 Utilities 13 Transportation 13 1 Rail 13 2 Bus 13 3 Tram 13 4 Airport 13 5 Cycling and walking 14 Crime 15 See also 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 External linksHistory EditPrehistory and European settlement Edit The Ballarat region was first populated by the Wadawurrung people an Indigenous Australian people 7 The first Europeans to sight the area were an 1837 party of six mostly Scottish squatters from Geelong led by Somerville Learmonth and Brendan Birch who were in search of land less affected by the severe drought for their sheep to graze The party scaled Mount Buninyong among them were Somerville s brother Thomas Livingstone Learmonth William Cross Yuille and Henry Anderson all three of whom later claimed land in what is now Ballarat The Yuille family Scottish settlers Archibald Buchanan Yuille and his brother William Cross Yuille arrived in 1837 and squatted a 10 000 acre 4 000 ha sheep run The first houses were built near Woolshed Creek by William Yuille and Anderson Sebastopol while Yuille erected a hut at Black Swamp Lake Wendouree in 1838 Outsiders originally knew of the settlement as Yuille s Station and Yuille s Swamp Archibald Yuille named the area Ballaarat Some claim the name is derived from a local Wathaurong Aboriginal word for the area balla arat The meaning of this word is not certain however several translations have been made and it is generally thought to mean resting place In some dialects balla means bent elbow which is translated to mean reclining or resting and arat meaning place 8 Another claim is that the name derives from Yuille s native Gaelic Baile Ararat Town of Ararat alluding to the resting place of Noah s Ark citation needed The present spelling was officially adopted by the City of Ballarat in 1996 Gold rush era Edit Further information Victorian gold rush Painting by Eugene von Guerard of Ballarat s tent city in the summer of 1853 54 The first publicised discovery of gold in the region was by Thomas Hiscock on 2 August 1851 in Buninyong to the south 9 The find brought other prospectors to the area and on 19 August 1851 more gold was found at Poverty Point 10 Within days a gold rush began bringing thousands of prospectors to the Yarrowee Valley which became known as the Ballarat diggings Yields were particularly high with the first prospectors in the area extracting between half an ounce 11 which was more than the average wage of the time and up to five ounces of alluvial gold per day As news of the Victorian gold rush reached the world Ballarat gained an international reputation as a particularly rich goldfield As a result a huge influx of immigrants occurred including many from Ireland and China gathering in a collection of prospecting shanty towns around the creeks and hills Within a few months numerous alluvial runs were established several deep mining leads began and the population had swelled to over 1 000 people 12 The first post office opened on 1 November 1851 the first to open in a Victorian gold mining settlement 13 Parts of the district were first surveyed by William Urquhart 14 as early as October 1851 15 By 1852 his grid plan and wide streets for land sales in the new township of West Ballarat 16 built upon a plateau of basalt contrasted markedly with the existing narrow unplanned streets tents and gullies of the original East Ballarat settlement The new town s main streets of the time were named in honour of police commissioners and gold commissioners of the time with the main street Sturt Street named after Evelyn Pitfield Shirley Sturt Dana Street named after Henry Dana Lydiard Street after his assistant Doveton Street after Francis Crossman Doveton Ballarat s first gold commissioner Armstrong after David Armstrong and Mair Street after William Mair 17 These officials were based at the government encampment after which nearby Camp Street was named which was strategically positioned on an escarpment with an optimal view over the district s diggings The first newspaper The Banner published on 11 September 1853 was one of many to be distributed during the gold rush period Print media played a large role in the early history of the settlement 18 Ballarat attracted a sizable number of miners from the Californian 1848 gold rush and some were known as Ballafornians 19 Troopers storm the rebels stockade during the 1854 Eureka Rebellion Civil disobedience in Ballarat led to an armed civil uprising the Eureka Rebellion colloquially referred to as the Eureka Stockade which took place in Ballarat on 3 December 1854 The event in which 22 miners were killed is considered to be a defining moment in Australian history The city earned the nickname The Golden City in the 1850s 20 The gold rush population peaked at almost 60 000 mostly male diggers by 1858 21 However the early population was largely itinerant As quickly as the alluvial deposits drew prospectors to Ballarat the rate of gold extraction fluctuated and as they were rapidly worked dry many quickly moved to rush other fields as new findings were announced particularly Mount Alexander in 1852 Fiery Creek 22 in 1855 and Ararat in 1857 By 1859 a smaller number of permanent settlers numbering around 23 000 23 many of whom had built personal wealth in gold established a prosperous economy based around a shift to deep underground gold mining Confidence of the city s early citizens in the enduring future of their city is evident in the sheer scale of many of the early public buildings generous public recreational spaces and opulence of many of its commercial establishments and private housing A local steam locomotive industry developed from 1854 with the Phoenix Foundry operating until 1906 24 The railway came to the town with the opening of the Geelong Ballarat line in 1862 and Ballarat developed as a major railway town 25 As the city grew the region s original indigenous inhabitants were quickly expelled to the fringe and by 1867 few remained 7 Post gold rush Edit The intersection of Lydiard and Sturt streets c 1905 shows a bustling city of trams horses and pedestrians From the late 1860s to the early 20th century Ballarat made a successful transition from a gold rush town to an industrial age city The ramshackle tents and timber buildings gradually made way for permanent buildings many impressive structures of solid stone and brick mainly built from wealth generated by early mining Prince Alfred Duke of Edinburgh visited between 9 and 13 December 1867 and as the first royal visit the occasion was met with great fanfare 26 The Prince Room was prepared at Craigs Royal Hotel for his stay 27 The city s first civic centre Prince Alfred Hall erected over the Yarrowee between the two municipalities was named in his honour during his visit The later attempt by Ballaratian Henry James O Farrell to assassinate the Prince was met with shock and great horror from locals 26 Ballarat was proclaimed a city in 1871 Gong Gong dam was built in 1877 to alleviate flooding and to provide a permanent water supply A direct railway to Melbourne was completed in December 1889 28 Many industries and workshops had been established as a result of manufacturing and servicing for the deep lead mining industry 20th century Edit Development of the Ballarat North Workshops was a major initiative to capitalise on the city s burgeoning role as a railway town and transition from a declining gold mining industry Local boosterists at the start of the 20th century adopted the nickname Athens of Australia first used to describe Ballarat by the jurist and politician Sir John Madden 29 30 31 32 The first electricity supply was completed in 1901 and that year a bluestone power station was built at the corner of Ripon Street and Wendouree Parade with the main aim of electrifying the city s tramway network 33 Despite such advancements mining activity slowed at this time and Ballarat s growth all but stopped leading to a decades long period of decline The Sunshine rail disaster in 1908 resulted in the death of dozens of Ballarat residents 34 and in August 1909 a great storm lashed the city resulting in the death of one person and the injury of seven others as well as the destruction of numerous homes 35 36 Ballarat s significant representation in World War I resulted in heavy human loss Around this time it was overtaken in population by the port city of Geelong further diminishing its provincial status 37 In response local lobbyists continually pushed the Victorian government for decentralisation the greatest success being the Victorian Railways opening the Ballarat North Workshops in April 1917 38 The Great Depression proved a further setback for Ballarat with the closure of many institutions and causing the worst unemployment in the city s history with over a thousand people in the dole queue 26 38 The city s two municipalities Ballarat East and West Town Councils finally amalgamated in 1921 to form the City of Ballarat 26 32 While deep the depression was also brief The interwar period proved a period of recovery for Ballarat with a number of major infrastructure projects well underway including a new sewerage system In 1930 Ballarat Airport was established By 1931 Ballarat s economy and population was recovering strongly with further diversification of industry although in 1936 Geelong displaced it as the state s second largest city 39 During World War II an expanded Ballarat airport was the base of the RAAF Wireless Air Gunners School as well as the base for USAAF Liberator bomber squadrons In 1942 Ballarat became connected to the state electricity grid by a 66 000 kV line 33 Prior to this power supply was generated locally During World War II Ballarat was the location of RAAF No 1 Inland Aircraft Fuel Depot IAFD completed in 1942 in the defence of Australia against a Japanese invasion and decommissioned on 29 August 1944 Usually consisting of four tanks 31 fuel depots were built across Australia for the storage and supply of aircraft fuel for the RAAF and the US Army Air Forces at a total cost of 900 000 1 800 000 40 In the post war era Ballarat s growth continued In response to an acute housing shortage significant suburban expansion occurred An extensive Housing Commission of Victoria estate was built on the former Ballarat Common today known as Wendouree West 41 The estate was originally planned to contain over 750 prefabricated houses While planning for the estate began in 1949 main construction occurred between 1951 and 1962 The 1950s brought a new optimism to the city On 17 April 1952 it was announced that Lake Wendouree was to be the venue for rowing events of the 1956 Summer Olympics 26 and work soon began on an Olympic village in Gillies Street A new prefabricted power terminal substation at Norman Street Ballarat North was constructed between 1951 and 1953 by the State Electricity Commission 42 The first Begonia Festival a highly successful community celebration was held in 1953 Elizabeth II visited on 8 March 1954 26 The Civic Centre Prince Alfred Hall had burned down suspiciously that year however a new Civic Hall was constructed and opened in March 1955 On 23 November 1956 the Olympic torch was carried through the city and the following day the rowing events were held at the lake 26 On 2 March 1958 the Queen Mother visited Ballarat During the following decades the city saw increased threats to its heritage In 1964 the Ballarat City Council passed laws banning pillar supported verandahs in the CBD which threatened the removal of historic cast iron verandahs in the city The by law was met by staunch opposition from the National Trust which had begun campaigning to protect some of the city s most historic buildings 26 58 By the 1970s Ballarat began to officially recognise its substantial heritage and the first heritage controls were recommended to ensure its preservation With the opening of Sovereign Hill the city made a rapid shift to become a major cultural tourist destination visited by thousands each year During the 1970s a further 300 houses were constructed at Wendouree West Private housing in the adjacent suburb of Wendouree closely matched and eventually eclipsed this by the mid 1960s The suburb of greater Wendouree and Wendouree West had evolved as the suburban middle class heart of the city Charles Prince of Wales visited Ballarat on 28 October 1974 during which he toured Sovereign Hill the Ballarat College of Advanced Education s new Mt Helen Campus and the White Swan Reservoir and spoke at Civic Hall 43 Ballarat played an important role in the Stolen Generation throughout the 20th century where the Ballarat Orphanage saw Aboriginal children who had been taken from their families The Ballarat and District Aboriginal Co operative BADAC was established by members of the Ballarat and district Aboriginal community in 1979 It became a co operative to deliver health social welfare and community development programs to local Aboriginal people In 2017 local Aboriginal community elder Ted Lovett was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for services to the indigenous community and for his works in eliminating racism in sports in south west Victoria Karen Heap and Ted Lovett were listed on the Victoria s Aboriginal Honour Role both in part for their work at BADAC 44 21st century Edit View of central Ballarat from St Peter s Anglican Church The city continued to grow at the national average throughout the late 20th century and early 21st century In 2008 the City of Ballarat released a plan directing that growth of the city over the next 30 years is to be concentrated to the west of the city centre The Ballarat West Growth Area Plan was approved by the city and state government in 2010 planning an extensive fringe development consisting of 14 000 new homes and up to 40 000 new residents including new activity centres and employment zones 45 46 The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse final report published on 15 December 2017 found that 139 people made a claim of child sexual abuse to the Diocese of Ballarat between 1980 and 2015 and 21 alleged perpetrators were identified in these claims Seventeen of the 21 alleged and convicted perpetrators were priests which is 8 7 of the priests who ministered during this period 47 About 45 victims are estimated to have committed suicide 48 Geography Edit Ballarat s skyline is hidden from this view of the city looking east across Lake Wendouree to Mount Warrenheip Mount Warrenheip dominating the skyline from Dawson Street with the town hall clock tower on the right Ballarat lies at the foothills of the Great Dividing Range in Central Western Victoria Also known as the Central Highlands it is named so because of its elevated position and moderate hills and terrain with a lack of any alpine mountains that are situated a few hundred kilometres NE The city lies within a mostly gently undulating section of the midland volcanic plains which stretch from Creswick in the north to Rokewood in the south and from Lal Lal in the south east to Pittong in the west Geologically the area consists of alluvial sediment and volcanic flows originating from now extinct volcanoes such as nearby Buninyong 750m 2460 ft and Warrenheip 746m 2446 ft which are the area s tallest peaks As a result the basin contains large areas of fertile agricultural soil 49 Ballarat itself is situated on an alluvial basin of the Yarrowee catchment and its tributary creeks penetrated by sub ranges of schists composed of granites and quartz Along with the visible river and creeks the catchment basin has numerous active and inactive aquifers and natural wetlands which are used for urban water supply agriculture and recreation There are numerous densely forested areas around Ballarat however due to historic wood milling and land clearing there remain no old growth forests The major natural bodies of water are in the west and include the former shallow swamps of Lake Wendouree which is central to the city s western suburbs and beyond Winter s Swamp and the large Lake Burrumbeet wetland complex Almost all of the other numerous bodies of water have been created artificially and include several reservoirs the largest being the White Swan Reservoir and smaller suburban lakes such as Lake Esmond The contiguous urban area of Ballarat covers approximately 90 km2 35 sq mi of the local government area s 740 km2 286 sq mi 50 Approximately 90 of the urban area s land use is residential and suburban 50 From the city centre this area extends approximately 6 kilometres 4 miles north to the hills around Invermay approximately 7 5 km 4 7 mi east to Leigh Creek in the foothills of Mount Warrenheip approximately 7 km 4 mi west along the plains to Lucas and approximately 8 5 km 5 3 mi south along the Yarrowee River and Canadian Creek valley to the fringe of Buninyong 17 The central city is situated low in the valley of the Yarrowee River and surrounded by hills such that the city skyline is visible only from the hills and the lower lying inner eastern suburbs The reach of the Yarrowee River toward Ballarat Central becomes a stormwater drain and is completely covered over as it flows under the CBD Urban structure Edit See also Ballarat Central Map of the urban area grey and the extent of the municipal area The city is home to nationally significant heritage structures These include the Ballarat Botanical Gardens established 1857 51 with the greatest concentration of public statuary 52 the official Prime Ministers Avenue the longest running lyric theatre building Her Majesty s Theatre established 1875 53 the first municipal observatory established 1886 54 and the earliest and longest war memorial avenue the Avenue of Honour established between 1917 and 1919 55 Ballarat is a primarily low rise city The City of Ballarat defines two Major Activity Centres within the urban area the Central Business District CBD and Wendouree with a high concentration of business retail and community function based primarily on the Melbourne 2030 planning model and a further 11 neighbourhood activity centres 56 The tallest building in urban Ballarat is the seven storey Henry Bolte wing of the Ballarat Base Hospital 1994 Beyond the central area urban Ballarat extends into several suburban areas with a mixture of housing styles Predominant styles are 19th century villas Victorian terraces 57 Federation homes and Georgian red brick homes Settlement patterns around Ballarat consist of small villages and country towns some with less than a few thousand people The Central Business District located in Ballarat Central is a large mixed use office and retail district bounded to the north by railway lines to the west by Drummond Street to the south to Grant street and to the east by Princes Street and spanning the floodplain of the Yarrowee River Lydiard Sturt Streets Armstrong Doveton Dana Street and Bridge Street known as Bridge Mall along with the historic centre of East Ballarat Main Street and Bakery Hill have retained stands of commercial and civic buildings of state and national heritage significance The inner established suburbs were initially laid out around the key mining areas and include Ballarat East Bakery Hill Golden Point Soldiers Hill Black Hill Brown Hill Eureka Canadian Mount Pleasant Redan Sebastopol and Newington The post gold rush era has seen a boom in expansion extending the conurbation north south and west To the west Ballarat has expanded West to Lucas Alfredton Delacombe To The North West Wendouree Wendouree West and Miners Rest To the north it has expanded to Ballarat North Invermay Park 58 Invermay Victoria 59 Invermay and Nerrina to the east to Warrenheip and south to Sebastopol Mount Clear and Mount Helen with the urban area encroaching the large town of Buninyong Wendouree is currently the only major suburban activity centre with a large indoor shopping mall Stockland Shopping Centre expanded in 2007 60 and also has a number of surrounding retail parks including a strip shopping centre along Howitt Street including the large retail chain Harvey Norman Elsewhere are small suburban hubs with supermarkets such as IGA supermarkets and small stretches of shopfronts Unlike Melbourne Ballarat does not have a defined urban growth boundary 61 This has put continuing pressure on the city council to approve development applications for subdivisions outside of the city fringe In response to lobbying by landholders the Ballarat West Growth Area Plan a major greenfield land development plan was prepared and has approved by the city and state government to allow for planned fringe communities consisting of 14 000 new homes and up to 40 000 new residents effectively doubling the city s urban area by extending the urban sprawl from Sebastopol Delacombe and Alfredton west toward Bonshaw Smythes Creek and Cardigan 45 46 with a new suburb to be known as Lucas to be created 62 New activity centres have been developed at Delacombe and Alfredton Architecture Edit Victorian era buildings Ballarat is renowned for its Victorian architectural heritage In 2003 Ballarat was the first of two Australian cities to be registered as a member of the International League of Historical Cities and in 2006 hosted the 10th World League of Historical Cities Congress 63 The city s history is a major focus of the Collaborative Research Centre in Australian History part of Federation University Australia and is located at old Ballarat Gaol The legacy of the wealth generated during Ballarat s gold boom is still visible in a large number of fine stone buildings in and around the city especially in the Lydiard Street area This precinct contains some of Victoria s finest examples of Victorian era buildings many of which are on the Victorian Heritage Register or classified by the National Trust of Australia Notable civic buildings include the Town Hall 1870 72 the former Post Office 1864 the Ballarat Fine Art Gallery 1887 the Mechanics Institute 1860 1869 the Queen Victoria Wards of the Ballarat Base Hospital 1890s and the Ballarat railway station 1862 1877 1888 Other historic buildings include the Provincial Hotel 1909 Reid s Coffee Palace 1886 Craig s Royal Hotel 1862 1890 and Her Majesty s Theatre 1875 the oldest intact and operating lyric theatre in Australia 53 and Ballarat Fire Station 1864 1911 one of Victoria s oldest fire fighting structures 64 and the Jewish synagogue 1861 the oldest surviving synagogue on the Australian mainland 65 Streetscape with the former Post Office at the rear Ballarat East Fire Station the oldest continually operating fire station in the Southern Hemisphere and the site of the first operational telephone made by Henry Sutton Restoration of historic buildings is encouraged including a low interest council Heritage Loans Scheme 66 and the prevention of demolition by neglect discouraged by council policies 67 Since the 1970s 68 the local council has become increasingly aware of the economic and social value of heritage preservation 69 This is in stark contrast to the 1950s and 60s when Ballarat followed Melbourne in encouraging the removal of Victorian buildings verandahs in particular Recent restoration projects funded by the Ballarat include the reconstruction of significant cast iron lace verandahs including the Mining Exchange Art Gallery 2007 Mechanics institute 2005 70 on Lydiard Street and in 2010 the restoration of the Town Hall and the long neglected Unicorn Hotel facade on Sturt Street 71 Ballarat Citizens for Thoughtful Development formed in 1998 and was incorporated as Ballarat Heritage Watch in 2005 to ensure that the city s architectural heritage is given due consideration in the planning process 72 The Ballarat Botanical Gardens established in 1858 are recognised as the finest example of a regional botanical gardens in Australia and are home to many heritage listed exotic tree species and feature a modern glasshouse and horticultural centre and the Prime Ministers Avenue which features bronze busts of every past Australian Prime Minister Ballarat is notable for its very wide boulevards The main street is Sturt Street with over 2 kilometres 1 2 miles of central gardens known as the Sturt Street Gardens featuring bandstands fountains statues monuments memorials and lampposts Ballarat is home to the largest of a collection of Avenues of Honour in Victoria The 15 kilometre long 9 3 mile Ballarat Avenue of Honour consists of a total of approximately 4 000 trees mostly deciduous which in many parts arch completely over the road Each tree has a bronze plaque dedicated to a soldier from the Ballarat region who enlisted during World War I The Avenue of Honour and the Arch of Victory are on the Victorian Heritage Register and are seen by approximately 20 000 visitors each year The city also has the greatest concentration of public statuary in any Australian city with many parks and streets featuring sculptures and statues dating from the 1860s to the present Some of the other notable memorials located in the Sturt Street Gardens in the middle of Ballarat s main boulevard include a bandstand situated in the heart of the city that was funded and built by the City of Ballarat Band in 1913 as a tribute to the bandsmen of the RMS Titanic a fountain dedicated to the early explorers Burke and Wills and those dedicated to monarchs and those who have played pivotal roles in the development of the city and its rich social fabric These include Robert Burns Peter Lalor Sir Albert Coates Harold Edward Elliott Pompey Elliot William Dunstan King George V Queen Victoria and more Ballarat has an extensive array of significant war memorials the most recent of which is the Australian Ex Prisoner of War Memorial The most prominent memorial in the city is the Ballarat Victory Arch that spans the old Western Highway on the Western approaches of the city The archway serves as the focal point for the Avenue of Honour Other significant individual monuments located along Sturt Street include those dedicated to the Boer War 1899 1901 the World War II 1939 1945 cenotaph and Vietnam 1962 1972 located adjacent to the Arch of Victory Climate EditBallarat has a moderate oceanic climate Koppen climate classification Cfb 73 74 with four distinct seasons Its elevation ranging between 400 and 630 metres 1 310 and 2 070 feet above sea level causes its mean monthly temperatures to tend to be on average 3 to 5 C 5 to 9 F below those of Melbourne especially in winter citation needed The mean daily maximum temperature for January is 25 1 C 77 F 75 while the mean minimum is 10 9 C 52 F 75 In July the mean maximum is 10 0 C 50 F average July minimum is 3 2 C 38 F Ballarat has 55 2 clear days annually 75 The city has a well known reputation for unpredictable and extreme weather ranging from snowfall to intense heatwaves 76 Perhaps the most infamous feature of Ballarat s climate is the chilly winter often accentuated by driving winds 77 Fog is common on autumn and winter mornings but usually dissipates by mid morning Temperatures can dip below freezing from May to September however a low of 0 2 C is more common widespread frosts and fog are a regular sight Snowfall typically falls on nearby Mount Buninyong and Mount Warrenheip a few times a year but in the urban area only once or twice particularly during heavy winters Snow has been known to fall heavily with several inches accumulating even in the CBD Heavy snow seasons occurred in 1900 1902 and 1905 1907 with record falls in 1906 and moderate snow seasons were recorded during the 1940s and 1980s Snowfalls in the urban area have occurred in recent years November 2006 light 78 July 2007 heavy 79 80 June 2008 light 81 August 2008 light 82 August 2014 moderate 83 and June 2016 light 84 July 2017 light June 2018 moderate May 2019 light 85 and August and September 2020 light and heavy 86 Snowy scene in Sturt Gardens in 1905The mean annual rainfall is 693 millimetres 27 3 inches 75 with August being the wettest month 75 mm or 3 0 in There are an average of 198 rain free days per year 75 Like much of Australia Ballarat experiences cyclical drought and heavy rainfall Flooding of the Yarrowee catchment occurs occasionally In 1869 a serious flood of the Yarrowee River put most of the lower section of business district including Bridge and Grenville streets under water and caused the loss of two lives 87 Prolonged drought an average annual rainfall with falls averaging as low as 400 mm 16 in per year since 2001 caused Lake Wendouree to dry up completely for the first time in its history between 2006 and 2007 More recently higher rainfall levels have been recorded including 95 0 mm 3 74 in in the 24 hours to 9 am on 14 January 2011 88 ending a four day period of flooding rains across much of Victoria and Tasmania 89 90 91 and contributing to the wettest January on record with a total of 206 0 mm 8 11 in of rain for the month 88 92 The city s mean daily wind run is 470 km 93 almost twice that of Melbourne making it one of the windiest cities in Australia This in turn causes warm summers to feel substantially cooler and near freezing winter days to have a far below zero wind chill 94 Ballarat s highest maximum recorded temperature was 44 1 C 111 F on 7 February 2009 during the 2009 southeastern Australia heat wave 95 This was 2 1 C 3 8 F above the previous record of 42 0 C 108 F set on 25 January 2003 The lowest ever recorded minimum was 6 3 C 21 F at sunrise on 19 July 2015 96 Climate data for Ballarat Ballarat Aerodrome averages 1991 2020 records 1957 2021 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 42 0 107 6 44 1 111 4 37 9 100 2 32 2 90 0 26 1 79 0 21 6 70 9 19 1 66 4 23 0 73 4 27 9 82 2 33 4 92 1 37 3 99 1 43 5 110 3 44 1 111 4 Average high C F 26 2 79 2 25 7 78 3 22 9 73 2 18 4 65 1 14 2 57 6 10 9 51 6 9 9 49 8 11 3 52 3 14 1 57 4 17 3 63 1 20 4 68 7 23 5 74 3 18 0 64 4 Daily mean C F 18 1 64 6 18 4 65 1 16 2 61 2 12 6 54 7 9 8 49 6 7 3 45 1 6 6 43 9 7 4 45 3 9 1 48 4 11 1 52 0 13 9 57 0 15 9 60 6 12 2 54 0 Average low C F 11 0 51 8 11 5 52 7 9 9 49 8 7 0 44 6 5 1 41 2 3 6 38 5 3 0 37 4 3 1 37 6 4 4 39 9 5 9 42 6 7 9 46 2 9 5 49 1 6 9 44 4 Record low C F 0 7 33 3 1 4 29 5 0 6 30 9 4 1 24 6 4 5 23 9 4 6 23 7 6 3 20 7 5 0 23 0 4 6 23 7 3 6 25 5 1 0 30 2 1 0 30 2 5 6 21 9 Average precipitation mm inches 39 7 1 56 31 2 1 23 35 9 1 41 43 4 1 71 52 2 2 06 61 9 2 44 62 0 2 44 72 3 2 85 68 4 2 69 59 1 2 33 56 6 2 23 52 2 2 06 635 4 25 02 Average rainy days 7 7 6 9 8 5 11 7 15 8 18 2 19 9 18 6 16 8 14 5 11 8 10 5 160 9Average afternoon relative humidity 44 43 46 55 69 77 76 72 65 60 56 48 59Source 97 98 Environment EditNatural reserves and commons Edit Ballarat Town Common in autumn 2018 While there are no national parks in Ballarat s proximity Ballarat is bordered by extensive bushland to the north south and south west and sensitive wetlands to the east The most central park to the city is the 130 ha Victoria Park with a plethora of ovals and fields playgrounds walking tracks and quiet roads There are a number of nearby state parks and large reserves including the Enfield State Park 99 Creswick Regional Park Mount Warrenheip Flora Reserve Mount Buninyong Reserve and Lake Burrumbeet park There are also smaller parks like Black Hill Victoria Park Pioneer Park and Yarowee Reserve located within walking distance of the city centre Ballarat is unique in Australia and internationally for having retained much of its commons land which can be used by any resident of Ballarat Ballarat Town Common Ballarat West Town Common and Ballarat Common are located to the west of the city Ballarat Town Common can be accessed via Howe Street in Miners Rest and is used by dog walkers and ramblers especially because of its open grass fields and native wetland Ballarat West Town Common is presently farmed on by licensed farmers 100 The commons were reduced in size during the 20th century for property development 101 The region is home to a large koala population with protected areas established in the city s outer southern and eastern settlements 102 103 Pollution Edit Air quality in Ballarat is generally good 104 however dust is sometimes an issue in the summer months 105 and woodsmoke from fireplaces contributes to reductions in visibility in the winter months 106 Ballarat s waterways have historically been affected by heavy pollution from both mining and industry 107 The Ballarat Environment Network formed in 1993 to provide a voice for environmental and nature conservation issues in Ballarat and its surroundings 108 Another large lobby group for sustainability in the city is the Ballarat Renewable Energy And Zero Emissions BREAZE formed in 2006 109 The City of Ballarat released an Environment Sustainability Strategy for the city in 2007 110 Many parts of urban Ballarat have been affected by the introduction of exotic species particularly introduced flora Common gorse is one such problem which has prompted the formation of an official Ballarat Region Gorse Task Force in 1999 to control 111 European rabbits 112 and red foxes 113 cause significant environmental damage in the region s agriculture areas Economy EditThe economy of Ballarat is driven by all three economic sectors though contemporary Ballarat has emerged as a primarily service economy with its main industry being the service industry and its key areas of business including tourism hospitality retail professional services government administration and education Secondary sector including manufacturing which had grown in the 20th century remains an important sector The city s historic primary sector roots including mining and agriculture continue to play a role though one that has declined since the 20th century Industries emerging this century include information technology service sector and renewable energy Service industries Edit As a major service centre for the populous goldfields region Ballarat has large sectors of employment in business including retail professional services and trades as well as state and federal government branch offices for public services and health care and non government service organisations Collectively these industries employ more than half of the city s workforce and generate the bulk of the city s economic activity Ballarat is the main retail economy in the region The city has several key retail districts including a pedestrian mall known as Bridge Mall comprising over 100 traders There are also indoor shopping malls including Central Square Shopping Centre and Stockland Wendouree better known as Wendouree Village with a large number of specialty stores Major department stores include Myer Target Big W Kmart Harvey Norman and Harris Scarfe 114 Additionally each of the major supermarkets Coles Woolworths IGA and Aldi are represented Servicing the financial sector are branches of the big four Australian retail banks National Australia Bank ANZ Commonwealth Bank and Westpac along with Bendigo amp Adelaide Bank and St George Bank and a number of smaller independent financial services firms Federation University Australia exports education through a large international students program and throughout Australia through distance education programs In recent years a large technology park the Ballarat Technology Park with communications centre has been established with tenants including IBM and employing over 1 400 people 115 Ballarat West Employment Zone BWEZ is located on the north west fringe of Ballarat adjacent to the Ballarat Airport existing rail infrastructure and the Ballarat Western Link Road 116 Ballarat West Employment Zone BWEZ will become the engine room for jobs and economic growth in Ballarat over the next 20 years The project involves the development of surplus Crown Land for industrial wholesale logistics construction commercial and residential uses encouraging employment growth in Ballarat and the surrounding region BWEZ will also include a freight hub secure infrastructure and access to road rail and ports 116 Businesses located un BWEZ include CHS Broadbent Westlab Pty Ltd Agrimac Milestone Benchtops Kane Transport and Office Vision Tourism and hospitality Edit Main Street in Sovereign Hill a large open air gold mining museum is Ballarat s most famous attraction Ballarat attracts 2 2 million visitors a year 117 and the tourism and hospitality industry is a A 480 million a year sector which accounts for around 15 of Ballarat s economy and employs around 2 870 people 118 Tourism in Ballarat is promoted by Ballarat Regional Tourism 119 A significant heritage tourism industry has not grown substantially in Ballarat since the 1960s Ballarat is most notable for the award winning open air museum known as Sovereign Hill a recreated 1850s gold mining settlement opened in 1970 Sovereign Hill is Ballarat s biggest tourism drawcard and is consistently rated among the best outdoor museums in the world and continues to expand Sovereign Hill accounts for over half a million of Ballarat s visitors and 40 million in tourism revenue 120 Several businesses and attractions have capitalised on Ballarat s gold mining history They include Kryal Castle 1972 Gold Rush Mini Golf 2002 featuring the Big Miner 2006 one of Australia s big things although the original proposal appeared larger and for the miner to hold the Eureka Flag 121 at Ballarat s eastern entrance Other tourist attractions include the Eureka Centre The Gold Museum Ballarat 122 Ballarat Botanic gardens and Lake Wendouree the Museum of Australian Democracy the Ballarat Tramway Museum and Ballarat Ghost Tours and Ballarat Wildlife Park A large number of Ballarat hotels motels and restaurants service the tourism industry The Ballarat Tourist Association is an industry based non profit membership organisation representing the city s tourism industry Ballarat honours its rich history by hosting a number of annual festivals with historical and cultural focus including the Ballarat Begonia Festival Ballarat Heritage Weekend and Ballarat Beat Rockabilly Festival 123 Manufacturing Edit According to the 2006 Australian Census manufacturing is Ballarat s third largest employment sector accounting for 14 8 of all workers 124 Ballarat attracts investment from several international manufacturers The Australian headquarters of Mars Incorporated was established in Ballarat in 1979 with the main Ballarat factory producing popular confectionery including Mars bars 125 Snickers and M amp M s for the Australian market as well as expanding in 2013 to produce Maltesers 126 McCain Foods Limited Australian headquarters was established in Ballarat in 1970 and the company continues to expand its operations 127 The Ballarat North Workshops is a major manufacturer of public transportation products with current investment from Alstom 128 Ballarat also has a large number of home grown companies producing textiles general industrial engineering food products brick and tiles building components prefabricated housing components and automotive components Brewing was once a large scale operation with many large businesses including the public company Phoenix Brewery and although large scale brewing has ceased the city retains a substantial microbrewery industry 129 Primary sector Edit Replica of the Welcome Nugget found at Ballarat the second largest gold nugget discovered in recorded history Though historically an important sector the production of Ballarat s primary sector declined for many decades recovering only marginally since 2006 130 Where historically the mining industry supported tens of thousands of workers or the majority of the population today agriculture dominates the sector though collectively both industries employ less than thousand people or just over 2 of the City of Ballarat s total workforce 131 Ballarat rose to prominence as a goldrush boomtown though gold no longer plays a pivotal role in the economy of the city Nevertheless deep underground mining continues to the present date with a single main mine operating There are still thought to be large undiscovered gold reserves in the Ballarat region with investigations being made by local and national companies 132 Lihir Gold invested in Ballarat Goldfields in 2006 133 however it downscaled its operations in 2009 due to the expense of extraction 134 before selling its stake in 2010 to Castlemaine Goldfields 135 Along with gold lignite coal kaolin clay and iron ore have also been mined in the Ballarat region and nearby Lal Lal however many of the resource deposits have since been exhausted An active quarrying industry with large enterprises including Boral Limited 136 extracts and manufactures building materials from the Ballarat region including clays aggregates cements asphalts Approximately half 38 000 hectares or 94 000 acres of the municipality s area is rural with optimal conditions for agriculture including rich volcanic soils and climate 130 This area is used primarily for agriculture and animal husbandry and generates more than 37 million in commodities 137 The region supports an active potato growing industry that has supplied local food manufacturers including McCain though more recently has been threatened by cheaper imports 138 Other large crops include grains vegetables grapes and berries Cattle and poultry stocks including sheep cows and pigs support an active local meat and dairy industry The Ballarat Livestock Selling Centre is the largest cattle exchange in regional Victoria 139 The Ballarat Agricultural and Pastoral Society formed in 1856 140 and has run the Ballarat Show annually since 1859 141 A 7 5 million 142 forestry industry is active in nearby state forests as well as on a small scale in the urban area along the Canadian Valley around the suburbs of Mt Clear and Mt Helen areas with pine plantations and sawmill operations 143 Renewable energy Edit Part of the Waubra Wind Farm The Ballarat region has a rapidly growing renewable energy industry in particular due to its abundant wind energy attracting significant investment and generating revenue for local landholders and local councils The region is also a source of bountiful geothermal energy 144 solar power 144 and biomass 145 146 although to date only its wind solar and hydroelectricity has been harvested commercially All local commercially produced electricity is sent to the National Electricity Market Wind energy is generated by local wind farms The largest Waubra Wind Farm completed in 2009 is capable of producing enough electricity to power a city 3 to 4 times the size of Ballarat 147 Other significant nearby wind farms include Mount Mercer completed 2014 which produces enough energy to power 100 000 homes equivalent to Ballarat s population 148 149 The first community owned wind farm in Australia the Hepburn Wind Project at Leonards Hill completed in 2011 produces the equivalent amount of electricity used by the town of Daylesford 150 Hydroelectricity is generated at White Swan reservoir micro hydro plant established in 2008 and producing the equivalent electricity needs of around 370 homes 151 Ballarat Solar Park opened in 2009 at the Airport site in Mitchell Park is Victoria s first ground mounted flat plate and grid connected photovoltaic farm Built by Sharp Corporation for Origin Energy it is 14 993 m2 161 380 sq ft and generates the equivalent electricity needs of around 150 homes 152 Demographics Edit St Peter s Anglican Church which represents the second most common religious affiliation in Ballarat Ballarat is the 4th largest inland city in Australia and the 3rd largest Victorian city behind Melbourne and Geelong The 2016 Australian national census indicated that the permanent population of the urban area was 101 588 153 out of the City of Ballarat s population of 104 355 and a total of 45 653 households 154 The population of Ballarat has increased moderately to 105 471 in June 2018 5 having an annual growth year on year of 1 78 since June 2013 slightly faster than the national rate of 1 56 during the same period 5 The recently accelerated growth rate has been attributed by demographers to increased commuter activity arising from surging house and land prices in Melbourne coupled with public transport improvements between Ballarat and Melbourne citation needed While most of the city s population can trace their ancestry to Anglo Celtic descent 8 2 of the population are born overseas 155 Of them the majority 4 2 come from North East Europe 155 3 4 speak a language other than English 155 14 4 of the population is over the age of 65 155 The median age in Ballarat is 35 8 years 156 Ballarat s ethnic make up is partly the result of the mid 19th Century gold rush where people of Celtic Anglo Saxon and East Asian descent emigrated here in the hope of landing a fortune The average income of Ballarat while lower than Melbourne is higher than average for regional Victoria 157 Ballaratians in the 2007 08 financial year earned on average A 38 850 a year 157 The highest earners living in the city s inner suburbs with a mean of 53 174 a year 158 while the lower earners are centred on the city s southern suburbs 157 According to the 2006 Census Ballarat s working population is largely white collar 52 1 consisting of Management Professionals Clerical and Administrative Workers and Sales Workers while 32 9 are blue collar working in Technicians and Trades Labouring or Machinery Operation 155 56 5 of households had access to the Internet in 2006 155 The unemployment rate as of June 2011 was 7 8 159 50 3 of the population have completed further education after high school 155 Christianity is the most common religion in Ballarat 56 3 indicated that they were Christian while 36 9 stated they had no religion and a further 9 1 did not answer the question Catholics 24 3 Anglicans 10 6 and the Uniting Church 6 8 were the largest Christian denominations 160 Governance Edit Ballarat Town Hall Council Chamber in Ballarat Town Hall Sturt Street is the seat of local government for the City of Ballarat The council was created in 1994 as an amalgamation of a number of other municipalities in the region The city is made up of 3 wards each represented by three councillors elected once every four years by postal voting 161 The Mayor of Ballarat currently Daniel Moloney is elected from these councillors by their colleagues for a one year term The Town Hall and annexe contains some council offices however the council s administrative headquarters are located at the council owned Phoenix Building and the leased Gordon Buildings on the opposite side of Bath Lane 162 In state politics Ballarat is located in the Legislative Assembly districts of Buninyong and Wendouree with both of these seats currently held by the Australian Labor Party 163 In federal politics Ballarat is located in a single House of Representatives division the Division of Ballarat The Division of Ballarat has been a safe Australian Labor Party seat since 2001 164 and was the seat of the second Prime Minister of Australia Alfred Deakin Law enforcement is overseen from regional police headquarters at the law complex in Dana Street with a single local police station operating in Buninyong Due to an increase in crime rates and population two additional local police stations were proposed in 2011 one each for the suburbs of North Ballarat and Sebastopol 165 Justice is conducted locally overseen through branches of the Supreme County Magistrates and Children s Court of Victoria which operate out of the Ballarat courts Complex adjacent police headquarters in Dana Street 166 Corrections at least in the longer term are no longer handled locally since the closure of the Ballarat Gaol in 1965 Offenders can be detained in 25 available cells at the police complex though are commonly transferred to nearby Corrections Victoria facilities such as the Hopkins Correctional Centre in Ararat 167 Public safety and emergency services are provided by several state funded organisations including local volunteer based organisations Storms and flooding are handled by the State Emergency Service SES Mid West Region Headquarters at Wendouree Bushfires are handled by the Country Fire Authority District 15 Headquarters and Grampians Region Headquarters at Wendouree 168 and urban structure fires are handled by multiple urban fire brigades operating at fire stations including the Ballarat Fire Brigade at Barkly Street Ballarat East Ballarat City Fire Brigade at Sturt Street Ballarat Central and suburban stations including Wendouree and Sebastopol Medical emergency and paramedic services are provided through Ambulance Victoria and include the Rural Ambulance Victoria St John Ambulance and Ballarat Base Hospital ambulance services 169 City of Ballarat is responsible for coordinating the Municipal Emergency Management Planning Committee MEMPC which prepares the Municipal Emergency Management Plan which is actioned in conjunction with local police 170 Media EditNewspapers Edit Ballarat has two local newspapers one owned by Australian Community Media and one a private equity The Courier is a daily and The Ballarat Times News Group is a free weekly The latter is distributed across most of the city on Thursday and contains news of community events advertisements for local businesses and a classifieds section Ballarat was the hub of Australian Community Media s Victoria production and manufacturing with all printed material for the state coming from the Wendouree print site until it closed in September 2020 Radio stations Edit Radio House Lydiard Street North Home to 3BA and Power FM Local radio stations include 3BA Power FM and several community radio stations There is also a Ballarat branch of ABC Local Radio s national network 102 3 FM 3BA local classic hits commercial radio station 103 1 FM Power FM 103 1 FM local top 40 commercial radio station 99 9 FM Voice FM 99 9 formerly known as 3BBB local community radio station 107 9 FM ABC Ballarat government funded local news current affairs light entertainment and talkback 103 9 FM Good News Radio 103 9 Christian community based radio station Television Edit Television station BTV Channel 6 Ballarat commenced transmission of test patterns on 17 March 1962 Today Ballarat is serviced by numerous free to air High Definition and Standard Definition Digital television services Two television broadcasting stations are located in the city including WIN WIN HD 9Life 9Go and 9Gem sub licensees of the Nine Network and Prime7 Prime7 HD 7Two 7mate and 7flix a sub licensee of Seven Network These two stations broadcast relayed services throughout regional Victoria The city also receives Southern Cross 10 10HD 10 Peach 10 Bold 10 Shake and Sky News Regional sub licensees of Network 10 which is based in Bendigo but operates a local office Ballarat television maintains a similar schedule to the national television network but maintains local commercials and regional news programming WIN previously presented a 30 minute local WIN News bulletin from its studios in the city where WIN News bulletins for Albury Bendigo Gippsland Shepparton and Mildura were also broadcast In 2015 the Ballarat studios closed with production of the regional Victorian news bulletins being relocated to Wollongong in New South Wales where they now originate from 171 WIN retains reporters and camera crews for its Ballarat bulletin in the city Southern Cross 10 airs short local news updates like Prime7 throughout the day broadcast from its Hobart studios Prime7 airs short local news and weather updates throughout the day broadcast from its Canberra studios with an office in the city In addition to commercial television services Ballarat receives Government ABC ABC1 ABC2 ABC3 ABC News 24 and SBS SBS One and Two television services On 5 May 2011 analog television transmissions ceased in most areas of regional Victoria and some border regions including Ballarat and surrounding areas All local free to air television services are now broadcasting in digital transmission only This was done as part of the federal government s plan for digital terrestrial television in Australia where all analogue transmission systems are gradually turned off and replaced with modern DVB T transmission systems Subscription television services are provided by Neighbourhood Cable Foxtel and SelecTV Education EditMain article Education in Ballarat Federation University Australia s SMB campus is set among heritage buildings including the former School of Mines and Industry left Ballarat Mechanics Institute Ballarat has two universities Federation University and a campus of the Australian Catholic University Formerly the University of Ballarat Federation University Australia was opened in 2014 It originated as the Ballarat School of Mines founded in 1870 and was once affiliated with the University of Melbourne The main campus is located in Mount Helen approximately 6 kilometres 3 7 miles southeast of the city The university also has campuses in the Ballarat CBD Horsham Berwick Brisbane Churchill Ararat and Stawell The Australian Catholic University s Ballarat campus is located on Mair Street It was formerly the Aquinas Training College run by the Ballarat East Sisters of Mercy in 1909 It is ACU s only campus located outside of a capital city Ballarat has five State Government operated secondary schools of which Ballarat High School established in 1907 is the oldest Ballarat High School and Mount Clear College are the only state school members of the Ballarat Associated Schools The three remaining schools are Phoenix College and the two newly formed schools Mount Rowan Secondary College and Woodmans Hill Secondary College which emerged from the old Ballarat Secondary College 172 Phoenix College was formed in 2012 as an amalgamation of Sebastopol College and Redan Primary School 173 The city is well serviced by Catholic schools with eight primary schools and three secondary colleges which include the all boys St Patrick s College 174 the all girls Loreto College and the co educational Damascus College which was formed by the amalgamation of St Martin s in the Pines St Paul s College and Sacred Heart College in 1995 Ballarat has three other non government secondary schools Ballarat Christian College Ballarat Clarendon College and Ballarat Grammar School The later two schools are day and boarding schools who provide education from Preschool to Year 12 Both of these co educational schools are classified as academically excellent as the only Ballarat schools to be ranked on the tables of the top 100 Victorian schools based on median VCE scores and percentage of scores of 40 and above In 2015 Clarendon was placed at 9th best VCE results in the State above Melbourne Grammar Geelong College Scotch College Trinity Grammar School Victoria Xavier College and Haileybury College Ballarat Grammar was placed at 82nd above Wesley College Geelong Grammar and Tintern 175 The City of Ballarat has three public libraries the largest and most extensive of which is the City of Ballarat Library run by the City of Ballarat and located on Doveton Street North 176 Another library service is provided by the Ballarat Mechanics Institute in Sturt Street which is the oldest library in the city and a significant heritage site it contains a collection of historic archival and rare reference material as well as more general books Arts and culture Edit Ballarat Fine Art Gallery the oldest and largest art gallery in regional Australia The Ballarat Fine Art Gallery houses one of Australia s oldest and most extensive collections of early Australian works It is considered to have the best Australian collection outside any capital city in Australia Federation University Australia operates the Post Office Gallery in the Wardell designed former Post Office on the corner of Sturt and Lydiard Streets 177 Events and festivals Edit Ballarat is home to many annual festivals and events that attract thousands of visitors The oldest large annual event is the Ballarat Agricultural Show since 1859 currently held at the Ballarat Showgrounds and has attracted attendances of up to 30 000 and is an official public holiday for residents of the city 178 179 Lake Wendouree is featured in many including the biggest and most prominent is the Begonia Festival held annually since 1953 180 SpringFest held annually since 2001 attracts more than 15 000 people from around Victoria 181 182 and features market stalls and activities around the lake Annual Agricultural Society Show at Ballarat Showgrounds Wendouree The controversial Ballarat Swap Meet formerly the Super Southern Swap Meet and held annually since 1989 attracts 30 000 visitors a year 183 Ballarat Heritage Weekend held annually since 2006 celebrates the city s heritage with activities such as historic vehicles and displays in and around the CBD and has attracted as many as 14 500 visitors a year from around Victoria 184 185 186 The Ballarat Beer Festival at the City Oval since 2012 has attracted more than 4 000 visitors 187 The Ballarat Airport Open Day Ballarat s unofficial air show held annually since 2009 also attracts thousands 188 Other minor cultural festivals include the Ballarat Writers Festival Ballarat International Foto Biennale and the Goldfields Music Festival Entertainment Edit Her Majesty s Theatre built in 1875 Ballarat has a lively and well established theatrical community with several local ensembles as well as a number of large performing arts venues Major performing arts venues include the 900 capacity Her Majesty s Theatre the Wendouree Centre for Performing Arts Mary s Mount Theatre and the Post Office Box Theatre The Ballarat Civic Hall is a large public building constructed in 1958 as a general purpose venue Its stripped classical design was heavily criticised during its planning however it has gained some cultural significance to the city with its cavernous spaces holding many significant events over the years Civic Hall was closed in 2002 and public pressure forced the council to redevelop it in 2018 189 as a modern performing arts and exposition centre The refurbished building is a modern interpretation of its original 1950s built form and features a 1000 capacity main hall capable of use for concerts meetings and civic events Ballarat has its own symphony orchestra the Ballarat Symphony Orchestra which was formed in 1987 Some notable theatre organisations in Ballarat include BLOC Ballarat Light Opera Company founded in 1959 190 Ballarat is also the home to Australia s oldest and largest annual performing arts eisteddfod The Royal South Street Eisteddfod is an all encompassing performing arts festival and competition event that is conducted over twelve weeks annually 191 In the 1970s the Ballarat urban area contained no less than 60 hotels The introduction of gaming machines in the early 1990s has brought about significant change in the city entertainment precincts By 2006 at least 20 hotels had closed and some of those that remain have been redeveloped as dining and or gaming venues Gaming machines have brought significant revenue to the remaining hotels sports and social clubs which has enabled many to expand and modernise The city has several dance clubs as well as a highly active live music and jazz scene Hotels are popular meeting places for young people The city has many fine restaurants wine bars and eateries as well as themed restaurants A large cinema complex consisting of several theatres is located behind the facade of the old Regent cinemas in the heart of the city Dance parties are popular within the Ballarat area BTR is an organisation founded in 2006 that has begun hosting dance events in Ballarat Cultural depictions Edit Ballarat has inspired many visual artists Eugene von Guerard documented the city s establishment as a gold digging settlement while Albert Henry Fullwood and Knut Bull depicted the city s boom era streetscapes 192 193 Ballarat features prominently in literature and fiction including The Boscombe Valley Mystery a short story from Arthur Conan Doyle s The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes 1891 King Billy of Ballarat and Other Stories 1892 by Morley Roberts The Fortunes of Richard Mahony 1917 by Henry Handel Richardson Murder on the Ballarat Train 1993 by Kerry Greenwood and Illywhacker 1985 by Peter Carey Ballarat is also a popular filming location 194 Australia s second oldest feature film Eureka Stockade 1907 is the first in a line of films about the historic Ballarat event The city makes cameos in Dogs in Space 1986 My Brother Jack 2001 Ned Kelly 2003 and The Writer 2005 195 The television series The Doctor Blake Mysteries 2012 2017 is set in Ballarat and also mostly shot there 196 197 The series was picked by the Seven Network which proposes to make several telemovies without the Blake character picking up the story line after his death leaving his widow Jean 198 199 Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Ballarat after the city the corvette HMAS Ballarat J184 and the frigate HMAS Ballarat FFH 155 Sport and recreation Edit Ballarat Football Club 1889 The club was founded in 1860 and is one of the oldest football clubs in the world Australian rules football is the most popular spectator and participation sports in Ballarat It has its own dedicated stadium Eureka Stadium which serves as a venue of the Australian Football League AFL as well as the home ground of the semi professional North Ballarat Roosters which formerly competed in the Victorian Football League VFL The Ballarat Football League established in 1893 features six local teams including the Ballarat Football Club which was founded in 1860 and remains one of the world s oldest football clubs Other Ballarat based teams compete in the regional Central Highlands Football League Cricket is Ballarat s second most popular sport It has three international standard cricket ovals including Eastern Oval which was one of the host venues of the 1992 Cricket World Cup The Ballarat Cricket Association is the city s principle cricket competition Soccer is also popular in Ballarat Based at Morshead Park Stadium 200 the semi professional Ballarat City FC competes in the National Premier League the third tier competition of Australian soccer Melbourne s Western United FC plays four A League matches per year at Eureka Stadium 201 Basketball is played in Ballarat with the Ballarat Sports Events Centre hosting South East Australian Basketball League matches involving the Ballarat Miners and Ballarat Rush Netball is similarly popular with many netball clubs affiliated with local Australian rules clubs Athletics is and has historically been very popular with 4 local clubs competing at the BRAC 202 Ballarat Regional Athletics Centre located at the Llanberis Athletics Track in Golden Point 5 minutes from the CBD The city features a rich and decorated athletics history with Australia s most successful track and field athlete Jared Tallent Racewalker and many other Olympians Steve Moneghetti Greg Smith Paralympian having been born in Ballarat Lake Wendouree hosted the rowing and canoeing events for the 1956 Summer Olympics Rowing and kayaking is centred on Lake Wendouree which hosts the Victorian Schools Rowing Championships as well as the annual Head of the Lake rowing regatta The city hosted rowing events for the 1956 Summer Olympic Games Horse racing and greyhound racing are also popular with dedicated facilities The Ballarat Turf Club schedules around 28 race meetings a year including the Ballarat Cup meeting in mid November 203 Athletics facilities include an international standard athletics track at Golden Point Swimming and water sport is facilitated at two Olympic sized pools as well as an indoor 25 metre 82 foot competition short course pool The main facility is the Ballarat Aquatic Centre located in Lake Gardens Baseball was first organised in Australia at Ballarat in 1857 204 and three local teams compete in the Geelong Baseball Association Golf is played at four main venues which include the Ballarat Golf Course in Alfredton home to the Ballarat Golf Club 205 The Ballarat Roller Derby League was formed in 2008 and held their first match in 2009 They have two teams who compete in local events and a combined travelling team the Rat Pack who compete in interleague roller derby competitions 206 Ballarat along with other cities in regional Victoria will host the 2026 Commonwealth Games with Eureka Stadium flagged to host athletics the Eastern Oval T20 cricket and Selkirk Stadium to host boxing Mars StadiumInfrastructure EditHealth Edit Ballarat Base Hospital s Henry Bolte wing Ballarat has two major hospitals The public health services are managed by Ballarat Health Services 207 including the Ballarat Base which services the entire region and the Queen Elizabeth Centre for aged care on Ascot Street Sth The St John of God Health Care centre also on Drummond Street Nth established in 1915 is currently the largest private hospital in regional Victoria 208 The Ballarat Regional Integrated Cancer Centre BRICC on the corner of Drummond and Sturt Street includes a number of facilities focused on cancer treatment 209 The Heart Foundation did a study in 2014 that Ballarat had the highest level of physical inactivity 85 3 per cent in Australia and that 32 9 per cent of residents were deemed obese 210 Utilities Edit Ballarat s residents are serviced by a wide range of public utilities including water gas and electricity telephony and data communications supplied overseen and regulated by state based authorities and private enterprise and local council Water supply as well as sewage collection and disposal are provided by Central Highlands Water 211 Drinking water is sourced from a network reservoirs all located in the highlands to the east however the majority is sourced from two main reservoirs Lal Lal and White Swan The Lal Lal Reservoir built in 1970 212 with a capacity of 59 500 megalitres 1 57 1010 US gallons 213 is Ballarat s largest water catchment accounting for approximately two thirds of the city s water usage 214 The White Swan reservoir built in 1952 212 with a 14 100 Ml 3 7 109 US gal capacity supplies most of the remainder 213 Since May 2008 the White Swan has been topped up by water from Bendigo s Sandhurst Reservoir through the Goldfields Superpipe with water originally sourced from the Goulburn River system 215 Kirks Reservoir built between 1860 and 1862 with a capacity of 400 Ml 110 000 000 US gal and Gong Gong Reservoir built in 1877 at Gong Gong Victoria 216 with a capacity of 1 902 Ml 502 000 000 US gal 213 are historic main water supplies now maintained for emergency use 217 Other reservoirs supplying Ballarat include Moorabool reservoir located in Bolwarrah Victoria 218 with a capacity of 6 738 Ml 1 780 109 US gal Wilson s Reservoir located in the Wombat State Forest with a capacity of 1 013 Ml 268 000 000 US gal Beales reservoir built 1863 219 located at Wallace with a capacity of 415 Ml 110 000 000 US gal and Pincotts reservoir built 1867 219 located at Leigh Creek Victoria 220 with a capacity of 218 Ml 58 000 000 US gal 221 Sewage is managed by two plants the Ballarat North Wastewater Treatment Plant and the Ballarat South Waste Water Treatment Plant 222 Residential electricity is supplied by Victorian electricity distributor Powercor while residential natural gas is supplied by AGL Energy Telephone services are provided via the Doveton Street BRAT telephone exchange 223 which was originally built by the Australian Telecommunications Commission now known as Telstra who remains its owner though Optus now also operates services from this facility The city s cellular network currently uses Universal Mobile Telecommunications System UMTS Telstra has provided mobile telecommunications to Ballarat since 2003 initially as CDMA Optus provided competition with its entrance to the market in 2003 along with significant service upgrades in 2004 224 followed by Vodafone in mid 2009 225 Data communications are provided by several companies Telstra was the first company to provide dial up Internet access via the Ballarat exchange however the first network for broadband Internet access available in the city was a hybrid optical fiber cable and coaxial cable built by Neighbourhood Cable in 2001 226 Since then Telstra and Optus have entered the Ballarat market providing Asymmetric digital subscriber line ADSL services for residential Internet access from four main exchanges Ballarat Wendouree Howitt Street Sebastopol Skipton Street and Alfredton Cuthberts Road These companies also provide mobile data access Evolved HSPA and since late 2011 3GPP Long Term Evolution 4G Ballarat s rollout of the National Broadband Network NBN is seen as vital for the city s growing IT industry 227 228 During Ballarat s first stage NBN rollout in 2012 17 800 homes will be directly connected to the network via optical fibre cable 229 Transportation Edit Arch of Victory over the Avenue of Honour The motor vehicle is the main form of transport in Ballarat A network of state highways radiate from Ballarat and the Western Freeway A8 dual carriageway bypasses the central city to the north of the urban area providing a direct road connection to Melbourne approximately 90 minutes westward to Ararat approximately 75 minutes and Horsham Five freeway interchanges service the urban area East Ballarat half diamond interchange at Victoria Street C805 Brown Hill interchange full diamond at Daylesford Ballarat Road C292 Creswick Road interchange full diamond at Wendouree A300 the Mount Rowan interchange half diamond at Gillies Road Wendouree C307 and the Mitchell Park interchange full diamond at Howe Street C287 The Midland Highway is a dual carriageway which runs north along Creswick Road to the Western Freeway interchange but becomes a single carriageway north of Ballarat to Creswick approximately 25 minutes and runs south as the dual carriageway of Skipton Road to Magpie before becoming a single carriageway to Geelong approximately 87 minutes The Glenelg Highway connects directly to Mount Gambier and the Sunraysia Highway west of Ballarat which connects directly to Mildura Sturt Street and Victoria Street both dual carriageways carry the bulk of the east west CBD traffic while Mair Street is planned to become a four lane dual carriageway to relieve pressure on these main streets 230 Other dual carriageway main roads in the west include Howitt Street and Gillies Street 231 The busiest roads by far are located in the west and south at Albert Street in Redan Sturt Street in Newington and Gillies Street in Lake Gardens which carry 22 400 22 000 and 21 500 vehicles per day respectively and all have 4 traffic lanes 231 Rail Edit Ballarat railway station A V Line train arriving at Ballarat station Ballarat is a major rail transport hub in Victoria Situated at the junction of the Ballarat line Ararat line and Mildura lines it currently has several connections for both passenger rail services and freight rail The city has two passenger railway stations the hub of Ballarat railway station and suburban Wendouree railway station 232 From Ballarat station V Line operates VLocity trains to Melbourne west to Ararat and north to Maryborough Since the controversial removal of flagship express services in 2011 successive timetable changes have slowed peak hour services to Southern Cross with the current journey taking a minimum of 73 minutes 233 234 Patronage however has continued to grow 235 236 The Regional Rail Link project was built in 2015 to separate Ballarat trains from Melbourne s suburban rail network 237 Interurban services Ballarat Melbourne now run half hourly during weekday peak and hourly during weekday non peak and on weekends from Ballarat station A twice daily thrice daily on weekdays 57 minute service connects Ballarat to Ararat stopping at Beaufort while there is a 53 minute service to and from Maryborough stopping at Creswick Clunes and Talbot once a day twice a day on weekdays each way 238 Victoria s electronic ticketing system Myki was implemented on rail services between Wendouree and Melbourne on 24 July 2013 239 Ballarat is connected to Geelong by rail via the Geelong Ballarat railway line which currently operates only for freight Bus Edit CDC Ballarat operates the bus network covering the city centre Ballarat and Wendouree stations and most surrounding suburbs contracted by Public Transport Victoria 240 Tram Edit A tourist tram on Wendouree Parade The once extensive Ballarat tramway network operated between 1887 and 1971 with a small section of remaining track being utilised as a tourist and museum tramway 241 There have been proposals to extend the network particularly as a major tourist facility but also to connect it to the railways and return it as a viable component of the Ballarat public transport system including a strong lobby in 2001 2002 242 243 244 245 2010 11 and 2014 246 however Ballarat City Council and federal member of parliament have dismissed recent proposals 247 248 249 Airport Edit Ballarat Airport located 8 km 5 mi north west of the CBD consists of two sealed runways each approximately 1 400 m 4 600 ft long and 30 m 98 ft wide as well as extensive sealed aprons night lighting and NDB navaid Master Plans for the Airport were completed in 2005 and subsequently 2013 250 The report made a series of recommendations and forecasts that included lengthening widening and strengthening of the existing main runway consideration for expansion of the passenger terminal recommendations for future use of aprons and development of future structures supporting larger aircraft that would result from the forecast increased frequent usage In 2020 initial Federal funding was provided to enable the re building and re instatement of the main north south runway to 1900m 6233 feet Cycling and walking Edit Ballarat has a long history of cycling as a form of transport and recreation The current cycling network continues to grow and consists of several marked on road routes and 50 kilometres 31 miles of segregated bicycle facilities including several main routes the Ballarat Skipton Rail Trail and the Yarrowee River Trail with connections to the Gong Gong Reservoir 216 Buningyong Trail Sebastopol Trail and the Lake Wendouree shared path 251 The Ballarat Bicycle Users Group provides advocacy for the growing number of cyclists in the city 252 The popularity of cycling in Ballarat is also demonstrated by the large number of spectators and participants drawn to cycling sporting events held in the city 253 Crime EditIn 2014 the city was one of a number of Australian regional centres examined by an ABC Four Corners report on the use of methamphetamine along with Devonport Burnie Castlemaine and St Arnaud 254 255 See also EditList of people from BallaratReferences Edit 2021 Ballarat Census All persons QuickStats Australian Bureau of Statistics www abs gov au Retrieved 3 July 2022 2016 Census Community Profiles Ballarat ABS Census Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 15 September 2016 Ballarat History Origin of some Ballarat Names Ballarat com Archived from the original on 9 October 1999 2021 Ballarat Census All persons QuickStats Australian Bureau of Statistics www abs gov au Retrieved 3 July 2022 a b c 3218 0 Regional Population Growth Australia 2020 21 Population Estimates by Significant Urban Area 2008 to 2018 Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Bureau of Statistics 27 March 2019 Retrieved 25 October 2019 Estimated resident population 30 June 2018 Profile of the Electoral Division of Ballarat Vic Australian Electoral Commission Aec gov au 7 October 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2011 a b Ballarat s Indigenous Heritage PDF Sovereign Hill Education Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2010 City of Ballarat community profile Retrieved 8 April 2017 Griffiths Peter M Three Times Blest A History of Buninyong 1737 1901 Ballarat Historical Society pp13 Victoria The Courier 5 November 1851 p 2 Ballarat Diggings From the Correspondent of the Geelong Advertiser pg 2 The Argus 13 September 1851 Victoria Mount Alexander The Sydney Morning Herald 11 December 1852 p 2 Retrieved 6 May 2012 Phoenix Auctions History Post Office List Retrieved 20 March 2021 OOLAC Ballarat oolac com Archived from the original on 23 October 2016 Retrieved 22 October 2016 James Ken The surveying career of William Swan Urquhart 1845 1864 Public Record Office Victoria Government of Victoria Archived from the original on 27 October 2009 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Jacobs Wendy Nigel Lewis Elizabeth Vines Richard Aitken 1981 Ballarat A Guide to Buildings and Areas 1851 1940 Jacobs Lewis Vines Architects and Conservation Planners p 11 ISBN 0 9593970 0 0 a b Heritage Impact Statement Civic Hall City of Ballarat City of Ballarat October 2011 Archived from the original on 8 March 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2012 Cornfield Jason Wickham Dorothy Gervasoni Clare 2004 The Eureka Encyclopedia Ballarat Heritage Services p 391 ISBN 1 876478 61 6 K T Livingston Richard Jordan Gay Sweely 2001 Becoming Australians the movement towards federation in Ballarat and the nation p 34 Wakefield Press Perkin Corrie Golden city of Ballarat comes into the picture The Australian 1 September 2009 Gold Rush Population Peak 1858 9 23 The Star 23 September 1858 p 2 Retrieved 6 May 2012 Colonial News The Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser New South Wales Australia 3 November 1855 p 3 Supplement to the Maitland Mercury Retrieved 3 June 2020 via Trove Summary for Europe Introduction The Argus 20 August 1860 p 5 Butrims Robert Macartney David 2013 The Phoenix Foundry Locomotive Builders of Ballarat Australian Railway History Society ISBN 978 0 646 90402 3 Rail Geelong Geelong Line Guide railgeelong com Retrieved 23 April 2008 a b c d e f g h Clarke Jan 1992 Speak Out Boldly The first 125 years of the Ballarat Courier Ballarat The Courier p 12 ISBN 978 0 646 09971 2 Craig s Royal Hotel History craigsroyal com au Archived from the original on 25 May 2012 Retrieved 30 June 2012 Sid Brown March 1990 Tracks Across the State Newsrail Australian Railway Historical Society Victorian Division 71 76 THE ATHENS OF AUSTRALIA Poverty Bay Herald Volume XXXVI Issue 11988 3 November 1909 p 7 Papers Past Poverty Bay Herald 3 November 1909 THE ATHENS OF AUSTRALIA Douglas Pike Geoffrey Serle Australian dictionary of biography Vol 9 Melbourne University Press 1983 Frederic C Frederic Chambers Spurr Five years under the Southern Cross experiences and impressions Read the ebook Five years under the Southern Cross experiences and impressions by Frederic C Frederic Chambers Spurr The Argus Melbourne Vic 1848 1954 Saturday 23 October 1909 Trove nla gov au 23 October 1909 Retrieved 18 August 2011 a b Balderstone Julia 20 February 1993 SEC offers historic lake property for sale The Courier Terrible railway disaster The Age Melbourne David Syme amp Co 21 August 1908 The Ballarat Tornado p6 The Mercury 25 August 1909 Furious Storm at Ballarat several houses demolished woman crushed to death several persons injured p5 The West Australian 23 August 1909 Progressive Geelong Industrial Expansion Development of the Harbour The Argus Melbourne 14 October 1921 p 8 Lee Robert Rosemary Annable Donald Stuart Garden 1 August 2007 The Railways of Victoria 1854 2004 Melbourne University Publishing Ltd p 144 ISBN 978 0 522 85134 2 Geelong Ousts Ballarat Population Surprises The Argus Melbourne 28 April 1936 p 10 Australia Royal Australian Air Force Historical Section 1995 Logistics units AGPS Press ISBN 978 0 644 42798 2 Wendouree West Profile and History Wendouree West Community Renewal Archived from the original on 9 July 2010 Retrieved 19 August 2010 Ballarat B Power Station Ballarat Historical Society private collection City of Ballarat Mayors Report 1974 1975 Whelan Melanie 12 November 2019 Ted Lovett Karen Heap hope for path finders in fight for equality The Courier Retrieved 15 November 2021 a b Ballarat West Local Structure Plan PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 16 May 2017 a b Ballarat West Local Structure Plan Business Ballarat Archived from the original on 18 August 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Commonwealth of Australia December 2017 Final Report Volume 16 Religious institutions Book 2 PDF Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse p 106 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Cardinal George Pell s Hometown Breaks Its Silence About Grim Past of Sexual Abuse The New York Times April 2018 p 106 Archived from the original on 1 January 2022 Retrieved 22 August 2018 City of Ballarat Maps Population amp Location http www ballarat vic gov au Global Maps index aspx dead link a b Ballarat Planning Scheme Land Use PDF City of Ballarat City of Ballarat 18 March 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 20 April 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2012 BALLARAT BOTANIC GARDENS National Trust of Australia Victoria Nattrust com au Archived from the original on 23 March 2012 Balarat Public Gardens Archived from the original on 25 March 2012 a b Her Maj A History of Her Majesty s Theatre Ballarat by Peter Freund with Val Sarah ISBN 978 0 9757483 1 2 Ballaarat Astronomical Society Observatory ballarat net Retrieved 18 August 2011 Monuments and Memorials within Australia associated with World War One Monumentaustralia org au Retrieved 18 August 2011 Ballarat Panel Report PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 March 2017 Retrieved 16 May 2017 Ballarat Australian Terrace Houses Archived from the original on 29 May 2014 Retrieved 22 April 2014 About the profile areas Ballarat North Invermay Park profile id id com au Map of Invermay VIC 3352 Whereis whereis com STOCKLAND WENDOUREE SHOPPING CENTRE REDEVELOPMENT PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2011 Establish an urban growth boundary to set clear limits to metropolitan Melbourne s outward development Archived from the original on 5 February 2004 Henderson Fiona Ballarat west suburb to be named Lucas The Courier 10 February 2011 League of Historical Cities Conference 2008 Archived 15 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Leaguehistoricalcities ballarat com Retrieved 18 August 2011 Brown Jenny May 2010 The Tower Royal Auto RACV Public Affairs p 7 Heritage Victoria Ballarat Synagogue Archived 18 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine PDF Retrieved 18 August 2011 Heritage Restoration Loan Ballarat vic gov au 1 June 2010 Archived from the original on 22 October 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Ballarat City Council Plan to Preserve Heritage by Marcus Power for The Courier 26 April 2010 Heritage Protection Ballarat vic gov au 1 June 2010 Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 The Economics of Heritage The value of heritage to the City of Ballarat Archived 17 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine from environment gov au Ballaarat Mechanics Institute to get 1 5 Million Restoration Press release Legislation vic gov au 4 November 2005 Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Restoration work to start at Unicorn Hotel after permits approved by Marcus Power for The Courier 27 March 2009 Ballarat Heritage Watch Ballaratheritagewatch wordpress com Retrieved 18 August 2010 Peel M C Finlayson B L McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification Hydrology and Earth System Sciences 11 5 1633 1644 Bibcode 2007HESS 11 1633P doi 10 5194 hess 11 1633 2007 Linacre Edward Geerts Bart 1997 Climates and Weather Explained London Routledge p 379 ISBN 978 0 415 12519 2 a b c d e Monthly Climate Statistics Ballarat Aerodrome Australian Bureau of Meteorology 23 January 2013 Retrieved 23 January 2013 Gliddon Greg 31 December 2018 2018 was a year of weather extremes across Ballarat The Courier Retrieved 4 February 2021 You know you re from Ballarat when you re annoyed at others complaining about the weather The Courier 5 November 2014 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Fires rage and snow s falling The Sydney Morning Herald 15 November 2006 Burgess Matthew 8 July 2008 Snow falls as cold snap hits state The Age Melbourne Australia Ballarat snowfall ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation ABC News Retrieved 18 August 2010 Snow falls in Ballarat ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Australian Broadcasting Corporation 8 July 2008 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Watt Jarrod 11 August 2008 Sunday snow in Ballarat ABC Ballarat Australian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 18 August 2010 Snow falls in Ballarat City Centre The Courier newspaper The Courier Ballarat 1 August 2014 Retrieved 1 August 2014 Ballarat snow is a hazy shade of winter The Courier newspaper The Courier Ballarat 24 June 2016 Retrieved 24 June 2016 Gliddon Greg 29 May 2019 Autumn snow falls in Ballarat as part of one in 20 year event The Courier Retrieved 4 February 2021 Massive flakes of snow fall in Victoria as temperatures drop to record breaking levels www abc net au 25 September 2020 Retrieved 4 February 2021 The Great Flood of Ballarat pg 6 The Maitland Mercury amp Hunter River General Advertiser 23 October 1869 a b Ballarat Victoria January 2011 Daily Weather Observations Commonwealth of Australia 2011 Bureau of Meteorology Archived from the original on 22 March 2011 Millar Paul and Sexton Reid Victoria and Tasmania struggle with heavy rain The Courier 14 January 2011 Ballarat region floods as record rains fall The Courier 14 January 2011 Williams Erin Ballarat region floods as record rains fall The Courier 15 January 2011 Rayner Meg Wettest January ever in Ballarat The Courier 20 January 2011 Climate statistics for Australian locations www bom gov au Retrieved 4 February 2021 Ballarat s freezing morning feels like temperature drops to 6 5 The Courier 9 June 2020 Retrieved 4 February 2021 Australian Government Bureau of Meteorology February 2009 The exceptional January February 2009 heatwave in southeastern Australia PDF Archived from the original on 13 September 2016 Retrieved 23 September 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The Courier 2015 Climate statistics for Australian locations normals 1991 2020 Australian Bureau of Meteorology Retrieved 29 November 2020 Climate statistics for Australian locations Ballarat Aerodrome all data Australian Bureau of Meteorology Retrieved 5 January 2022 Design UBC Web Creswick Bush Walking Scenery History Landcare creswick net Victoria Wicks A Landscape and Architectural Services Section Department of Conservation Forests and Lands Ballarat West Town Common Landscape plan and future management www ccmaknowledgebase vic gov au Victoria Government Gazette PDF Victoria Government Gazette 2 July 1952 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2015 Retrieved 22 October 2022 Williams Erin 3 August 2010 VCAT knocks back Mt Helen subdivision Local News News General The Courier Retrieved 18 August 2011 Implementing the Ballarat Koala Plan of Management through the Ballarat Planning Scheme Archived 21 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine PDF Retrieved 18 August 2011 Airborne particle monitoring at Ballarat 2 Feb to Sept 03 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 March 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Ballarat s Air Quality good despite drought dust Archived 17 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine 21 January 2004 Air monitoring at Ballarat August 2005 to August 2006 Epanote2 epa vic gov au Archived from the original on 27 February 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Quinlan Kim 11 April 2002 Yarrowee Don t call it a creek Local News News News Features The Courier Retrieved 18 August 2010 Offline BEN Archived from the original on 1 July 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Welcome to BREAZE Breaze org au Archived from the original on 8 August 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Ballarat Sustainability Strategy PDF City of Ballarat 1 September 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 12 November 2013 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Biodiversity Australia State of the Environment Report 2001 Theme Report Biodiversity issues and challenges part 2 Environment Victoria 13 December 2010 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Rabbit numbers on the rise across Ballarat region The Courier Fairfax 5 January 2012 Retrieved 12 November 2013 McGrath Gav 19 June 2013 Foxes in plague numbers across Ballarat district The Courier Fairfax Retrieved 12 November 2013 Harris Scarfe Ballarat store opens The Courier 15 June 2011 Multimedia Victoria IBM expansion brings 300 jobs to Ballarat Mmv vic gov au 4 December 2009 Archived from the original on 6 April 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2010 a b Ballarat West Employment Zone 7 November 2019 City of Ballarat Visitor Services Archived 16 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine PDF Retrieved 18 August 2011 Ballarat Tourist Association Ballarat Tourist Association Archived from the original on 1 April 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Ballarat Regional Tourism comes of age Archived from the original on 19 March 2012 Business Ballarat Sovereign Hill Archived 25 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 February 2011 Retrieved 1 September 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link sovereignhill Ballarat Attraction Museum sovereignhill com au Why there is more to the rockabilly festival than dancing dress and rock beats 9 February 2019 Ballarat City Council representatives to meet with Federal Minister for Innovation Industry Science and Research dead link 18 February 2010 Sobey Emily Mars celebrates 30 years in Ballarat The Courier 24 November 2009 Nothing pleases like Maltesers made in Ballarat Archived 24 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine 28 February 2013 From the Victorian Premier and Minister for Manufacturing Exports and Trade Company History Archived 10 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine from mccain com au X trapolis Train Manufacturing Under Way in Ballarat Tandlnews com au Retrieved 18 August 2011 Archived 21 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Beer Lovers Guide to Victoria s microbreweries 4th edition PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2009 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 31 January 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ballarat Rural Land Use Strategy pg 31 http www ballarat vic gov au media 470869 rlus 20strategy pb 20final pdf Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Dobbin Marika 20 February 2010 Miners still search for a cart of gold The Age Fairfax Media Retrieved 31 January 2015 Lihir Gold to buy Ballarat for 350m by Jamie Freed for The Age 18 October 2006 200 jobs lost as Lihir Gold quits Ballarat by Mathew Murphy for The Age 22 July 2009 Lihir Gold sells Ballarat mine to Castlemaine TopNews Topnews in Retrieved 18 August 2010 Boral opens new state of the art asphalt plant in Ballarat Victoria boral com au Archived from the original on 24 June 2017 Retrieved 29 January 2019 as at 2006 from http www ballarat vic gov au media 470869 rlus 20strategy pb 20final pdf Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine McGrath Gavin 4 February 2014 McCain Foods potato growers fixing strained relationship The Courier Ballarat Fairfax Media Retrieved 31 January 2015 Ballarat cattle market improves in tough conditions State News Livestock Cattle Stock amp Land Sl farmonline com au 2 March 2009 Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 18 August 2010 About Us Ballarat Agricultural Society ballaratshow org au Archived from the original on 9 October 2010 Retrieved 9 May 2012 According to the Agricultural Society s website the showgrounds site has been relocated since its inaugural year it was relocated to Lake Wendouree in 1861 before the current site at Creswick Road was used from 1934 as at 2002 http www ballarat vic gov au media 470869 rlus 20strategy pb 20final pdf Archived 23 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Ballarat Planning Scheme Amendment C95 Explanatory Report PDF City of Ballarat ballarat vic gov au Archived from the original PDF on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 9 May 2012 a b Williams Erin 14 July 2010 Ballarat region named a geothermal hotspot The Courier Fairfax Retrieved 9 May 2012 Burin Margaret 20 October 2010 Biomass not sexy but more viable than wind farms bioenergy expert ABC abc net au Retrieved 9 May 2012 Central Highlands Bioenergy Scoping Study and Biomass Audit Central Highlands Agribusiness Forum chaf org au Archived from the original on 24 March 2012 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Ballarat s Energy Use and Emissions Stats amp Facts Breaze org au Archived from the original on 2 March 2011 Mount Mercer Wind Farm About the Project Mount Mercer Wind Farm Website mtmercerwindfarm com au Archived from the original on 23 July 2012 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Houston Cameron 13 April 2007 Victorian community goes it alone on wind farm The Age Fairfax Retrieved 9 May 2012 Victorian community goes it alone on wind farm ABC News abc net au 25 July 2008 Retrieved 9 May 2012 Mini Hydro Goldfields Superpipe Ballarat Link Central Highlands Water Archived from the original on 5 March 2011 Retrieved 25 April 2012 Stephens Kim 27 November 2009 Solar park goes public The Courier Fairfax Retrieved 9 May 2012 2016 Census QuickStats Ballarat quickstats censusdata abs gov au Retrieved 4 February 2021 Population households and dwellings City of Ballarat Population forecast forecast id com au Retrieved 4 February 2021 a b c d e f g National Regional Profile Ballarat C Local Government Area Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Government 31 October 2011 Retrieved 7 May 2012 dead link Ballarat enjoys younger blood The Courier Fairfax 2 May 2007 Retrieved 7 May 2012 a b c Nolan Pat 14 September 2010 Higher income in central Ballarat The Courier Fairfax Retrieved 7 May 2012 Higher income in central Ballarat The Courier Fairfax 3 May 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2012 Neville Ivan Overview of the Ballarat Area PDF deewr gov au Department of Education Employment and Workplace Relations Archived from the original PDF on 7 April 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2012 2016 Census QuickStats Ballarat C Local Government Area Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 29 October 2018 Victorian Electoral Commission profile for Ballarat 1 Business Case for Council Office Accommodation on Civic Hall Site PDF City of Ballarat 3 November 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 21 April 2012 Retrieved 11 June 2012 State Election 2006 Results Electorate swings Victorian Electoral Commission website Archived from the original on 30 November 2007 Retrieved 16 December 2007 Seats won in the 2007 Federal Election Australian Electoral Commission website Retrieved 16 December 2007 dead link McIlroy Tom 3 May 2011 State budget New police stations for Ballarat The Courier Retrieved 25 March 2013 Access to Justice Access to Justice 29 September 2011 Archived from the original on 18 April 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2013 Nolan Pat 20 April 2012 Overcrowding sees prisoners relocated to Ballarat The Courier Retrieved 25 March 2013 Locations CFA has a State Headquarters and 9 Area Headquarters across Victoria Archived from the original on 30 March 2009 Greive Jennifer 10 February 2012 Ambulance concerns after Ballarat hospital limits reached The Courier Retrieved 25 March 2013 Emergency Management Ballarat vic gov au 10 December 2012 Archived from the original on 11 December 2010 Retrieved 25 March 2013 Knox David 27 October 2015 WIN TV cuts jobs in Ballarat relocating news to Wollongong TV Tonight Retrieved 11 January 2020 The Ballarat school name that won t exist next year 14 June 2018 Greive Jennifer 2 December 2011 Phoenix College a new name change for Sebastopol thecourier com au Agency The ADWEB Error Scotch College scotch vic edu au Family Wang VCE School Ranking 2015 bettereducation com au Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 21 November 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link UB Site Listing Archived 25 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine Oliver Jordan Crowds flock to Ballarat Show The Courier 13 November 2011 Ballarat Agricultural amp Pastoral 8 January 2007 Archived from the original on 8 January 2007 Retrieved 16 May 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Begonia Festival Enters New Era With Bracks Government Support Archived 3 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Minister for Tourism 15 October 2003 Springfest An initiative of the Rotary Club of Ballarat Archived from the original on 18 July 2008 Nolon Patrick SpringFest will go on whatever the weather The Courier 28 October 2010 Mcilroy Tom Ballarat Rotary saves the Swap Meet The Courier 26 October 2011 pg 12 My Ballarat August 2012 City of Ballarat City of Ballarat Ordinary Council Meeting 10 August 2011 Archived 20 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Brown Emma Heritage Weekend crowds up on last year The Courier 10 May 2010 O Neill David Crowds flock to Ballarat Beer Festival Archived 27 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Weekly Times Now 23 January 2012 Pilven Jack Ballarat Airport open day draws thousands The Courier 3 April 2011 Marcus Power 7 December 2009 Civic Hall plan to go before Ballarat City Council Local News News General The Courier Retrieved 18 August 2010 About Us BLOC Music Theatre Archived from the original on 11 August 2010 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Royal South Street Society Archived 18 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Southstreet ballarat net au Retrieved 18 August 2011 BALGAL My WordPress Blog Archived from the original on 24 October 2010 Retrieved 10 June 2010 Gold rushes 1851 Gold rushes in New South Wales and Victoria begin Defining Moments in Australian History National Museum of Australia Archived from the original on 31 August 2018 Retrieved 30 August 2018 Filmed Here Film Ballarat Hepburn amp Beyond Archived from the original on 24 July 2007 Retrieved 18 August 2010 Movies Shot in Ballarat Invest in Ballarat City of Ballarat 9 July 2009 Archived from the original on 17 June 2010 Retrieved 10 June 2010 Oliver Jordan 2 April 2012 Filming for ABC series to start in Ballarat The Courier Fairfax Retrieved 8 May 2012 Bentley Prue Allan Tony 20 April 2017 Ballarat keeps Doctor Blake alive as ABC kills off crime series ABC News Ballarat Retrieved 30 August 2018 Brain Anna 3 November 2017 Good news for Anna McGahan means bowing out of The Doctor Blake Mysteries for now Herald Sun Retrieved 30 August 2018 Carmody Broede 20 April 2018 Doctor Blake Mysteries to return without Craig McLachlan The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 30 August 2018 City of Ballarat Community Events Calendar ballarat vic gov au permanent dead link Western United brings A League soccer to Mars Stadium 8 August 2019 www nemenvisual com Ben Foster Ballarat Regional Athletic Centre Retrieved 4 February 2021 Country Racing Victoria Ballarat Race Club Archived from the original on 19 July 2008 Retrieved 7 May 2009 Harris John O 2009 Queensland Baseball 1905 1990 p 14 Golf Select Ballarat Retrieved 11 May 2009 Who is BRDL Ballarat Roller Derby League Archived from the original on 3 April 2012 Retrieved 1 May 2012 Home Ballarat Health Services Archived from the original on 3 June 2017 Retrieved 16 May 2017 City of Ballarat Health and Community Services www ballarat vic gov au Archived from the original on 9 March 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2017 Ballarat Regional Integrated Cancer Centre home Reachnewheights com au Archived from the original on 15 April 2013 Retrieved 25 March 2013 CUNNINGHAM MELISSA 16 February 2015 Eat in not out experts thecourier com au Essential Services Film Ballarat Archived from the original on 21 August 2011 Retrieved 20 April 2012 a b Streams Lakes and Storages Department of Primary Industries 11 May 2010 Archived from the original on 20 May 2013 Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b c Water Storages water vic gov au 12 October 2011 Archived from the original on 13 April 2011 Retrieved 26 April 2012 Burin Margaret 5 August 2011 Lal Lal catchment full and flowing for first time in 15 years ABC Ballarat ABC Retrieved 26 April 2012 Brown Emma 21 January 2010 Ballarat water storages White Swan gets healthy new look The Courier Retrieved 20 April 2012 a b Gong Gong reservoir park Central Highlands Water chw net au Quinlan Kim 13 May 2009 Ballarat population growth water supply critical The Courier Retrieved 20 April 2012 Victoria Department of Environment and Primary Industries 10 May 2017 Moorabool Angling Waters agriculture vic gov au a b Margaret Cochran 1974 Sovereign City A Ballarat Tapestry Ballarat and Queens Grammar School Parents and Friends Association p 37 ISBN 978 0 9598167 0 9 Retrieved 15 June 2013 Vidoni Daniel Suburb Leigh Creek 3352 VIC Near Ballarat www findmap com au Archived from the original on 25 October 2016 Retrieved 29 January 2019 King P N 1 May 1979 A Report on the Ballarat Water Supply Catchments PDF Soil Conservation Authority Department of Primary Industries Archived from the original PDF on 20 May 2013 Retrieved 1 May 2012 Welcome to Central Highlands Water Central Highlands Water Chw net au 27 October 2012 Retrieved 25 March 2013 Delahunty Erin 2 November 2000 Ballarat jobs to go as part of Telstra cutback The Courier Retrieved 20 April 2012 Germaine Graham 18 April 2004 Optus improves mobile coverage in Ballarat Optus optus com au Retrieved 20 April 2012 Suzanne Tindall 24 March 2009 May date for Vodafone 3G bush launch CNET cnet com au Archived from the original on 4 April 2009 Retrieved 1 May 2012 Borgo Matt 18 April 2001 NBN doubles rollout of fibre to Ballarat Whirlpool whirlpool net au Retrieved 20 April 2012 Power Marcus 13 May 2009 Broadband revolution coming to Ballarat The Courier Retrieved 20 April 2012 National Broadband Network Issues to be canvassed with Minister Steven Conroy PDF Ballarat ICT Archived from the original PDF on 10 March 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2012 NBN doubles rollout of fibre to Ballarat ABC Ballarat abc net au 12 February 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2012 Ballarat CBD Strategy PDF 26 May 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 22 April 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2012 a b Ballarat Road Transport Strategy PDF March 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 21 April 2012 Retrieved 26 June 2012 Victorian Transport Plan Ballarat Wendouree Station http www4 transport vic gov au vtp projects wendouree html Archived 25 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Mcilroy Tom Ballarat commuter anger V Line drops express The Courier 25 April 2011 Nolan Pat New V Line timetable sends some commuters days off track The Courier 20 November 2012 Mcilroy Tom Ballarat train line records most growth for V Line The Courier 15 September 2011 Regional rail travel booming despite delays from The Age Regional rail link seen as Ballarat work boost from the Australian Broadcasting Commission 6 April 2011 Timetable list V Line 29 January 2017 Myki to start on VLine Commuter Services VLine Pty Ltd Archived from the original on 27 August 2013 Retrieved 7 August 2013 Ballarat CDC Ballarat Retrieved 16 February 2022 Ballarat Tramway Museum Btm org au Retrieved 18 August 2011 Tram plans on track by Mariza Fiamengo for The Courier 1 May 2001 Chamber of Commerce backs tram plan The Courier 2 May 2001 Ballarat s hotels support push to bring back trams The Courier 25 July 2002 Support for Tram Plan The Courier 30 July 2002 Cunningham Melissa 8 August 2014 Call to bring trams back The Courier No trams for at least a decade The Courier 31 July 2002 pg 147 Ballarat CBD Strategy 2012 Appendix A Other Ideas Considered Cowie Tom 2013 Ballarat tram return could cost 90 million retrieved 15 September 2013 Ballarat Airport Master Plan 2013 2033 PDF 2013 archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2015 retrieved 28 November 2013 Microsoft Word 0002 1 Ballarat Bicycle Strategy doc Archived 22 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine PDF Retrieved 18 August 2011 Ballarat Bicycle Users Group Archived 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Balbug net Retrieved 18 August 2011 Cycling boon for Ballarat region David Brehaut for The Courier 10 May 2010 Meldrum Hanna Caro Russell Ali 20 October 2014 Ice Rush Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on 23 October 2014 Four Corners Australian country towns in ice epidemic News com au News Corp Australia 20 October 2014 Archived from the original on 12 March 2016 Bibliography EditHistory books Bate Weston Lucky City The First Generation of Ballarat 1851 1901 1978 Bate Weston Life After Gold Twentieth Century Ballarat Melbourne University Press 1993 Carboni Raffaello The Eureka Stockade 1980 first published 1855 Goodman David Gold Seeking Victorian and California in the 1850s 1994 Jacobs Wendy Ballarat A Guide to Buildings and Areas 1851 1940 Jacob Lewis Vines Conservation Architects and Planners 1981 Lynch John The Story of the Eureka Stockade Epic Days in the early fifties at Ballarat 1947 Flett James The History of Gold Discovery in Victoria Molony John Eureka 1984 Molony John By Wendouree 2010 Serle Geoffrey The Golden Age A History of the Colony of Victoria 1851 1860 1963 Freund Peter with Val Sarah Her Maj A History of Her Majesty s Theatre Ballarat 2007 Ballarat City Council Victorian Heritage Register Heritage VictoriaExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ballarat Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ballarat Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Ballarat and Ballarat East Wikinews has news related to Ballarat Ballarat City Council Visit Ballarat Ballarats Official Tourism website Ballarat Tourism Victoria Government tourism site Ballarat and District Industrial Heritage Project Ballarat TV Guide All channels currently broadcasting in Ballarat and surrounding areas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ballarat amp oldid 1129718459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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