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Box Hill, Victoria

Box Hill is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) east of the city's Central Business District (CBD),[2] located within the City of Whitehorse local government area. Box Hill recorded a population of 14,353 at the 2021 census.[1]

Box Hill
MelbourneVictoria
Station Street, Box Hill
Box Hill
Coordinates37°49′17″S 145°07′34″E / 37.8215°S 145.126°E / -37.8215; 145.126Coordinates: 37°49′17″S 145°07′34″E / 37.8215°S 145.126°E / -37.8215; 145.126
Population14,353 (2021 census)[1]
 • Density4,100/km2 (10,620/sq mi)
Postcode(s)3128
Area3.5 km2 (1.4 sq mi)
Location14 km (9 mi) from Melbourne
LGA(s)City of Whitehorse
State electorate(s)Box Hill
Federal division(s)

Founded as a township in the 1850s, Box Hill grew over the following century into a small city with its own CBD, its own municipality in the former City of Box Hill, and its own suburbs, including Box Hill North and Box Hill South. In the 1950s, Box Hill was absorbed into Melbourne as part of the eastward expansion of the metropolis. Today, Box Hill is notable for its large Chinese community, being one of the largest in Melbourne,[3] and is home to the city's tallest high-rise buildings outside the CBD.[3]

A major transportation hub for Melbourne's eastern suburbs, Box Hill is home of one of the city's busiest train stations, located beneath Box Hill Central. It is also served by the route 109 tram and numerous bus routes.

History

Early settlement

 
Frederick McCubbin's Down on His Luck, painted in Box Hill in 1889. He and other Australian impressionists founded the Box Hill artists' camp.

Box Hill was first settled by the squatter Arundel Wrighte, formerly of Van Diemen's Land, who, in 1838 took up a pastoral lease on the land he had previously explored in the Bushy Creek area. The first permanent settlers, Thomas Toogood and his wife Edith, purchased 5,000 acres (20 km2) in 1841 and Wrighte built a house on his property, "Marionvale", in 1844. The Pioneers' Memorial, which can be found in front of the town hall, is made from a chimney stone, taken from Wrighte's original house. It was not until after 1850, however, that Crown lands were subdivided and sold. Traffic along a main road running through the district encouraged the building of a hotel at Box Hill in 1853. Its owner named it the White Horse hotel and the name was bestowed on the road. Box Hill Post Office opened on 1 February 1861,[4] being the first official use of the name. The postmaster, Silas Padgham proposed the name, derived from Box Hill, Surrey, England, near his birthplace.[5]

In 1871, Box Hill township's population was 154 and the district relied on orchards, vineyards and mixed farming. The extension of the railway line from Camberwell to Lilydale in 1882 included a station at Box Hill, but there were also stations at Canterbury and Surrey Hills, to the west. They attracted subdivisions and development ahead of Box Hill. Growth came, though, with a school opening in Box Hill in 1887, then known as State School 2838.[6] The town became the seat of the Nunawading Shire Council, which met at the Box Hill Courthouse.[7]

In the mid-1880s, Box Hill became a favoured area for landscape artists who wanted to paint the Australian bush en plein air.[8] These artists, among them Arthur Streeton, Tom Roberts and Frederick McCubbin, established the Box Hill artists' camp,[8] and formed what would become known as the Heidelberg School, the first distinctively Australian movement in Western art.[9]

Development

 
Aerial panorama of Box Hill facing east towards the Dandenong Ranges. April 2023.

Unlike suburbs closer to Melbourne, Box Hill lacked the web of tramlines, which promoted residential development beyond the reach of the railway line. In 1916–17, tramlines reached the western edge of what in a short time would be the Box Hill Municipality, at Burwood, Mont Albert and Wattle Park. The years after World War I saw Box Hill's turn for residential growth. A girls' technical school was built in 1924 and a boys' high school in 1930. During World War II a boys' technical school was opened.

The new town hall on Whitehorse Road opened in April 1935.[10] One of the arguments for its construction was that "the boon it would prove to the local brickworks, which had just resumed production after a period of suspension".[10]

The Box Hill Presbyterian (now Uniting) Church building was originally the West Melbourne Presbyterian Church built 1867 on the corner of Lonsdale and William Streets; a final service was held on 3 February 1935, following which the building was dismantled and re-erected on its present site, being opened in late 1935.[10]

After the end of the Second World War, Box Hill was suburbanised, but Box Hill South and Box Hill North remained comparatively undeveloped.[11]

Post-war development

 
High-rise buildings with a tram in the foreground

Post-war housing expansion included a Housing Commission estate in Box Hill South. A district hospital opened in 1956.[12] The shopping area enjoyed growth and prosperity which placed a significant strain upon its parking infrastructure by the end of the 1950s.[13]

In 1954, the Melbourne & Metropolitan Board of Works designated Box Hill as one of five district centres for metropolitan Melbourne.[11] The plan has succeeded in Box Hill. In addition to the shopping centre, the Box Hill TAFE and several office buildings have strengthened its centrality in the region. Apart from commercial functions there are large reserves, with ovals in three directions, about a kilometre from Box Hill Central. Box Hill South lies between Canterbury Road and Burwood East, about two kilometres square. Its proximity to trams was better than Box Hill North's and its residential growth was substantially pre- and early post-war. The Box Hill Golf Club is nearby and a linear park continues along Gardiners Creek. There are church educational institutions; Kingswood College (Anglican and then Uniting) and the Christian Brothers' Teachers' College and St. Leo's College (1952 and 1957).

In 1971, a sister city relationship was forged with Matsudo, Chiba Prefecture, Japan. "Box Hill" is the name of a department store in Matsudo (ja:ボックスヒル).

Box Hill City was amalgamated with Nunawading City on 15 December 1994, to form Whitehorse City, renewing the boundaries that began with the Nunawading Parish and subsequent Shire.[14]

More recently, Box Hill has experienced a construction boom, and is now home to high-rise buildings. These include the Australian Taxation Office's Box Hill Tower,[15] the Whitehorse Towers[16][17] and the 36-storey Sky One, which, at 122 metres, is the tallest building in Melbourne outside of the CBD.[18][19] More high-rises are under construction, including New Chinatown, a $450 million twin tower project which will serve as a modern "sibling" of the historic Chinatown in the CBD, with this development to consist of 10,000 square meters of mixed-purpose storefronts over three levels, a 4000-square-metre “Hawker Hall” where visitors will find street-style food stalls, a 1500-square-metre childcare centre, a Chinese language school and bookshop, Chinese herbalists, and a handful of Chinese and Western medicine clinics.[20][21][22][23]

Facilities

Box Hill has a shopping district. These range from the shops along Station Street and Whitehorse Road, to the suburb's two shopping centres. Box Hill Central is integrated with a bus interchange and the Box Hill railway station.

In late 2007, the two shopping centres merged as a part of a large-scale redevelopment project of the precints.[24] They are now known as buildings "South" (Formerly Central Box Hill) and "North" (formerly Central Whitehorse,) or "Box Hill Central", which further hosts the Box Hill Railway Station, and a bus interchange.

Box Hill is also home of a number of recreational services, such as Neighbourhood Houses; a number of Scout Groups, including 11th Box Hill; Mont Albert North (formerly 10th/13th Box Hill);[25] 6th Box Hill; and 1st Mont Albert Scout Groups. The Box Hill Community Centre, located 1 km south of Box Hill Central, also provides a number of services to the local community.

Box Hill Hospital serves Box Hill and its surrounding suburbs. Epworth Eastern, a private hospital, opened in 2005 opposite Box Hill Hospital.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
20018,130—    
20068,616+6.0%
20119,672+12.3%
201611,395+17.8%
202114,353+26.0%

At the 2021 Australian census, 68.3% of Box Hill residents reported being born overseas, with the most common being China (excludes Taiwan and the SARs; 29.5%), Malaysia (6.4%), India (4.5%), Hong Kong (2.5%), and Vietnam (1.9%). Mandarin Chinese have overtaken English as a language spoken at home at 33.9%, with English being the second most commonly spoken language (32.5%), followed by Cantonese (8.5%), Vietnamese (1.7%), Korean (1.5%), and Hindi (1.3%). Self-described non-religious people made up the largest single group at 50.4% of the population, followed by Catholic (10.2%), Buddhism (9.0%), and Hinduism (4.5%). 9.1% of Box Hill residents did not state their religious affiliation in the census. Compared to Australia as a whole, Box Hill residents are much less likely to be Australian-born, and are more likely to have stated "No Religion" on the census.[26] Within the City of Whitehorse, Box Hill have the largest Chinese-Australian diaspora community, and one of the most visible Chinese-Australian communities in Australia.[27][28]


Previously, in the 2016 Australian census, 64.7% of Box Hill residents reported being born in foreign countries, the most common being China (excluding Taiwan and the SARs; 27.6%), Malaysia (4.8%), India (4.2%), Hong Kong (3.0%) and South Korea (1.7%). 36.9% of residents only speak English at home. Mandarin Chinese is the second most commonly spoken language (28.3%), followed by Cantonese (9.8%), Korean (1.7%), Hindi (1.3%) and Vietnamese (1.2%). Self-described non-religious people made up the largest single group at 46.3% of the population, followed by Catholics (13.5%), Buddhists (7.8%) and Anglicans (4.5%). 10.1% of Box Hill residents did not state their religious affiliation in the census. Compared to Australia as a whole, Box Hill residents are much less likely to be Australian-born, and are more likely to have stated "No Religion" on the census.[29]

Education

The suburb of Box Hill has several schools, including Box Hill High School, Box Hill Senior Secondary College, Our Lady of Sion College, St. Francis Xavier's Catholic Primary School. For mature students, Box Hill Institute of TAFE and St Leo International College provide further education. There are two kindergartens in the area; St Peter's Anglican Kindergarten and Goodstart Early Learning Box Hill.

Schools in neighbouring suburbs include Koonung Secondary College, Kingswood College and Roberts McCubbin Primary School.

Sport

The Box Hill Hawks are a local Australian rules football club, playing in the Victorian Football League and are based at the Box Hill City Oval. This team was formerly known as the Mustangs, named for the city's mascot, the White Horse. They are currently affiliated with the Hawthorn Hawks.

Another football team, The Whitehorse Pioneers, competes in the Eastern Football League.[30]

Box Hill United Soccer Club currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Victoria 2.

Box Hill Athletic Club, founded in 1932, survived through the war years and became notably prominent after the 1956 Olympic Games,[31] held in Melbourne. The club's original training ground was at Surrey Park, Elgar Road South, an area provided by the Box Hill Council.

After several years of filling in and grading, the area known as Hagenauer's Park was made available for athletics.

Box Hill has an 18-hole golf course, located at 202 Station Street. [32] The club offers junior development programs.

In basketball, the Whitehorse Mustangs Basketball Association represents the Box Hill suburbs in domestic junior competitions of basketball.[33] The club fields junior teams each Saturday in the Eastern District Junior Basketball Association (EDJBA), with home games played at the basketball stadium of Box Hill High School. It also runs weekly social competitions for both men and women and fields a championship men's team in the Melbourne Metropolitan Basketball League (MMBL).

The Box Hill Action Indoor Sports Centre also provides residents with dedicated facilities for indoor soccer, cricket and netball.

 
Box Hill's Surrey Park Sporting Grounds

Aqualink Box Hill (formerly Whitehorse Aquatic and Leisure Centre), run by Whitehorse Council, provides residents with an indoor and outdoor pool, basketball courts, a gym, squash and tennis courts. The swim club, Surrey Park, swim at Aqualink Box Hill. The club uses the facilities of Aqualink. The surrounding parklands include (aside from a large lake, now filled with water, but once used as a quarry) a baseball diamond, a football oval and cricket pitches.

Box Hill Rugby Club play at RHL Sparks Reserve in the Dewar Shield competition.

Transport

Box Hill is a major transport hub for the City of Whitehorse and surrounding suburbs. Box Hill railway station is located under Box Hill Central Shopping Centre and is served by the Belgrave and Lilydale railway lines. The complex also includes a large bus terminus, linking commuters to a broad range of destinations across most Melbourne suburbs.

Tram route 109, which runs along Whitehorse Road, was extended from Union Road, Surrey Hills, to Box Hill and opened in May 2003. It runs to Port Melbourne via the city.[34]

There are V/Line coaches that run from Melbourne (Southern Cross) to Mansfield / Mount Buller. The coach stop is opposite Box Hill Town Hall, on Whitehorse Road.

Box Hill has also been planned as one of the locations for an exchange station on the Southeastern section of the Suburban Rail Loop. It is planned to go through Station Street into Whitehorse Road next to the train station located in Box Hill Central. And start from early 2023 to late 2024.

Notable people

See also

  • City of Box Hill – Box Hill was previously within this former local government area.

References

  1. ^ a b "2021 Census QuickStats Box Hill". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Postcode for Box Hill, Victoria (near Melbourne)". Postcodes Australia. Retrieved 9 November 2012.
  3. ^ a b "The rise and rise of Melbourne's largest Chinese community: Box Hill". Ironfish. 8 December 2017. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  4. ^ Phoenix Auctions History, Post Office List, retrieved 19 January 2021
  5. ^ Green, Robyn. "Box Hill, VIC". Aussie Towns. Retrieved 10 August 2021.
  6. ^ "Box Hill Primary School". Learning from the Past. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  7. ^ . 11 September 2014. Archived from the original on 11 September 2014. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  8. ^ a b "Centenary of Box Hill Artists Camp | Monument Australia". monumentaustralia.org.au. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  9. ^ . 17 March 2011. Archived from the original on 17 March 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  10. ^ a b c Lemon, Andrew (1978). Box Hill. Lothian Publishing. p. 173. ISBN 0-85091-064-1.
  11. ^ a b "Box Hill and Box Hill City | Victorian Places". victorianplaces.com.au. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  12. ^ Lemon, Andrew (1978). Box Hill. Lothian Publishing. p. 201. ISBN 0-85091-064-1.
  13. ^ "Box Hill 3128". www.onlymelbourne.com.au. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  14. ^ "History and Heritage | Whitehorse City Council". www.whitehorse.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 2 March 2023.
  15. ^ "Box Hill ATO | Webber Australia". webberaustralia.com.au. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  16. ^ "Whitehorse Towers". Deague Group. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  17. ^ "Whitehorse Towers reach peak". Herald Sun. 28 June 2017. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  18. ^ "Skyscraper plan for suburban skyline". Herald Sun. 7 April 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  19. ^ "Home". Sky One - Box Hill. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  20. ^ Black, Euan. "Melbourne's second Chinatown is coming to Box Hill". realcommercial.com.au. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  21. ^ Lam, Joseph (30 July 2019). "Oldest Chinatown in Australia faces headwinds from suburban Melbourne New Chinatown plan in Box Hill". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  22. ^ Boucher, Dinah Lewis. "Golden Age Plan 'New Chinatown' in Box Hill". The Urban Developer. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  23. ^ Landale, Edwina. "Melbourne's Getting a Second $450 Million Chinatown". Broadsheet. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  24. ^ "Box Hill Central (North Precinct)". Vicinity Centres. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  25. ^ "Mont Albert North Scouts – Best Scout Group". Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  26. ^ "2021 Box Hill (Vic.), Census All persons QuickStats | Australian Bureau of Statistics". www.abs.gov.au. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  27. ^ "Population with Chinese ancestry | City of Whitehorse | atlas.id". atlas.id.com.au. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  28. ^ Life in Box Hill, one of Australia's strongest Chinese communities | Australia Talks, retrieved 23 January 2023
  29. ^ "2016 Census QuickStats Box Hill". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
  30. ^ Full Point Footy, , archived from the original on 1 January 2009, retrieved 21 October 2008
  31. ^ "History | Box Hill Athletic Club". Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  32. ^ Golf Select, Box Hill, retrieved 11 May 2009
  33. ^ "About | Whitehorse Mustangs Basketball Association". Whitehorse Mustangs. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  34. ^ "109 Box Hill - Port Melbourne". Public Transport Victoria.

External links

  • Australian Places – Box Hill

hill, victoria, other, uses, hill, disambiguation, hill, suburb, melbourne, victoria, australia, kilometres, east, city, central, business, district, located, within, city, whitehorse, local, government, area, hill, recorded, population, 2021, census, hill, me. For other uses see Box Hill disambiguation Box Hill is a suburb of Melbourne Victoria Australia 14 kilometres 8 7 mi east of the city s Central Business District CBD 2 located within the City of Whitehorse local government area Box Hill recorded a population of 14 353 at the 2021 census 1 Box Hill Melbourne VictoriaStation Street Box HillBox HillCoordinates37 49 17 S 145 07 34 E 37 8215 S 145 126 E 37 8215 145 126 Coordinates 37 49 17 S 145 07 34 E 37 8215 S 145 126 E 37 8215 145 126Population14 353 2021 census 1 Density4 100 km2 10 620 sq mi Postcode s 3128Area3 5 km2 1 4 sq mi Location14 km 9 mi from MelbourneLGA s City of WhitehorseState electorate s Box HillFederal division s ChisholmMenziesSuburbs around Box Hill Mont Albert North Box Hill North Blackburn NorthMont Albert Box Hill BlackburnSurrey Hills Box Hill South Blackburn SouthFounded as a township in the 1850s Box Hill grew over the following century into a small city with its own CBD its own municipality in the former City of Box Hill and its own suburbs including Box Hill North and Box Hill South In the 1950s Box Hill was absorbed into Melbourne as part of the eastward expansion of the metropolis Today Box Hill is notable for its large Chinese community being one of the largest in Melbourne 3 and is home to the city s tallest high rise buildings outside the CBD 3 A major transportation hub for Melbourne s eastern suburbs Box Hill is home of one of the city s busiest train stations located beneath Box Hill Central It is also served by the route 109 tram and numerous bus routes Contents 1 History 1 1 Early settlement 1 2 Development 1 3 Post war development 2 Facilities 3 Demographics 4 Education 5 Sport 6 Transport 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditEarly settlement Edit Frederick McCubbin s Down on His Luck painted in Box Hill in 1889 He and other Australian impressionists founded the Box Hill artists camp Box Hill was first settled by the squatter Arundel Wrighte formerly of Van Diemen s Land who in 1838 took up a pastoral lease on the land he had previously explored in the Bushy Creek area The first permanent settlers Thomas Toogood and his wife Edith purchased 5 000 acres 20 km2 in 1841 and Wrighte built a house on his property Marionvale in 1844 The Pioneers Memorial which can be found in front of the town hall is made from a chimney stone taken from Wrighte s original house It was not until after 1850 however that Crown lands were subdivided and sold Traffic along a main road running through the district encouraged the building of a hotel at Box Hill in 1853 Its owner named it the White Horse hotel and the name was bestowed on the road Box Hill Post Office opened on 1 February 1861 4 being the first official use of the name The postmaster Silas Padgham proposed the name derived from Box Hill Surrey England near his birthplace 5 In 1871 Box Hill township s population was 154 and the district relied on orchards vineyards and mixed farming The extension of the railway line from Camberwell to Lilydale in 1882 included a station at Box Hill but there were also stations at Canterbury and Surrey Hills to the west They attracted subdivisions and development ahead of Box Hill Growth came though with a school opening in Box Hill in 1887 then known as State School 2838 6 The town became the seat of the Nunawading Shire Council which met at the Box Hill Courthouse 7 In the mid 1880s Box Hill became a favoured area for landscape artists who wanted to paint the Australian bush en plein air 8 These artists among them Arthur Streeton Tom Roberts and Frederick McCubbin established the Box Hill artists camp 8 and formed what would become known as the Heidelberg School the first distinctively Australian movement in Western art 9 Development Edit Aerial panorama of Box Hill facing east towards the Dandenong Ranges April 2023 Unlike suburbs closer to Melbourne Box Hill lacked the web of tramlines which promoted residential development beyond the reach of the railway line In 1916 17 tramlines reached the western edge of what in a short time would be the Box Hill Municipality at Burwood Mont Albert and Wattle Park The years after World War I saw Box Hill s turn for residential growth A girls technical school was built in 1924 and a boys high school in 1930 During World War II a boys technical school was opened Box Hill Town Hall The new town hall on Whitehorse Road opened in April 1935 10 One of the arguments for its construction was that the boon it would prove to the local brickworks which had just resumed production after a period of suspension 10 The Box Hill Presbyterian now Uniting Church building was originally the West Melbourne Presbyterian Church built 1867 on the corner of Lonsdale and William Streets a final service was held on 3 February 1935 following which the building was dismantled and re erected on its present site being opened in late 1935 10 After the end of the Second World War Box Hill was suburbanised but Box Hill South and Box Hill North remained comparatively undeveloped 11 Post war development Edit High rise buildings with a tram in the foreground Post war housing expansion included a Housing Commission estate in Box Hill South A district hospital opened in 1956 12 The shopping area enjoyed growth and prosperity which placed a significant strain upon its parking infrastructure by the end of the 1950s 13 In 1954 the Melbourne amp Metropolitan Board of Works designated Box Hill as one of five district centres for metropolitan Melbourne 11 The plan has succeeded in Box Hill In addition to the shopping centre the Box Hill TAFE and several office buildings have strengthened its centrality in the region Apart from commercial functions there are large reserves with ovals in three directions about a kilometre from Box Hill Central Box Hill South lies between Canterbury Road and Burwood East about two kilometres square Its proximity to trams was better than Box Hill North s and its residential growth was substantially pre and early post war The Box Hill Golf Club is nearby and a linear park continues along Gardiners Creek There are church educational institutions Kingswood College Anglican and then Uniting and the Christian Brothers Teachers College and St Leo s College 1952 and 1957 In 1971 a sister city relationship was forged with Matsudo Chiba Prefecture Japan Box Hill is the name of a department store in Matsudo ja ボックスヒル Box Hill City was amalgamated with Nunawading City on 15 December 1994 to form Whitehorse City renewing the boundaries that began with the Nunawading Parish and subsequent Shire 14 More recently Box Hill has experienced a construction boom and is now home to high rise buildings These include the Australian Taxation Office s Box Hill Tower 15 the Whitehorse Towers 16 17 and the 36 storey Sky One which at 122 metres is the tallest building in Melbourne outside of the CBD 18 19 More high rises are under construction including New Chinatown a 450 million twin tower project which will serve as a modern sibling of the historic Chinatown in the CBD with this development to consist of 10 000 square meters of mixed purpose storefronts over three levels a 4000 square metre Hawker Hall where visitors will find street style food stalls a 1500 square metre childcare centre a Chinese language school and bookshop Chinese herbalists and a handful of Chinese and Western medicine clinics 20 21 22 23 Facilities EditBox Hill has a shopping district These range from the shops along Station Street and Whitehorse Road to the suburb s two shopping centres Box Hill Central is integrated with a bus interchange and the Box Hill railway station In late 2007 the two shopping centres merged as a part of a large scale redevelopment project of the precints 24 They are now known as buildings South Formerly Central Box Hill and North formerly Central Whitehorse or Box Hill Central which further hosts the Box Hill Railway Station and a bus interchange Box Hill is also home of a number of recreational services such as Neighbourhood Houses a number of Scout Groups including 11th Box Hill Mont Albert North formerly 10th 13th Box Hill 25 6th Box Hill and 1st Mont Albert Scout Groups The Box Hill Community Centre located 1 km south of Box Hill Central also provides a number of services to the local community Box Hill Hospital serves Box Hill and its surrounding suburbs Epworth Eastern a private hospital opened in 2005 opposite Box Hill Hospital The White Horse Whitehorse Road Box Hill St Andrew s Uniting ChurchDemographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 20018 130 20068 616 6 0 20119 672 12 3 201611 395 17 8 202114 353 26 0 At the 2021 Australian census 68 3 of Box Hill residents reported being born overseas with the most common being China excludes Taiwan and the SARs 29 5 Malaysia 6 4 India 4 5 Hong Kong 2 5 and Vietnam 1 9 Mandarin Chinese have overtaken English as a language spoken at home at 33 9 with English being the second most commonly spoken language 32 5 followed by Cantonese 8 5 Vietnamese 1 7 Korean 1 5 and Hindi 1 3 Self described non religious people made up the largest single group at 50 4 of the population followed by Catholic 10 2 Buddhism 9 0 and Hinduism 4 5 9 1 of Box Hill residents did not state their religious affiliation in the census Compared to Australia as a whole Box Hill residents are much less likely to be Australian born and are more likely to have stated No Religion on the census 26 Within the City of Whitehorse Box Hill have the largest Chinese Australian diaspora community and one of the most visible Chinese Australian communities in Australia 27 28 Previously in the 2016 Australian census 64 7 of Box Hill residents reported being born in foreign countries the most common being China excluding Taiwan and the SARs 27 6 Malaysia 4 8 India 4 2 Hong Kong 3 0 and South Korea 1 7 36 9 of residents only speak English at home Mandarin Chinese is the second most commonly spoken language 28 3 followed by Cantonese 9 8 Korean 1 7 Hindi 1 3 and Vietnamese 1 2 Self described non religious people made up the largest single group at 46 3 of the population followed by Catholics 13 5 Buddhists 7 8 and Anglicans 4 5 10 1 of Box Hill residents did not state their religious affiliation in the census Compared to Australia as a whole Box Hill residents are much less likely to be Australian born and are more likely to have stated No Religion on the census 29 Education EditThe suburb of Box Hill has several schools including Box Hill High School Box Hill Senior Secondary College Our Lady of Sion College St Francis Xavier s Catholic Primary School For mature students Box Hill Institute of TAFE and St Leo International College provide further education There are two kindergartens in the area St Peter s Anglican Kindergarten and Goodstart Early Learning Box Hill Schools in neighbouring suburbs include Koonung Secondary College Kingswood College and Roberts McCubbin Primary School Campus of Box Hill High SchoolSport EditThe Box Hill Hawks are a local Australian rules football club playing in the Victorian Football League and are based at the Box Hill City Oval This team was formerly known as the Mustangs named for the city s mascot the White Horse They are currently affiliated with the Hawthorn Hawks Another football team The Whitehorse Pioneers competes in the Eastern Football League 30 Box Hill United Soccer Club currently competes in the National Premier Leagues Victoria 2 Box Hill Athletic Club founded in 1932 survived through the war years and became notably prominent after the 1956 Olympic Games 31 held in Melbourne The club s original training ground was at Surrey Park Elgar Road South an area provided by the Box Hill Council After several years of filling in and grading the area known as Hagenauer s Park was made available for athletics Box Hill has an 18 hole golf course located at 202 Station Street 32 The club offers junior development programs In basketball the Whitehorse Mustangs Basketball Association represents the Box Hill suburbs in domestic junior competitions of basketball 33 The club fields junior teams each Saturday in the Eastern District Junior Basketball Association EDJBA with home games played at the basketball stadium of Box Hill High School It also runs weekly social competitions for both men and women and fields a championship men s team in the Melbourne Metropolitan Basketball League MMBL The Box Hill Action Indoor Sports Centre also provides residents with dedicated facilities for indoor soccer cricket and netball Box Hill s Surrey Park Sporting Grounds Aqualink Box Hill formerly Whitehorse Aquatic and Leisure Centre run by Whitehorse Council provides residents with an indoor and outdoor pool basketball courts a gym squash and tennis courts The swim club Surrey Park swim at Aqualink Box Hill The club uses the facilities of Aqualink The surrounding parklands include aside from a large lake now filled with water but once used as a quarry a baseball diamond a football oval and cricket pitches Box Hill Rugby Club play at RHL Sparks Reserve in the Dewar Shield competition Box Hill City Oval Aerial perspective of Aqualink Box HillTransport EditFurther information Transport in Melbourne Box Hill is a major transport hub for the City of Whitehorse and surrounding suburbs Box Hill railway station is located under Box Hill Central Shopping Centre and is served by the Belgrave and Lilydale railway lines The complex also includes a large bus terminus linking commuters to a broad range of destinations across most Melbourne suburbs Tram route 109 which runs along Whitehorse Road was extended from Union Road Surrey Hills to Box Hill and opened in May 2003 It runs to Port Melbourne via the city 34 There are V Line coaches that run from Melbourne Southern Cross to Mansfield Mount Buller The coach stop is opposite Box Hill Town Hall on Whitehorse Road Box Hill has also been planned as one of the locations for an exchange station on the Southeastern section of the Suburban Rail Loop It is planned to go through Station Street into Whitehorse Road next to the train station located in Box Hill Central And start from early 2023 to late 2024 Box Hill railway station looking east from Platform 4 January 2013 Notable people EditKevin Abley Australian rules footballer Ray Argall cinematographer Fred Barnes Australian rules footballer Ron Black Australian rules footballer Brooke Buschkuehl long jumper Jack Charles actor and activist Paula Coghlan wheelchair basketballer Alan Collins writer Anthony Condon Australian rules footballer Chika Emeagi basketballer Trish Flavel Paralympic athlete Matthew Gale cricketer Azra Hadzic tennis player Peter Handscomb cricketer Sonya Hartnett author Ralph Hultgren trumpet player Julie Hunter cricketer Steve Irons politician Rob Jolly politician Quentin Kenihan disability advocate Alice Kunek basketballer Regan Lamble athlete Ben Laughlin cricketer Lawrence Leung comedian James Linger baseball player Travis Mahoney swimmer Bob McLellan Australian rules footballer Frederick Kenneth McTaggart chemist Bruce Mildenhall politician Sam Mitchell Australian rules footballer Damian Mori soccer player Clive Morrison Australian rules footballer Kelly O Dwyer politician Mick Parker mountaineer and graphic designer Fred Petterson Australian rules footballer Stanley Porteus psychologist Jared Purton immunologist Mabel Pye artist Paul Reiffel cricketer and umpire Hurtle Rice Australian rules footballer Dee Ryall politician Stan Rodgerson Australian rules footballer Reg Sampson Australian rules footballer Mark Smythe table tennis player Arthur George Stephenson architect Mike Symon politician Karl von Moller director and cinematographer Alan Yeomans jockey and swimmerSee also Edit Australia portalCity of Box Hill Box Hill was previously within this former local government area References Edit a b 2021 Census QuickStats Box Hill Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 3 July 2022 Postcode for Box Hill Victoria near Melbourne Postcodes Australia Retrieved 9 November 2012 a b The rise and rise of Melbourne s largest Chinese community Box Hill Ironfish 8 December 2017 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Phoenix Auctions History Post Office List retrieved 19 January 2021 Green Robyn Box Hill VIC Aussie Towns Retrieved 10 August 2021 Box Hill Primary School Learning from the Past Retrieved 23 January 2023 Browsing by theme Municipality of Box Hill Victoria Museum Victoria 11 September 2014 Archived from the original on 11 September 2014 Retrieved 23 January 2023 a b Centenary of Box Hill Artists Camp Monument Australia monumentaustralia org au Retrieved 23 January 2023 National Gallery of Victoria Australian Impressionism Education Resource 17 March 2011 Archived from the original on 17 March 2011 Retrieved 23 January 2023 a b c Lemon Andrew 1978 Box Hill Lothian Publishing p 173 ISBN 0 85091 064 1 a b Box Hill and Box Hill City Victorian Places victorianplaces com au Retrieved 23 January 2023 Lemon Andrew 1978 Box Hill Lothian Publishing p 201 ISBN 0 85091 064 1 Box Hill 3128 www onlymelbourne com au Retrieved 2 March 2023 History and Heritage Whitehorse City Council www whitehorse vic gov au Retrieved 2 March 2023 Box Hill ATO Webber Australia webberaustralia com au Retrieved 12 May 2019 Whitehorse Towers Deague Group Retrieved 12 May 2019 Whitehorse Towers reach peak Herald Sun 28 June 2017 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Skyscraper plan for suburban skyline Herald Sun 7 April 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Home Sky One Box Hill Retrieved 12 May 2019 Black Euan Melbourne s second Chinatown is coming to Box Hill realcommercial com au Retrieved 21 February 2022 Lam Joseph 30 July 2019 Oldest Chinatown in Australia faces headwinds from suburban Melbourne New Chinatown plan in Box Hill South China Morning Post Retrieved 21 February 2022 Boucher Dinah Lewis Golden Age Plan New Chinatown in Box Hill The Urban Developer Retrieved 21 February 2022 Landale Edwina Melbourne s Getting a Second 450 Million Chinatown Broadsheet Retrieved 21 February 2022 Box Hill Central North Precinct Vicinity Centres Retrieved 23 January 2023 Mont Albert North Scouts Best Scout Group Retrieved 20 May 2021 2021 Box Hill Vic Census All persons QuickStats Australian Bureau of Statistics www abs gov au Retrieved 23 January 2023 Population with Chinese ancestry City of Whitehorse atlas id atlas id com au Retrieved 23 January 2023 Life in Box Hill one of Australia s strongest Chinese communities Australia Talks retrieved 23 January 2023 2016 Census QuickStats Box Hill Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 27 September 2019 Full Point Footy Eastern Football League archived from the original on 1 January 2009 retrieved 21 October 2008 History Box Hill Athletic Club Retrieved 23 January 2023 Golf Select Box Hill retrieved 11 May 2009 About Whitehorse Mustangs Basketball Association Whitehorse Mustangs Retrieved 23 January 2023 109 Box Hill Port Melbourne Public Transport Victoria External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Box Hill Victoria Australian Places Box Hill Box Hill Department Store Matsudo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Box Hill Victoria amp oldid 1152473270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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