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Postcode: 6023 |
Location: 16km to CBD |
Established: 1960's
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Duncraig is a northern suburb located 16
kilometres north of Perth's CBD between
Marmion Avenue and Mitchell Freeway. Its
local government area is the City of
Joondalup.
History
Not much is known about Duncraig before the
residential settlement boom - the majority
of land in the area remained largely
undeveloped until the 1960s. In 1969, the
name Duncraig was approved, and was first
used as a promotional name. It is of
Scottish origin. In 1967, planning
stages commenced for a Marmion Town Centre
with 17,000 m² of retail space by 1986 in
the southwestern corner of the suburb to be
developed by the Lands Department in
conjunction with the Rural and Industries
Bank. A mining lease for sand and limestone
was held by Thiess Brothers over part of the
land in question (Reserve 8018), so the
Lands Department suggested a road (now
Burragah Way) be built to separate the
proposed centre from the lease. A detailed
submission for the centre was made in 1977
by T.S. Martin and Associates, but Warwick,
Karrinyup and small local centres had filled
the retail need in the area and population
had developed somewhat differently from
original expectations, so the plan was
shelved. Plans to develop a large retail
centre were resurrected in the late 1980s to
local protest, after which the area was the
last to be developed for residential use.
The bulk of the suburb was built in the
mid-1970s, with infrastructure being built
almost at the same time - Davallia Primary
School (February 1974), Duncraig Library
(July 1974) and Duncraig Primary School
(February 1975). In 1979, the Carine Glades
tavern on Beach Road (now "The Carine"),
Glengarry Private Hospital and Duncraig
Senior High School all opened. In 1983, the
Uniting Church in Australia opened St
Stephen's School, a secondary,
co-educational day school, in the
northeastern corner of the suburb, which
expanded to include a primary school in
1993. St Stephen's School is the largest
independent school in Western Australia. In
1986, the suburb was finally linked directly
to the CBD via the Mitchell Freeway. It is
the home of motorsport superstar Daniel
Ricciardo.
Geography
Duncraig is bounded by Beach Road to the
south, Mitchell Freeway to the east, Hepburn
Avenue to the north and Marmion Avenue to
the west, and Warwick Road runs through the
centre of the suburb. Almost all of Duncraig
is residential, although many small parks
and bushland areas can be found throughout.
In the Northwest corner of Duncraig is a
tangle of streets named after Gilbert and
Sullivan characters and personalities.
Gilbert Road meets Sullivan Road there, near
Savoy Place, Pinafore Court, and streets
named after 30 characters from the Gilbert
and Sullivan operas. The only Gilbert and
Sullivan performer with a street named after
him is Bernard Manning (1888–1961), a
performer with the J. C. Williamson company
and founder of the Gilbert and Sullivan
Society of Western Australia in Perth. At
the ABS 2006 census, Duncraig had a mostly
above-average-income white population of
15,325 people living in 5,384 dwellings. The
ABS identified many managers and
professionals living within the suburb.
Facilities
Duncraig is a residential suburb, although
has numerous small parks and bushland areas,
and the Percy Doyle Reserve which contains a
library and recreation centre. It also
contains a multipurpose sports complex
including several football fields and soccer
pitches, lawn bowl greens and over 20 tennis
courts. Several neighbourhood shopping
centres are dotted throughout the suburb,
the largest of which are Glengarry and
Carine Glades, each of which also has a
tavern offering pub meals.
Nearby the Centro Warwick to the southeast,
Karrinyup Shopping Centre to the south and
Westfield Whitford City to the northwest
provide for a wide range of retail shopping.
Glengarry Private Hospital, together with a
number of specialist medical
centres/services are located on Arnisdale
Road behind the Glengarry shopping area.
Just beyond Duncraig's southern boundary is
Carine Regional Open Space, a wetland
reserve centred on two large swamps which is
home to many rare waterbirds, frogs, turtles
and other wildlife. The space is served by
walking and bicycle tracks and also offers
AFL and soccer fields, and tennis courts.
Education
Duncraig contains Duncraig Senior High
School (Years 7-12) and a private school
operated by the Uniting Church, St Stephen's
School (Years K-12). The area south of
Warwick Road falls within the catchment area
of Carine Senior High School (Years 7-12).
Also, Duncraig contains four state primary
schools:
Davallia (1974)
Duncraig (1975)
Glengarry (1980)
Poynter (1980)
Transport
Duncraig is served by the Warwick train/bus
interchange at its southeastern corner, and
Greenwood train station at its northeastern
corner, linking the area to the Perth CBD.
The suburb is also served by Transperth
buses along Beach Road, Glengarry and
Poynter Drives, Davallia, Lilburne and
Readshaw Roads, and Marmion Avenue (423,
441, 442, 443, 444, 452). All bus services
are operated by Swan Transit.
Local Schools
Duncraig P.S.
Duncraig S.H.S
Duncraig Education Support Centre
Glengarry P.S.
Poynter P.S.
Davallia P.S.
Saint Stephens School
Other Nearby Schools
Our Lady of Grace School (North Beach)
Padbury Catholic Primary School (Padbury)
Sacred Heart College (Sorrento)
St Luke's Catholic Primary School (Woodvale)
St Mark's Anglican Community School (Hilliarys)
Shops
Glengarry Shopping Centre
Duncraig Shopping Centre
Duncraig Village
Carine Glades
Train Stations
Greenwood
Warwick
Bus Services
Bus service to Greenwood or Warwick train
stations
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