- Source: City of Kingston
The City of Kingston is a local government area in Victoria, Australia in the south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne, its northern boundary lying approximately 15 km from the Melbourne city centre along the north-eastern shorelines of Port Phillip. It covers an area of 91 km² and has an estimated population of 163,431 people.
History
The City of Kingston area was originally governed by the Moorabbin Roads Board, which formed in 1862 and became a shire council in 1871, covering a large area of mixed agricultural and semi-urban land. After years of agitation, in 1917 the seaside town of Sandringham became a borough with its own council, and this fuelled the desire of those living in towns further south to combine their efforts and demand self-representation. This finally occurred in May 1920 and the "Borough of Mordialloc and Mentone" was formed. It became a town in 1923 and the City of Mordialloc in 1926.
The City of Moorabbin had a population of 109,588 by the time of the 1971 census.
In 1994, the state government amalgamated local councils all over Victoria, as part of its local government reform. The new City of Kingston was one result, and on 15 December 1994 the City was formally Gazetted comprising all of the City of Chelsea, most of the City of Mordialloc, a substantial portion of the City of Moorabbin, and parts of the Cities of Oakleigh and Springvale.
A new electoral structure for Kingston was effected in November 2008. Under the new structure there are three wards – North Ward, Central Ward and South Ward, and three Councillors representing each ward. This makes a total of nine Councillors, instead of the previous structure of seven wards each represented by one Councillor, and as of November 2020 there are 11 wards each individually represented by a ward councillor.
Kingston's headquarters are located at the 7-storey '1230 Nepean Hwy' building, which has become a landmark to Cheltenham as well as the council. The A-Grade office building was built in 1993.
Schools
Primary education
Secondary education
Primary and secondary education
Mentone Girls' Grammar School
Mentone Grammar School
Townships and localities
The city had a population of 158,129 at the 2021 census, up from 151,389 in the 2016 census.
^ - Territory divided with another LGA
Railway stations
Aspendale
Aspendale railway station – April 1891
Bonbeach
Bonbeach railway station – February 1927
Carrum
Carrum railway station – August 1882
Chelsea
Chelsea railway station – February 1907
Cheltenham
Cheltenham railway station – December 1881
Southland railway station – November 2017
Clayton South
Westall railway station – February 1951
Edithvale
Edithvale railway station – September 1919
Highett
Highett railway station – December 1881
Mentone
Mentone railway station – December 1881
Moorabbin
Moorabbin railway station – December 1881
Mordialloc
Mordialloc railway station – December 1881
Parkdale
Parkdale railway station – September 1919
Library services
The City of Kingston operates nine free council run libraries.
= Major branches
=Chelsea
Cheltenham
Clarinda
Parkdale
Westall
= Minor branches
=Dingley
Highett
Moorabbin
Patterson Lakes
Sport and recreation facilities
The City of Kingston operates two swimming and recreation centres:
The Waves Leisure Centre which has a 50-metre swimming pool, spa, gym and separate wave pool.
The Don Tatnell Leisure Centre which has a 25-metre swimming pool, spa and gym (closed as of 2021 due to structural damage).
The Kennedy Community Centre, the future training and administrative base of the Hawthorn Football Club, is located in Dingley Village.
Council structure
= Corporate management
=Chief Executive Officer, Peter Bean
General Manager, Customer & Corporate Support, Dan Hogan
General Manager Planning and Development, Jonathan Guttmann
General Manager Organisational City Assets and Environment, Samantha Krull
General Manager Community Sustainability, Sally Jones
Chief Financial Officer, Bernard Rohan
Council services
The council has an annual budget of $245 million (2021–22), with works involving areas such as road maintenance and construction, community, cultural and youth activities, town planning and development, waste management and recycling, maintenance of parks and public areas, public health and animal control, library services, and business and tourism support.
Election results
As of November 2020 there are 11 wards each individually represented by a ward councillor. All wards elected councillors at the 2024 election.
= Current elected representatives
=Councillors and Mayors 1997 - 2024
Greg Alabaster 1997 – 2000 / 2005 - 2008
Ron Brownlees OAM 1997 – 2000 / 2000 – 2003 / 2008 – 2012 / 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020 (Mayor: 1998-99, 2010-11 & 2012-13)
Di Comtesse 1997 - 2000
Lesley McGurgan 1997 – 2000 (Mayor: 1999-2000)
Bill Nixon OAM 1997 – 2000 / 2003 – 2005 / 2005 – 2008 (Mayor: 1997-98 & 2007-08)
John Ronke 1997 – 2000 / 2000 – 2003 / 2005 – 2008 / 2008 – 2012 / 2012 – 2016 (Mayor: 2011-12)
Dalene Salisbury 1997 – 2000
Arthur Athanasopoulos 2000 – 2003 / 2003 – 2005 / 2005 – 2008 / 2008 – 2012 (Mayor: 2000-01, 2003–04, March – December 2004, 2008–09)
Elizabeth Larking 2000 – 2003 / 2003 – 2005 (Mayor: 2001-02)
David Normington 2000-2001
Topsy Petchey OAM 2000 – 2003 / 2003 – 2005 / 2005 – 2008 (Mayor: 2002-03, 2004–05, 2005-06 & 2006-07)
Joanna van Klaveren 2000 - 2005
Trevor Shewan 2001 - 2003 / 2008 – 2012
Andrew Adams 2003 - 2005
Rosemary West OAM 2003 – 2005 / 2005 – 2008 / 2008 – 2012 / 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020
Justin McKeegan 2005 – 2008
Donna Bauer 2008 – 2010
Lew Dundas 2008 – 2012
Paul Peulich 2008 – 2012 / 2012 – 2016 (Mayor: 2013-14)
Steve Staikos 2008 – 2012 / 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020 / 2020 – 2024 (Mayor 2009-10, 2017–18, 2020-21 & 2021-22)
Dan Maloney 2011 – 2012
Tamara Barth 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020
Geoff Gledhill 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020 (Mayor: 2014-15)
Tamsin Bearsley 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020 / 2020 – 2024 (Mayor: 2015-16)
David Eden 2012 – 2016 / 2016 – 2020 / 2020 – 2024 (Mayor: 2016-17)
George Hua 2016 – 2020 / 2020 – 2024
Georgina Oxley 2016 – 2020 / 2020 – 2024 (Mayor: 2018-19 & 2019-20)
Tim Cochrane 2020 – 2024
Jenna Davey Burns 2020 – 2024 (Mayor: 2023-24)
Tracey Davies 2020 – 2024
Chris Hill 2020 – 2024
Cameron Howe 2020 – 2024
Hadi Saab 2020 – 2024 (Mayor: 2022-23)
See also
List of places on the Victorian Heritage Register in the City of Kingston
References
External links
Media related to City of Kingston at Wikimedia Commons
Kingston City Council
Kingston Historical Website, in particular The Battle for Local Government: The Severance of Mordialloc from Moorabbin in 1920
Department for Victorian Communities Kingston City Council Municipality Profile (includes ward map)
Metlink local public transport for City of Kingston
Link to Land Victoria interactive maps Archived 24 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kingston upon Hull
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- Kota New York
- Kingston, Ontario
- Elon Musk
- Keuskupan Agung Kingston di Jamaika
- Kota Westminster
- Stadion MKM
- London
- Australia
- City of Kingston
- Kingston, New York
- Kingston City
- List of places called Kingston
- Kingston upon Hull
- Kingston, Ontario
- Kingston, Jamaica
- Kingston City FC
- Kingston
- Kingston, Tennessee