place

Ashfield SC

1970 establishments in AustraliaAssociation football clubs established in 1970Football West State League teamsSoccer clubs in Perth, Western AustraliaUse Australian English from June 2024

Ashfield Sports Club is an Australian semi-professional football club based in the suburb of Ashfield, Perth, Western Australia, and founded in 1970. The club will compete in 2022 in the Football West State League Division 2.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ashfield SC (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Ashfield SC
Haig Street, Town of Bassendean

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Ashfield SCContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -31.914854 ° E 115.937714 °
placeShow on map

Address

Ashfield Sports Club

Haig Street 40
6054 Town of Bassendean, Ashfield
Western Australia, Australia
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
ashfieldsportsclub.com.au

linkVisit website

Share experience

Nearby Places

Ashfield, Western Australia

Ashfield is a residential suburb of Perth, Western Australia in the Town of Bassendean. The suburb is located along the Swan River. The Midland line passes through the suburb and it is serviced by the Ashfield railway station. It is home to Ashfield Reserve, which also contains Ashfield Arena. It also contains Ashfield Flats, the largest river flat remaining in the Perth metropolitan area.The housing was originally established as small collection of railway houses near the train line. In the late 1950s early 1960s the area experienced a small boom of housing (400 houses) mostly built by the then State Housing Commission partly funded by the sale of half the properties to individuals. In the late 1960s the State Housing started to reacquire some of those properties. During the late 1990s the suburb underwent a revamp driven by the State Housing Commission, now called the Department of Housing. This occurred in conjunction with the infill sewage project which was created to convert Perth homes from septic tanks and leach drains to mains sewage. They bulldozed houses on land where they had adjoining properties. For every three houses removed five to seven were built in their place. The majority of these were sold off to low income and first home buyers. The Department of Housing still owns about 22% of the houses (as opposed to their stated goal of 10%), and uses their housing stock as subsidised rental accommodation. The deepest point of the Swan River upstream from Melville Water occurs in Ashfield. It was in this area the farthest upstream recording of sharks occurred with one being caught in the late 1970s.