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Aubin Grove, Western Australia

Perth, Western Australia geography stubsSuburbs in the City of CockburnSuburbs of Perth, Western AustraliaUse Australian English from March 2014
Aubin Grove Sport and Community Facility, September 2020 02
Aubin Grove Sport and Community Facility, September 2020 02

Aubin Grove is a suburb of Perth, Western Australia in the City of Cockburn. The suburb was approved in 2003. Aubin Grove was formerly part of the rural locality of Banjup. It is named after Henry John Aubin, who leased agricultural land in the area in 1897.It has grown rapidly, from a population of 351 at the 2006 census to 6,324 at the 2016 census.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Aubin Grove, Western Australia (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Aubin Grove, Western Australia
Balboa Loop, City Of Cockburn

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Wikipedia: Aubin Grove, Western AustraliaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -32.169 ° E 115.864 °
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Balboa Loop

Balboa Loop
City Of Cockburn, Aubin Grove
Western Australia, Australia
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Aubin Grove Sport and Community Facility, September 2020 02
Aubin Grove Sport and Community Facility, September 2020 02
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Aubin Grove railway station
Aubin Grove railway station

Aubin Grove railway station (officially Aubin Grove Station) is a commuter railway station serving Atwell, Aubin Grove, Hammond Park and Success, which are suburbs of Perth, Western Australia. It is on the Mandurah line, which is part of the Transperth network, and is located immediately north of Russell Road in the median of the Kwinana Freeway. It has two platform faces on a singular island platform, which is linked to either side of the freeway by a pedestrian overpass. Services run every 10 minutes during peak and every 15 minutes between peak. The journey to Perth railway station is 23.8 kilometres (14.8 mi) and takes 21 minutes. The station has a bus interchange with four bus stands and seven regular bus routes. Construction of the station was promised by both major political parties ahead of the 2013 Western Australian state election. A tender was released for the station's construction in July 2014, with a projected cost of $80 million for the whole project, including the purchase of two Transperth B-series trains. The design contract was awarded in February 2015 to a joint venture between Coniglio Ainsworth Architects and M. P. S. Architects. The scope of the project was broadened in April 2015 to include the widening of the Russell Road bridge over the freeway, which increased the project budget to $105 million. Construction on the station began in March 2016, and it was opened on 23 April 2017, with the final cost being $125 million.

Wandi, Western Australia
Wandi, Western Australia

Wandi is a suburb of Perth, Western Australia in the City of Kwinana at its northern border. The suburb was approved on 14 March 1978. The suburb is zoned Special Rural, which prevents the loss of trees from clearing. The area is mainly divided into 2-hectare (5-acre) lots. The land of Wandi is bushland, and some of it is part of the Jandakot Regional Park. The Western boundary is the Kwinana Freeway. Market gardens in the western area bounded by the freeway and Lyon Road are being developed into a residential area name Honeywood. The suburb is approximately 27 kilometres (17 mi) from Perth city. Wandi was named after a highly regarded Aboriginal stockman, who drove northwest cattle from Robb Jetty to nearby holding paddocks as well as driving sheep into paddocks around Cockburn Sound. For the first four decades of the twentieth century Wandi worked for Anchorage Butchers, owned by Copley, Atkinson and Negus. For at least some of this time, Wandi lived in the racing quarters of George Atkinson's South Fremantle home, working the many racehorses he owned. Wandi died in 1955 at the age of 76.A rare, and possibly the last, chuditch or western quoll (Dasyurus geoffroii ), an endangered carnivorous marsupial not seen in the Perth area for nearly twenty years, was caught by a rabbit trap in Wandi in March 2009.In the early 2010s, an estate called Honeywood came to the town. It grew pretty fast from 782 in the 2006 census to 2,854 people at the 2016 census. Honeywood Primary School was the first school to open in Wandi and was opened officially in 2018. As of 2021, Honeywood Primary School is the only school in Wandi.