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Waikiki, Western Australia

Perth, Western Australia geography stubsSuburbs in the City of RockinghamSuburbs of Perth, Western AustraliaUse Australian English from March 2014
Waikiki Village Shopping Centre, September 2019 01
Waikiki Village Shopping Centre, September 2019 01

Waikiki is an outer southern suburb of Perth, the capital city of Western Australia. It adjoins and is closely associated with Safety Bay in the City of Rockingham. A prime landmark is the Waikiki Village shopping centre on Read Street, the main road linking Rockingham with Warnbro and Port Kennedy. The suburb is named after the Honolulu neighbourhood of Waikiki and was chosen by the developer of the area. The name was officially gazetted on 5 April 1974.

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

Waikiki, Western Australia
Ennis Avenue, City Of Rockingham

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Waikiki, Western AustraliaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -32.322 ° E 115.769 °
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Address

Ennis Avenue

Ennis Avenue
6172 City Of Rockingham, Waikiki
Western Australia, Australia
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Waikiki Village Shopping Centre, September 2019 01
Waikiki Village Shopping Centre, September 2019 01
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Nearby Places

Warnbro railway station
Warnbro railway station

Warnbro railway station is a commuter railway station in Warnbro, a suburb of Perth, Western Australia. It is on the Mandurah line, which is part of the Transperth commuter rail network, and is located immediately south-east of the interchange of Safety Bay Road and Ennis Avenue. It has two side platforms, linked by a pedestrian overpass accessed by stairs, a lift, and escalators. Services run every 10 minutes during peak, and every 15 minutes between peak. The journey to Perth Underground station is 47.5 kilometres (29.5 mi), and takes 38 minutes. The journey to Mandurah railway station is 23.3 kilometres (14.5 mi), and takes 13 minutes. The station has a bus interchange with seven bus stands and 12 regular bus routes. Known as Waikiki station during planning, the station was included in the South West Metropolitan Railway Master Plan, released in 1999. Originally, there was only going to be a single track railway south of Waikiki station, making the station the terminus for the majority of trains on the line. This was revised later to the entire Mandurah line being dual tracked. The station was designed by Jones Coulter Young Architects and Taylor Robinson Architects. Construction on the station by Doric Constructions and Brierty Contractors began in August 2005. The cost of the station was $15 million. Construction was completed in March 2007, and the station opened, along with the rest of the Mandurah line, on 23 December 2007.