Medina, Western Australia Explained

Type:suburb
Medina
City:Perth, Western Australia
State:wa
Lga:City of Kwinana
Map Type:nomap
Local Map:yes
Zoom:13
Coordinates:-32.232°N 115.802°W
Postcode:6167
Est:1951
Area:3.7
Stategov:Kwinana
Fedgov:Brand
Near-Nw:Kwinana Beach
Near-N:Kwinana Beach
Near-Ne:Postans
Near-E:Orelia
Near-Sw:Kwinana Beach
Near-S:Calista

Medina is a suburb of Perth, Western Australia, located within the City of Kwinana. It lies 32 km south of central Perth.

Medina was the first developed of the Kwinana suburbs named after ships carrying settlers to the Swan River Colony in 1829 and 1830. arrived at Fremantle on 6 July 1830 with 51 passengers on board. The ship's name Medina is believed to be derived from the River Medina on the Isle of Wight, and was approved as a suburb name in 1953. Streets were named after passengers and crew, such as Pace Road after Captain Walter Pace, and Ridley Green, Ridley Way and Ridley Court after passenger Mary Eliza Ridley.[1]

History

Medina is a well-established suburb, designed in the early 1950s by Perth's first female town planner, Margaret Feilman. Medina was the first of Kwinana's four 'neighbourhood units' developed to meet the housing needs of the newly established Kwinana industrial area. During the 1950s construction included Australia's largest oil refinery, operated by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (later British Petroleum); the Cockburn Cement works (then owned by Rugby Portland Cement); and a BHP blast furnace and steel-rolling mill. In 1963 Alcoa of Australia established an alumina refinery, and in 1967 the CSBP sulphuric acid and superphosphate plants were commissioned.[2]

Medina housing was typical for the State Housing Commission (now the Housing Authority) of the era. Most original houses were built with jarrah weatherboard to window height, and asbestos sheeting above, with jarrah frames, floors and stumps. Most lots were 730m2 or greater in size.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: History . City of Kwinana . 19 May 2020 . 2017.
  2. Book: Wakeman . Rosemary. Practicing Utopia: An Intellectual History of the New Town Movement . 2016. University of Chicago Press . 9780226346175 . 59 . 23 May 2017.