Taylor, Australian Capital Territory Explained

Type:suburb
Taylor
City:Canberra
State:act
Lga:Gungahlin
Est:1991
Postcode:2913
Elevation:667
Stategov:Yerrabi
Fedgov:Fenner
Dist1:17
Dir1:N
Location1:Canberra CBD
Dist2:32
Dir2:NNW
Location2:Queanbeyan
Dist3:90
Dir3:SW
Location3:Goulburn
Dist4:287
Dir4:SW
Location4:Sydney
Near-E:Jacka
Near-Sw:Casey
Near-Se:Moncrieff
Near-S:Ngunnawal
Coordinates:-35.149°N 149.102°W

Taylor is a suburb in Gungahlin, Canberra, Australia. Development of the suburb began in 2017. It is named after magazine publisher Florence Mary Taylor, who was editor of and writer for several Australian building industry journals including the influential Building magazine. The suburb is approximately 4 km from the Gungahlin Town Centre and 16 km from the centre of Canberra and bounded to the south by Horse Park Drive. One Tree Hill lies to the northwest on the border with New South Wales. The suburb is located in north Gungahlin adjacent to the suburbs of Moncrieff, Casey, Jacka and Ngunnawal.

History

Until 1991, the suburb Taylor was part of the former 'Gold Creek' a 1,594–hectare rural property with the Gold Creek Homestead at its centre.[1]

Local facilities

A public primary school, Margaret Hendry School, opened in 2019 and has capacity for 600 students. It caters to preschool through to year 6 students from the North Gungahlin suburbs of Taylor, Jacka, Moncrieff and Casey (a shared priority enrolment area for Gold Creek School).[2]

Taylor District Playing Fields has 2 rectangle playing fields and is located directly adjacent to Margaret Hendry School.

Geology

See also: Geology of the Australian Capital Territory. The rocks in Taylor are from the late middle Silurian period. Hawkins volcanics green grey dacite and quartz andesite are in the west. The Canberra Formation is separated by a fault in the east side. It consists of slatey shale and mudstone, with north east trending bands of acid volcanics (dacite and andesite).[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Newman Chris (2004), Gold Creek, Reflections of Canberra's Rural Heritage, Gold Creek Homestead Working Group.
  2. Web site: ACT Government. 2019-05-02. School of the future – Margaret Hendry. 2020-08-29. Our Canberra. en.
  3. Henderson, G. A. M.. Matveev, G.. Geology of Canberra, Queanbeyan and Environs . 1:50000 . 1980.