Yulara, Northern Territory Explained

Type:town
Yulara
State:nt
Coordinates:-25.2069°N 130.971°W
Coord Ref:[1]
Pop:853
Pop Footnotes:[2]
Established:10 August 1976 (town)
4 April 2007 (locality)
Established Footnotes:[3] [4]
Postcode:0872[5]
Elevation:492
Elevation Footnotes:(airport)
Area:104
Timezone:ACST
Utc:+9:30
Dist1:1421
Dir1:S
Location1:Darwin City
Dist2:428
Location2:Alice Springs
Dist3:18
Location3:Uluru
Lga:Yulara – Ayers Rock Resort[6]
Stategov:Gwoja
Fedgov:Lingiari[7]
Maxtemp:30.0
Mintemp:14.0
Rainfall:285.2
Near-N:Petermann
Near-Ne:Petermann
Near-E:Petermann
Near-Se:Petermann
Near-S:Petermann
Near-Sw:Petermann
Near-W:Petermann
Near-Nw:Petermann
Footnotes:Locations
Adjoining localities[8]

Yulara is a town in the southern region of the Northern Territory, Australia. It is an unincorporated enclave within the MacDonnell Region. At the, Yulara had a permanent population of 1,099,[2] in an area of . It is by road from the World Heritage Site of Uluru (Ayers Rock), and from Kata Tjuta (The Olgas). It is in the Northern Territory electorate of Gwoja and the federal electorate of Lingiari.

History

By the early 1970s, the pressure of unstructured and unregulated tourism, including motels near the base of Uluru (Ayers Rock), was having detrimental effects on the environment in the area of both Uluru and Kata Tjuta. Following the recommendation of a Senate Select Committee, which was to remove all developments near the base of the rock, and build a new resort to support tourism in the Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park, the Commonwealth Government agreed in 1973 to relocate accommodation facilities to a new site outside the park. On 10 August 1976, the Governor General proclaimed the new town of Yulara, some from Uluru.[3]

After the Northern Territory was granted self-government in 1978, the development of the new town became a priority of the Northern Territory government. Between 1978 and 1981, basic infrastructure, such as roads and water supply, was provided via the government's capital works program. In 1980, the government set up the Yulara Development Company Ltd to provide tourist accommodation, staff housing and a shopping centre.

Between 1982 and 1984, the first stage of the resort was constructed for the Northern Territory Government by Yulara Development Company Ltd., at a cost of A$130 million. The resort was designed by Philip Cox & Associates and won the Royal Australian Institute of Architects (RAIA) Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture in 1985. In 2019, it won the Northern Territory Award for Enduring Architecture and the National Award for Enduring Architecture.[9] [10]

When the new facilities became fully operational in late 1984, the Commonwealth Government terminated all the leases for the old motels near the Rock, and the area was rehabilitated by the National Park Service (now called Parks Australia). Around the same time, the national park was renamed Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa, and its ownership was transferred to the local Indigenous people, who leased it back to the Parks Australia for 99 years.

There were originally three competing hotels, but that detracted from the viability of the whole enterprise, with the company (and, indirectly, the government) incurring massive operating losses. Between 1990 and 1992, the competing hotel operators were replaced by a single operator, the government-owned Investnorth Management Pty Ltd. In 1992, the government sold, through open tender, a 40% interest in the Yulara Development Company and, therefore, the resort, to a venture capital consortium.

In 1997, the entire resort was again sold by open tender to General Property Trust, which appointed Voyages Hotels & Resorts as operator. Voyages operated all aspects of the resort, with the exception of the post office. Almost all residents of the town rented their housing from Voyages, but the government leased some housing for its employees. Most residents are either workers in the resort or tour operators.

In 2011, the resort was sold once more, to the Indigenous Land Corporation, which operates the resort under its subsidiary, Voyages Indigenous Tourism Australia.[11] [12]

Population

The 2016 Australian census found that Yulara had a population of 1,099 people, which had the following characteristics:[2]

Transport

Ayers Rock Airport, also known as Connellan Airport, is about six kilometres north of Yulara. It makes it possible to reach Yulara from Sydney, Melbourne, Alice Springs, Cairns, Adelaide or Darwin in less time than the five-hour car journey from Alice Springs, the nearest major town, north-east.[13]

The resort is served by one major road, the Lasseter Highway, which links it to surrounding roads and landmarks. In the early 2020s, the highway was expanded to cope with increase tourist traffic.[14] The sealed highway runs east to meet the Stuart Highway. The roads in other directions are not well maintained or travelled.[13] The Great Central Road heads west and south-west into Western Australia, but is generally only suitable for high-clearance four-wheel drive vehicles. Transit permits from Aboriginal Land Councils are required to travel west of Kata-Tjuta.[15]

Climate

Yulara has an arid climate (BWh), with long, hot summers and short, cool winters, and scant rainfall year-round. Frost may occur on some winter mornings.[16]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Place Names Register Extract for the "Town of Yulara" . NT Place Names Register . Northern Territory Government . 15 June 2019.
  2. Material was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
  3. News: Adermann . Evan . THE NORTHERN TERRITORY OF AUSTRALIA Crown Lands Ordinance PROCLAMATION (re the Town of Yulara) . . G32 . Australia . 10 August 1976 . 29 April 2019 . 3 . National Library of Australia.
  4. Web site: Place Names Register Extract for "Yulara" . NT Place Names Register . Northern Territory Government . 15 June 2019.
  5. Web site: Yulara Postcode. postcode-finders.com.au . 15 June 2019.
  6. Web site: Place Names Register Extract for "Connellan Airport" . NT Place Names Register . Northern Territory Government . 15 June 2019.
  7. Web site: Federal electoral division of Lingiari. Australian Electoral Commission. 16 June 2019.
  8. Web site: McDonnell Shire (sic) Localities (map) . Northern Territory Government . 17 June 2019. 29 October 1997.
  9. Web site: November 2019 . 2019 National Architecture Award Winners . 18 January 2024 . Australian Institute of Architects.
  10. Web site: 8 November 2019 . Enduring Architecture: Sails in the Desert Takes Home National Award . 18 January 2024 . COX Architecture.
  11. Web site: What is the ILC . Indigenous Land Corporation . .
  12. Web site: History . About us . Indigenous Land Corporation . 2015 . 20 August 2016.
  13. Australia Road and 4WD Atlas. Hema . Maps. 2007 . Hema Maps. Eight Mile Plains Queensland. 978-1-86500-456-3. 100-101 .
  14. Web site: Key Freight Routes 2018 - 22 Expenditure Plan. dead. 2023-08-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20200229231758/https://www.transportinfrastructurecouncil.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/nt_kfr_expenditure_plan_2018-22.pdf. 2020-02-29.
  15. Web site: Permits . Ngaanyatjarra Council . 17 June 2019.
  16. Peel, M. C.. Finlayson, B. L.. McMahon, T. A.. 2007. Updated world map of the Köppen - Geiger climate classification. Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.. 11. 5. 1636 & 1642. 10.5194/hess-11-1633-2007. 2007HESS...11.1633P . 1027-5606. free.