Western Sydney Parklands

Western Sydney Parklands
New South Wales
Looking over a southern section of the parkland, from Calmsley Hill Farm in Abbotsbury.
Nearest town or city Blacktown
Fairfield
Liverpool
Established 2006
Area 52.8 km2 (20.4 sq mi)
Managing authorities Western Sydney Parklands Trust
Website Western Sydney Parklands

The Western Sydney Parklands is an urban park system and a nature reserve located in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.[1] The NSW government has spent around $400 million for the park. The park is governed by the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service and is listed under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974.[2] The Parklands begin in the north in the City of Blacktown, cross the City of Fairfield, and end in the City of Liverpool. The Parkland, being one of the largest in the world, features picnic areas, sports grounds and walking tracks.[3] The parklands attract 430,000 to 790,000 visitors annually.[4][5]

History

The Parkland was an area of specialty for the Darug people and it is still deemed as important by the Aboriginal Land Council.[6] The Parkland has been visited by some early settlers, such as Edward Abbott and George Johnson. The Park was originally used for agricultural purposes which included gardening, dairy farming and grazing. The early settlement in the Parklands took place in Prospect in the 1790s.

The Parklands were planned in 1968, as Western Sydney needed open space and recreational areas. In the late 1970s, the northern parts of the regional park had areas for rural residential lots (near Horsley Park), though by 1997 they became part of Western Sydney Regional Park. In the year 2000, the parklands supplied venues for the Sydney Olympic Games. The boundaries of the park were completed in 2006. A year later, the walking and cycling track, which meander through the park, was finally finished and opened to public.[7]

Geography

The Parklands are formed by a series of connected green spaces, roughly following the western section of the M7 motorway and the M7 cycleway. They form an elongated shape, narrow in the east-west direction. The Parklands are bounded by the M7 motorway in the north, and begin in the suburb of Dean Park in the north, then largely follow the eastern side of the M7 motorway south to reach the M4 Western Motorway, at which point it extends east to incorporate the Prospect Nature Reserve around Prospect Reservoir. The Parklands continue to follow the M7 motorway south, and near Cecil Hills crosses the M7 motorway to incorporate parkland on the western side of the motorway, from where it continues south, and ends in the suburb of Horningsea Park.[8]

The park is around 27 kilometres (17 mi) long, from north to south, and is located in the heart of the Greater Western Sydney area. It features a conspicuous ridge that runs through it from north to south, providing panoramic views of Greater Western Sydney. Every entrance to the parkland contains prominent planting accompanied by a large signage to indicate access. The Parklands contain the headwaters of Eastern Creek, as a tributary of the Hawkesbury-Nepean. The north-south ridgeline in the Parklands is the catchment boundary between the Hawkesbury-Nepean, Georges River and Parramatta River catchments.[9]

Ecology

Flora

The Sugarloaf Ridge picnic area and the Australian fauna within its prospect.

The park has around 135 hectares of woodland areas, which are remnants of Cumberland Plain Woodland. Most parts of the regional park are made up of 427 hectares of planted re-vegetation and cleared grassland areas. The Parkland's environment has remained very similar to how it was prior European contact. The park consists of 135 hectares of woodland, with the majority comprising 427 hectares of planted vegetation and cleared grassland areas. Until recently, the NSW Government has re-vegetated the area through the Greening Western Sydney Program. The Parkland's revegetation has been going since the early 1990s.

The parkland has three types of soil present, with the primary ones being Luddenham soil, which comes from Wianamatta Shale. Tree in the park include, Eucalyptus moluccana, Forest Red Gum, Eucalyptus tereticornis, Eucalyptus crebra, Corymbia, Corymbia maculata, Stringybark and Eucalyptus eugenioides. Shrubs include, Blackthorn, Bursaria spinosa, Themeda triandra, Themeda australis and Microlaena stipoides.[10]

Fauna

The Park contains threatened and endangered species which are protected under State and Commonwealth legislation. Wildlife in the parks includes many native species of frogs, birds, lizards and bats. Foxes and rabbits are not rare and not unheard of.[10] Around eighty native vertebrate species exist within the parkland. Migratory birds are also known to visit. A search by Wildlife Atlas returned the identification of 167 vertebrate fauna species within the Park.[11]

One group of birds that is present all year round are the parrots. Many breed in the Parklands' trees are found, such as rainbow lorikeets, rosellas, red-rumped parrots, galahs and cockatoos.[12] Threatened species in the park include, Meridolum corneovirens, Grey-headed flying fox, little eagle, Eastern false pipistrelle, Varied sittella, East-coast free-tailed bat, Common bent-wing bat, Rüppell's broad-nosed bat and Turquoise parrot.[13]

Recreational features

Western Sydney Regional Park
Walking path in bushland
Type Urban park, wildlife park, nature reserve
Location Abbotsbury and Horsley Park
Coordinates 33°52′08″S 150°51′34″E / 33.8689°S 150.8595°E / -33.8689; 150.8595Coordinates: 33°52′08″S 150°51′34″E / 33.8689°S 150.8595°E / -33.8689; 150.8595
Area 583 ha (1,440 acres)
Opened 1997
Operated by Fairfield City Council
Status Open all year

The parklands have 16 precincts and 50 park areas. From north to south, the following parks, reserves, geographical features and sporting facilities are incorporated into the Western Sydney Parklands. Most of the precincts below feature picnic and BBQ areas, pathways (for cycling or walking) and children's playgrounds. The most popular picnic areas in the park are Lizard Log, The Dairy and Plough and Harrow.[14]

Northern Parklands:

Southern Parklands:

In addition to above, the Parklands contains market gardens, former military places and infrastructural facilities such as water supply canal, pipelines, electricity, gas and water easements, waste services, water storage tanks and telecommunications towers. Heritage sites include the Upper Canal System, The Rooty Hill, Bungarribee Homestead complex archaeological site.

See also

References

  1. HASSELL (2010a) Stage One Report, Context and Analysis, Western Sydney Parklands Plan of Management.
  2. WSPT Annual Visitor Monitoring 2009/2010
  3. RTA (2008) The Western Sydney Regional Aboriginal Heritage Study. NSW Department of Environment and Climate Change
  4. HASSELL (2010b) Draft Western Sydney Parklands Plan of Management 2010–2020.
  5. DECCW (2009), Draft Recovery Plan for the Cumberland Plain. DECCW, Sydney.
  6. NSW NPWS (2001) State of the Parks 2001, NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service, Hurstville.
  7. 1 2 DECC (2006) A Vertebrate Fauna Survey of Western Sydney Regional Park. Unpublished report. NPWS, Parramatta.
  8. NSW NPWS (2002) Native Vegetation of the Cumberland Plain - Final Edition. NPWS, Sydney.
  9. Ecological (2008) Biodiversity Restoration Strategy Western Sydney Parklands. NSW Department of Planning.
  10. "Sydney Zoo - Bungarribee Super Park, Western Sydney". Sydney Zoo. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
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