Macquarie Park was part of the suburb of North Ryde until it was gazetted as a suburb in its own right on 5 February 1999,[2] and many businesses still use North Ryde as the address. Both suburbs share the 2113 postcode but Macquarie University, which is located at the northern part of the suburb, has its own postcode of 2109.
The whole area between the Parramatta and Lane Cove Rivers was originally known by its Aboriginal name Wallumatta. Contact with the first white settlement's bridgehead into Australia quickly devastated much of the population through epidemics of smallpox and other diseases. Their descendants live on, though their language, social system, way of life and traditions are mostly lost. The Aboriginal name survives in a local reserve, the Wallumatta Nature Reserve, located at the corner of Twin and Cressy roads, North Ryde. Very few remnants of Sydney Turpentine-Ironbark Forest still exist. The most substantial undisturbed area is the Wallumatta Nature Reserve in North Ryde, which is owned and managed by the National Parks and Wildlife Service. This small and critically endangered reserve, also known as the Macquarie Hospital Bushland, is one of the last remnants of the remaining 0.5% (as at 2007)[4] of original and endangered[5] turpentine-ironbark forests on Wianamatta shale soil in Sydney.[6] See Sydney Turpentine-Ironbark Forest.
British settlement
Macquarie Park is named for Governor Lachlan Macquarie (1762–1824), a British military officer and colonial administrator who served as the Governor of New South Wales from 1810 to 1821. The area that is now Macquarie Park was part of the suburb of North Ryde from the late 19th century. The area was once filled with market gardens, poultry farms and vast tracts of bushland, with many beautiful picnic spots and waterfalls.
Suburban development
Tuckwell Place
The mid-1960s saw the establishment of Macquarie University and the 'Macquarie Park Employment Area' which saw the rezoning of 'Green Belt' bushland to allow for industrial activities. The initial concept for Macquarie Park was based on the idea of a similar hi-tech industrial area surrounding Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, the goal being to provide for the interaction between industries and the university.[7]
During the 1970s, companies such as Amalgamated Wireless Australasia Limited, Beiersdorf, Racal and Universal Press located their corporate headquarters in the area. Macquarie Park has since gained a reputation of being a leading high-tech industrial area in Australia. It attracts many local and international companies from high-tech fields including electronic, scientific, computing, medical, communication, pharmaceutical and business supply.
Economy
Macquarie Park is Northern Suburb's centre for major commercial and retail districts. The "Sydney global economic corridor", is used to describe a geographical "arch" of Sydney, home to international corporations.
Macquarie Centre is a major shopping centre located opposite Macquarie University and next to Macquarie University Station. There are also two smaller shopping centres nearby, Lachlan's Square Village located in the Lachlan's Line precinct and strip mall on Lane Cove Road known as Eden Park Centre which features fast food restaurants and other takeaway shops.
Macquarie Park has a wide variety of restaurants and cafes and is known as a major dining destination in the Northern Suburbs of Sydney. There are a large number of restaurants ranging from Australian to Chinese (including Cantonese), Japanese and Korean restaurants and eateries.
Macquarie University Station Precinct
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A substantial re-development of the Macquarie University Station Precinct (also known as the Herring Road Precinct) in Macquarie Park is planned and underway as part of the NSW State Government's "Priority Growth Precincts" program (originally known as the "Urban Activation Precincts" program). The objective is to provide housing and employment close to transport to help meet Sydney's growth needs, including up to 2,400 new homes by 2021 and up to 5,800 by 2031 that are within a ten-minute walk from Macquarie University Station. Following public display and consultation, the rezoning proposal was finalised in September 2015.[11][12]
At the 2016 census, 36.4% of employed people travelled to work on public transport and 34.1% by car either as driver or as passenger, compared to the 2021 Census, conducted during COVID which recorded that 10.3% of residents travelled to work by public transport and 20.7% by car either as a driver or passenger.[14][15]
Education
Macquarie University
Macquarie University is one of Australia's largest universities. It features a 126-hectare park-like campus beside a high-technology corridor.[16]
The university is affiliated with a number of colleges also located in the suburb including Dunmore Lang College,[17] Robert Menzies College[18] an Anglican college, Macquarie Christian Studies Institute[19] and Sydney Institute of Business & Technology.[20]
Macquarie University has in recent years become a major research centre, with Macquarie University Hospital and the Cochlear Research Centre located within the university grounds.
At the 2021 census, Macquarie Park recorded a population of 11,071. Of these:[14]
Age distribution
In keeping with its proximity to the university, Macquarie Park shows an over-representation of younger adults compared to the rest of the country. Macquarie Park residents' median age was 31 years, compared to the national median of 38. Children aged 0–14 years made up 11.1% of the population (compared to the national average of 18.2%) and people aged 65 years and over made up 8.7% of the population (the national average was 17.2%).
This is an optional question on the Census. Of the people who answered it, the most common responses were No Religion, so described 42.8%, Catholic 12.1%, Hinduism 9.9%, Not stated 7.2%, and Islam 5.5%.
Politics
Macquarie Park is in the state of New South Wales electorates of Lane Cove[22] and Ryde,[23] and the federal electorate of Bennelong.[24]
Climate
Like the rest of the Sydney basin, Macquarie Park has a humid sub-tropical climate with warm to hot summers and cool, damp winters. The record low of −3.5 °C (26 °F) was recorded on 28 July 1986. The record maximum temperature was recorded more recently, on 21 December 1994 when the temperature reached 43.1 °C (110 °F).
^"The Legislative Assembly District of Lane Cove". NSW Electoral Commission. 12 April 2023. Archived from the original on 4 March 2024. Retrieved 4 March 2024. Chatswood West, East Ryde, Gladesville, Greenwich, Henley, Hunters Hill, Huntleys Cove, Huntleys Point, Lane Cove, Lane Cove North, Lane Cove West, Linley Point, Longueville, Macquarie Park, North Ryde, Northwood, Putney, Riverview, Ryde, St Leonards, Tennyson Point, Woolwich.
^"The Legislative Assembly District of Ryde". NSW Electoral Commission. 12 April 2023. Archived from the original on 4 March 2024. Carlingford, Denistone, Denistone East, Denistone West, Eastwood, Epping, Macquarie Park, Marsfield, Meadowbank, Melrose Park, North Ryde, Ryde, West Ryde.
^"Profile of the electoral division of Bennelong (NSW)". Australian Electoral Commission. 19 November 2019. Archived from the original on 28 February 2024. Retrieved 4 March 2024. Bennelong covers an area from Ermington (part) and Melrose Park in the west, bounded by the Parramatta River in the south and Pittwater Road and the Lane Cove River in the east, with the M2 Motorway, Devlins Creek and Lane Cove River providing the northern boundary. Suburbs include Denistone, Epping, Gladesville (part), Macquarie Park, Meadowbank, Melrose Park, Putney, North Ryde, Ryde and parts of Carlingford (part).