The City of Bankstown was a
local government area in the
south-west region of Sydney, Australia, centred on the suburb of
Bankstown, from 1895 to 2016. The last mayor of the City of Bankstown Council was
Clr Khal Asfour, a member of the
Labor Party.
The traditional Aboriginal inhabitants of the land now known as the Canterbury-Bankstown were the
Dharug (Darag, Daruk, Dharuk) and
Eora peoples. Early indigenous groups relied upon the riparian network of the
Georges River and
Cooks River catchments towards
Botany Bay, with extant reminders of this lifestyle dating back 3,000 years including rock and overhang paintings, stone scrapers, middens and axe grinding grooves.[3][4]
Following the arrival of Europeans in 1788, the new British settlers in the area burned oyster shells from the middens along Cooks River to produce lime for use in building mortar. The first incursions and eventual land grants in the area by Europeans led to increasing tensions, culminating in a confrontation between Europeans and a group of Aboriginal people led by Tedbury, the son of
Pemulwuy, in what is now Punchbowl in 1809. However, following Tedbury's death in 1810, resistance to European settlement generally ended.[5]
The District of Bankstown was named by
Governor Hunter in 1797 in honour of botanist Sir
Joseph Banks. The area remained very rural until residential and suburban development followed the development of the Bankstown Railway Line with the passing of the Marrickville to Burwood Road Railway Act by the NSW Parliament in 1890, extending the rail line from
Marrickville Station (later Sydenham Station) to
Burwood Road (later Belmore Station) by 1895.[6] With the passing of the Belmore to Chapel Road Railway Act in 1906, the line was extended further to
Lakemba,
Punchbowl and
Bankstown by 1909.[6] The railway formed an important part of the development of Bankstown, with rapid development following its construction – so much so that the commercial centre of Bankstown moved from its former position in Irish Town (Now Yagoona) on Liverpool Road to the vicinity of Bankstown railway station.
Establishment of Bankstown Council
In March 1895 a petition was submitted to the NSW Colonial Government by 109 residents of the Bankstown area, requesting the establishment of the "Municipal District of Bankstown" under the Municipalities Act, 1867.[7] The petition was subsequently accepted and the Municipal District of Bankstown was proclaimed by Lieutenant Governor
Sir Frederick Darley on 7 September 1895.[8] The first six-member council, standing in one at-large constituency, was elected on 4 November 1895.[9] With the passing of the Local Government Act 1906, the council area became known as the Municipality of Bankstown.
Administration
On 13 December 1933, the Minister for Local Government
Eric Spooner dismissed Bankstown council for the first time, which was also the first time the minister's power to dismiss a council was exercised under the Local Government Act, 1919. Spooner dismissed the council as a result of an inquiry into the council's awarding of a sanitary contract, which had recommended that the council seek further tenders for the contract as a result of an irregular and deficient original tender process, and that there was a clear implication that there had been undue influence involved in the awarding of the contract.[10] After the council refused to accept these findings, and resolved to award the contract as originally intended, Spooner dismissed the council the next day and appointed the inquiry commissioner, William Robert Wylie, Inspector of Local Government Accounts, as administrator until fresh elections could be held in December 1934.[11][12]
On 3 March 1954, the Minister for Local Government
Jack Renshaw dismissed Bankstown council and appointed the Chief Inspector of Local Government, Henry William Dane, as administrator. Renshaw announced that the dismissal was due to the council being "not competent to discharge its responsibilities" after failing to act upon a report by the Department of Local Government that identified serious allegations of corruption and inappropriate acquisition methods for council materials by council's assistant electrical engineer, who was later dismissed in July 1954 following an official inquiry.[13][14][15][16][17]
On 8 November 1963, Bankstown council was dismissed for the third time by the Minister for Local Government (
Pat Hills), with Dane appointed for a second term as administrator, when five aldermen were charged with conspiracy to demand and receive payment in consideration of doing acts pertaining to aldermanic office.[18] It was alleged the aldermen William Thomas Delauney, Charles Henry Little, Georgen Allardice Johnstone, Alfred Frederick McGuren and Murt O'Brien, were involved in a conspiracy to seek £5,000 each for ensuring that a
Lend Lease proposal for a shopping centre in Bankstown was approved.[19][20] On 7 April 1965, Delauney and another accused who was not an alderman, Martin Goode, pled guilty to the charges, while the remaining four went to trial at the
District Court of New South Wales (prosecuted by John Slattery QC and presided over by Justice Christopher Monahan).[21] The Crown's case relied upon tape recordings of the accused, which the judge ruled as admissible despite an admission from the Crown that they had been illegally obtained.[22] On 13 April 1965, Justice Monahan acquitted McGuren and O'Brien on the basis that there was insufficient evidence to connect them to the conspiracy.[23] On 15 April 1965, Johnstone was acquitted and Little was found guilty, with Judge Monahan sentencing him, along with Delauney and Goode (who had pled guilty), to 12-months in prison.[24]
City status and later history
Bankstown's city status was proclaimed in 1980 in the presence of
Queen Elizabeth II, becoming the "City of Bankstown".[25] On 12 May 2016, the City of Bankstown was merged with the City of Canterbury to form the Canterbury-Bankstown Council.
Council seats
Council Chambers (1918)
On 29 June 1918 the new Council Chambers building located on South Terrace south of the Bankstown railway station (now No. 9 Bankstown City Plaza) was officially opened by the mayor, A. Townsend. Completed to a cost of £4,000, the new Council Chambers building was designed by prominent architect and mayor of
Kogarah, Charles Herbert Halstead, and built by A. G. Swane. At the time of opening the street frontage included a post office, and a branch of the
Australian Bank of Commerce.[26][27] This remained the Council's primary meeting place and offices until new offices in the Civic Centre to the north were completed in 1963.[28]
Civic Centre and Council Chambers (1963)
By the early 1960s, Bankstown Council sought a new headquarters that would be able to accommodate a growing organisation as well as provide a new 'civic centre' for the Council area. In 1961, the council commissioned a modernist design by architect
Kevin Curtin, which envisaged a complex of an Administration Building, a Council Chamber roundhouse, and a Town Hall with the capacity for 1,500 people, to be located on a large block north of the Bankstown railway station between Chapel Road, Rickard Road, Appian Way and The Mall.[29][30][31] The Council Chambers was the first building completed and took the form of a roundhouse and was built by Monier Builders Pty Ltd, with the interior fittings and furniture designed by Maison Paul Pty Ltd of Greenacre, featuring timberwork in
Queensland walnut timber (Endiandra palmerstonii).[29] The consulting engineers for the project were M. G. Bull (structural) and John R. Wallis, Spratt & Associates (electrical and mechanical).[29]
Administration building
The administration building was officially opened on 2 December 1963.[28] It was built to house the majority of council's staff and departments, and was a two-storey square block with an external colonnade and basement level for parking.[29] The rates, health & building, and Town Clerk's departments were located on the ground floor, while the upper floor contained the engineering and planning departments. The building's main lobby featured a mosaic mural by Michael Santry depicting the history of Bankstown, in addition to marble-clad columns, timber panelling, and terrazzo floors.[29] In 1964, the exterior lighting of the Civic Centre received an award for meritorious lighting from the Australian Illuminating Engineering Society.[28] In 1966 a new fountain, the "Dane Fountain", was unveiled outside the building to commemorate the service of H. W. Dane as administrator of the council.[28]
On Tuesday 1 July 1997, a fire in the building, caused by a spark from maintenance works to bring the building up to modern standards, resulted in the complete destruction of the Administration Building, along with a large number of council records and historical items.[32][33][34] With the Council offices relocated to the nearby Bankstown Civic Tower, the remains of the Administration Building were cleared and its site became the location for a new central park which was officially named
Paul Keating Park on 13 June 2000.[35]
Spirit of Botany
In 1963, as part of the works to complete the new Bankstown Civic Centre, the council commissioned sculptor Alan Ingham to create a memorial statue to Sir Joseph Banks. Ingham accepted on the basis that he would create a statue that would be to the 'spirit of botany', a more abstract representation of Banks' work in the field, that would blend with the modernist style of the new Civic Centre: "It would be controversial and create far more interest than a statue of the man".[36] The cast aluminium statue was officially unveiled on 7 April 1964 atop a base of rocks.[29][37] When the Town Hall was completed in 1973, the statue was moved to the Town Hall forecourt as part of a fountain.[28] In 2012 as part of the Bankstown Library and Knowledge Centre project the statue was moved again to a more prominent location further south at the south-western corner of Paul Keating Park.[38]
Town hall
The final element of the Civic Centre to be completed was the town hall, designed as a theatre for 1,500 people, at the north-western end of the site. It was officially opened on 30 June 1973 by Prime Minister
Gough Whitlam.[28] The Town Hall project was overseen by
Civil and Civic (a
Lendlease subsidiary).[39] In 2013, the Town Hall was upgraded and redeveloped as part of the Bankstown Library and Knowledge Centre project to become a 300-seat theatre named the "
Bryan Brown Theatre", with the eastern side demolished and replaced by a new Library and "Knowledge Centre".[40][41][42]
Civic Tower
In 1989, Council commissioned a new 14-storey "Civic Tower" office building at 66-72 Rickard Road to accommodate additional council staff, state government agencies, and rented office space. With construction beginning in 1990, the tower was complete by 1991. The Civic Tower became the primary Council offices from 1997 to 1999 following the destruction of the Administration Building.[33]
Demographics
At the
2011 Census, there were 182,352 people in the Bankstown local government area, of these 49.3% were male and 50.7% were female.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people made up 0.8% of the population. The
median age of people in the City of Bankstown was 35 years, which is slightly lower than the national median of 37 years. Children aged 0 – 14 years made up 21.7% of the population and people aged 65 years and over made up 13.7% of the population. Of people in the area aged 15 years and over, 52.1% were married and 11.0% were either divorced or separated.[1]
Population growth in the City of Bankstown between the 2001 Census and the 2006 Census was 3.43%; and in the subsequent five years to the 2011 Census, population growth was 6.96%. When compared with total population growth of Australia for the same periods, being 5.78% and 8.32% respectively, population growth in Bankstown local government area was approximately 75% of the national average.[43] The median
weekly income for residents within the City of Bankstown was slightly lower than the national average.[1][44]
At the 2011 Census, the proportion of residents in the Bankstown local government area who stated their
ancestry as
Lebanese, was in excess of eight times the national average. The proportion of residents who stated an affiliation with
Islam was in excess of eleven times the national average. Meanwhile, as at the Census date, the area was linguistically diverse, with
Arabic or
Vietnamese languages spoken in 30% of households, both languages approximately seven times the national averages.[1]
Selected historical census data for Bankstown local government area
Bankstown City Council was composed of twelve
councillors elected
proportionally as four separate
wards, each electing three councillors. All councillors were elected for a fixed four-year term of office. The mayor was elected by the councillors at the first meeting of the council. The most recent and last election was held on 8 September 2012, and the makeup of the council prior to its abolition was as follows:[45][46][47][48]
The former Bankstown City region was approximately 76 square kilometres (29 sq mi) and had a population density of about 21.46 people per hectare.[177] The boundaries of the former Bankstown City were, clockwise, the Prospect water supply pipeline and Liverpool Road (also known as
Hume Highway) along the north, Roberts Road, Juno Parade, Koala Road, Punchbowl Road, Canterbury Road and the
Salt Pan Creek along the east, the
Georges River in the south and the Georges River, Prospect Creek, the Hume Highway and Woodville Road along the west. Salt Pan Creek is a saltmarsh and mangrove swamp that extends from Canterbury Road to Georges River.
Parks
Bankstown had 293 parks covering 730 hectares (1,800 acres) within its city limits. There are 41 sports grounds, 12 community parks and 18 natural parklands.[178] In the CBD, major parks include Bankstown Oval,
McLeod Reserve, Paul Keating Park and Bankstown City Gardens. Other major parks include
Mirambeena Regional Park, The Crest, Middleton Park, O'Neill Park,
Terry Lamb Complex,
Garrison Point,
Jensen Oval and the extensive parklands around Georges River, among others. The entrance to
Georges River National Park is also located within the city.
Paul Keating Park, in the centre of Bankstown, stands on the old site of the Council Administration building, which burned down in an accidental fire in 1997, and was named in 2000 for former prime minister and local MP for Blaxland, Paul Keating.[179] The Park is used for a variety of concerts and festivals, and is otherwise a large playing field.
In 1946, Bankstown became the first municipality in Western Sydney to adopt the Library Act, 1939 by opening a Children's Library, located at Restwell Street. A central branch library was established on The Mall in Bankstown in 1954, followed by a mobile library service from 1955.[28] In 1958–1961, three more branch libraries were opened in Chester Hill, Greeacre and Padstow, followed by a branch in Panania in 1968.[28] The original Bankstown City Library was demolished in 1981 to make way for a much larger 2700sqm facility, which officially opened on 28 May 1983.[28][180]
In 2013, the Bankstown City Library was closed when the new "Bankstown Library and Knowledge Centre" next to the Town Hall was officially opened.[181] Designed by architects
Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp (FJMT), the new library has been praised by the NSW Government Architect as a "reference for better design quality across the town centre" and as having "expanded the traditional idea of what a public library is, becoming a welcoming and socially engaging community hub".[182][183] In 2015 the design received the
Australian Institute of Architects Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture, the Australian Institute of Architects (NSW Chapter) John Verge Award for Interior Architecture and Commendation for Public Architecture.[182]
Sister cities
Sister Cities of Bankstown include:
Broken Hill, a city in remote
New South Wales. Bankstown signed its first Sister City Agreement with Broken Hill on 16 September 1986.[184]
Suita,
Osaka, Japan. Bankstown signed its first international Sister City agreement with Suita City, Japan, in March 1989.[184]
Yangcheon-gu City,
Seoul, South Korea. In 1997, Bankstown signed a Friendship Agreement with
Yangcheon-gu City in South Korea, resulting in the establishment of youth exchanges and the sharing of information between both local authorities. During a tour in 2001, Bankstown Council delegates met with Korean officials to discuss ways of promoting Bankstown companies with a view to creating new export markets. The Cities exchanged details of Management Planning Processes and inspections of community facilities took place in Yangcheon. A Sister City Agreement was subsequently signed with Yangcheon City in September 2002.[184]
Shijiazhuang, Hebei, China. In February 2000 a friendship agreement was made between Shijiazhuang City and Bankstown. The friendship agreement signifies that the two cities are exploring the possibility of venturing into a sister city agreement.[185]
Crest and logo
In 1963, to coincide with the official opening of the new Bankstown Civic Centre, Bankstown Council adopted a new civic badge to serve as the primary visual symbol of the council.[186] It took the form of a royal blue and gold heraldic shield quartered into four fields by a white cross charged with a golden
lion passant guardant from the
Coat of Arms of New South Wales. The top left corner included a
Southern Cross to represent Australia; A
mace and
mayoral chain in the top right corner to represent authority; A stork on an oak stump sprouting new branches in the bottom right corner and a
fleur-de-lis in the bottom left corner are both taken from the coat of arms of Sir Joseph Banks, as are the blue and gold colours and white cross. A simple
crown on top of the shield represents the monarchy of
Queen Elizabeth II. The crest formed the primary logo of the council until 1995 when a logo featuring the 'Spirit of Botany' statue was adopted, which remained in use until the council's end in 2016.[186]
The coat of arms of Sir Joseph Banks as granted in 1803.
The 'crest' of Bankstown Council, as adopted in 1963.
^
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^"Mayor again". The Sydney Morning Herald. 29 September 1978. p. 10. Alderman Roger Bowman was re-elected Mayor of Bankstown by the council last night. It is his second term. Alderman Ray McCormack was elected deputy mayor. The council decided to increase the mayoral allowance by $2,000 to $12,000.
^Nicklin, Lenore (27 December 1980). "The mayors of Sydney". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 23.
^"Elected for 15th year as mayor". The Sydney Morning Herald. 2 October 1980. p. 17.
^"Significant Council gains for Labor". The Sydney Morning Herald. 4 October 1980. p. 4.
^"Mayor buried tomorrow". The Sydney Morning Herald. 25 June 1985. p. 3.
^"Bankstown City Council". City of Bankstown. Archived from
the original on 4 October 2006. Retrieved 10 October 2021. On Friday 1st September, Clr Tania Mihailuk was elected Mayor of Bankstown, with Clr Richard McLaughlin elected to the position of Deputy Mayor. Mayoral elections are held annually.
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^
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