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Werribee Park homestead
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Werribee
(including Werribee Park and Point Cook)
Part of Melbourne's sprawl famous for the superb
Werribee Park
Werribee is a city and suburb which is situated on the
Werribee River 31 km south-west of Melbourne, near Port Phillip Bay.
The City of Werribee includes Little River, Hoppers Crossing, Laverton
(a growing industrial centre) and Point Cook. The latter has a large
air force base. Werribee itself is located on a section of the old
Princes Highway which has been bypassed by the Princes Freeway. It is
now part of the residential/industrial sprawl of the outer Melbourne
metropolitan area. Werribee South is a patchwork quilt of market gardens.
Prior to European occupation the area is thought to
have been occupied by the Wathawurung Aborigines. Evidence of their
presence can be found at the Mount Rothwell Archaeological Area, 20 km
south-west of Werribee. It is one of only four known Aboriginal stone
arrangements in Victoria and one of the most spectacular in Australia,
consisting of 95 basalt blocks which have been carefully arranged in an
oval with a circumference of 151 metres.
The Werribee Plains were spotted from the You-Yangs by
Matthew Flinders in 1802. Hume and Hovell reached the Werribee River in
1824, naming it the Arndell. The first European settlement in the
district took place in the mid-1830s. Scotsman Thomas Chirnside,
already a major landholder in what is now western Victoria, took up
land in the Werribee district in the late 1840s. He and his brother
Andrew eventually owned 93 000 acres in the area. Thomas's Point Cook
homestead was built c.1850 and the brothers' Werribee Park Mansion in
the mid-1870s. The latter is considered Victoria's finest colonial
homestead. Both are open to the public.
In 1850 the village site, which later became Werribee, was
proclaimed. It was declared a municipality in 1862. The Presbyterian
Church at the corner of Duncans Rd and Synott St was financed by the Chirnsides.
In the 1890s farmers from the Ballarat area began
to move into the district, establishing dairying and agriculture. The
production of vegetables commenced when an irrigation scheme was
established c.1910. A state research farm (still in operation) was
established in 1912 and ex-servicemen were granted land in the area
after World War I.
Aviation instruction began at Point Cook in 1913-14 and the
RAAF's first air force base was established there in 1921. Still in
operation it is allegedly the oldest continually-operating military
base in the world. Werribee was declared a city in 1987.
Things to see:
Historical Museum
The local historical society is located in the second
shire office building (1893) at the corner of Duncans Rd and Watton St.
Their museum display is open on the second and fourth Saturdays of the
month from 1.00 p.m. to 4.00 p.m., tel: (03) 9741 6324. The other
historic survival in town is the original shire office, built of
bluestone in 1868 at the corner of Synnot St and Greaves St. It was
later a Masonic lodge.
B-24 Memorial Liberator Restoration
A restored B-24 Liberator is located at the
corner of the Princes Highway and Farm Rd. It is open Thursday and
Sunday from 9.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m.
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Werribee Park homestead
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Werribee Park
Werribee Park Mansion, on the basalt plains west of
Melbourne, has long been regarded as Victoria's finest rural colonial
homestead. Today the mansion is still the state's largest private
residence. The graziers Thomas and Andrew Chirnside commissioned the
building and it was completed between 1874 and 1877. Thomas had first
taken up land in the Werribee area in the late 1840s. His brother later
became joint owner of the 93 000-acre property which stretched from the
You-Yangs to the sea at Point Cook and from Little River to Skeleton
Creek (between Hoppers Crossing and Laverton). The proximity to the
markets at Geelong, Melbourne and the goldfields ensured the
profitability of their sheep empire which was allegedly one million
strong.
The mansion, built in the Classical Revival style boasts 60
rooms, a central tower and single-storey arcade. Built of bluestone
faced with local freestone, it can be considered an Australian analogue
of the English country house and garden and a symbol of Australia's
pastoral elite in the colonial era.
Thomas, suffering ill-health and related depression, shot
himself in the estate's washhouse in 1887. Andrew died in 1890 and his
wife in 1908. His son George then inherited the mansion. He broke up
the estate to enable the establishment of the Werribee State Research
Farm in 1912 and the RAAF base at Point Cook in 1921 then sold the
mansion to the Jesuits in 1923. They used it as a seminary, making
major additions to the house in the 1920s and 1930s, including the
tower. The mansion and grounds were purchased by the Victorian
government in 1973.
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The billiards room complete
with elephant's foot and bear rug
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The driveway begins at
the grand entry gates and gatekeeper's lodge and passes the Floriana
Parterre, an ornamental arrangement of flower beds which is in full
bloom from February to March. It is the one of the largest and most
spectacular in the country and is the focal point of the formal gardens
which cover 10 hectares. Completed in 1882, they were allegedly laid
out by the curator of the Melbourne Botanical Gardens and, like their
English counterparts, they feature not only a parterre, but also a
lake, grotto, glasshouses, meandering pathways, extended vistas and
British fauna and flora, including many venerable trees.
At the end of the drive is the mansion with its lavish
and remarkable Victorian interiors. Exceptional efforts have been made
to restore the house to the splendour of its heyday in the 1870s and
1880s. The furniture, fine art and paintings also reflect the period of
the Chirnside's residence. Most of the Chirnsides' furniture was made
in Edinburgh and shipped in 58 crates. A third of these items remain.
While in London in 1881 Thomas Chirnside acquired a collection of 73
paintings by contemporary artists and 'old masters', 20 of which remain.
The drawing room features an exceptional cut-glass
chandelier, ebony-and-gilt cabinets, an ottoman and chenille carpeting.
There is a magnificent staircase with rococo statue-lamps, a billiard
room with a panelled ceiling and carvings, a marble-paved conservatory
featuring a fine plastered ceiling and etched-glass windows, a main
hall with mosaic floor, Corinthian columns and gold-leaf, a library,
bedrooms, dining room and morning room.
The kitchen and servants' wing are designed to provide
insight into the working lives of the numerous domestic staff required
to maintain this grand lifestyle.
In the fashion of the day the estate was essentially a
self-sufficient village. There is a farm section at a small distance
from the mansion which retains a number of bluestone buildings - the
stables, blacksmith's shop, men's hut, implement shed, ration house and
employee's cottage. Farmhands are in attendance.
Other features of the 140-ha estate are the bluestone river
ford that linked the two parts of the estate, an ornamental lake with
an island that features one of Australia's few surviving grottoes,
glasshouses, the original Melbourne to Geelong road, and an earlier
bluestone homestead (1857) which is surrounded by a ha-ha, a sunken
bluestone wall which stopped animals from accessing the garden while
preserving views of the garden.
There is a cafe which is open daily, together with a
gift shop. Picnics but no barbecues are allowed within the grounds but
there is a picnic area with free gas barbecues in the regional
parkoutside the main entrance.
The shrubland, woodland and stands of river red gums are home
to birdlife such as great egrets, willy wagtails, the Australian white
ibis, swamp harriers, magpie larks, migratory waders, cormorants and
ibis. There are also platypuses and water rats along the river, eastern
long-necked tortoises, the forest eptesicus bat and plenty of frogs.
Werribee Park is located on K Road, 4 km south of the centre
of Werribee. It is signposted from the Princes Freeway (take the
Werribee South exit) or, if you are coming from Werribee itself, follow
Duncans Rd out of town and turn right onto K Road. Public Transport is
available via shuttle from Flinders St Station in Melbourne, tel: (03)
9748 5094.
From November to April the mansion is open to the public from
10.00 a.m. to 4.45 p.m. daily. From May to Octoberentry ceases at 3.45
p.m.
There are pamphlets with detailed information on the culture
of the mansion in the Chirnside's time, its interiors and the other
features of the estate. Tours of the precinct are self-guided by means
of audio head sets which are provided at no extra cost. The full tour
takes about one hour but it allows for much individual variation.
Guided mansion, garden and tower tours start from
the mansion, for an extra fee. The tours run according to request and
are subject to the availability of guides. Bookings are essential.
Furthermore, a vehicle departs every 30 minutes for an audio
tour of the property (this is known as the Park Explorer Tour). Pick-up
points are the front door of the mansion and the gate lodge. This
service also incurs an extra charge.
Visitors can choose to stay at the Mansion Hotel, which
offers five-star accommodation and a quality restaurant.There is also a
health club and day spa offering therapeutic treatments, tel: (03) 9731
4000. Shadowfax Winery isopen for tastings on the weekends. There are
facilities for disabled visitors, wedding and corporate function
venues, educational programs and a corporate cricket pitch for hire.
Special events are held throughout the year at the mansion,
notably the Spring Harvest Festival which includes period costumes and
crafts exhibitions, musical events, polo matches and working farm
demonstrations. For further information on any matter ring (03) 9741 2444.
State Rose Garden
The State Rose Garden is located adjacent the grounds
and incurs no entry fee. It features 4500 plants from 100 species in
the shape of a giant Tudor rose and is at its best from November to
April. As a continuation of the themes established in the adjacent
estate the gardeners are in period costume. A tour of the garden can be
booked any time, but spring is best, tel: 131 963. A summer party is
held in March. For general information ring (03) 9742 6717.
The National Equestrian Centre
Also on K Road, just before you reach the mansion, is
the National Equestrian Centre on 73 acres with a 4700-square-metre
indoor arena, tel: (03) 9741 7672.
Werribee Open Range Zoo
The zoo is on over 200 ha of land adjacent Werribee Park
mansion. Access is via a signposted side road which heads off K Road,
just before you reach the Equestrian Centre. It is open daily from 9.00
a.m. to 5.00 p.m., although no-one is admitted after 3.30 p.m. Hours
are extended during daylight savings.
Remember, this is an open-range zoo so visitors are taken on
a fifty-minute guided tour on board a specially-provided bus. The tours
operate between 10.30 a.m. and 3.40 p.m. There are also two walking
trails. The zoo features lions, rhinos, hippos, giraffes, zebras, deers
and antelopes from Africa and Asia, American bison, camels, monkeys,
cheetahs, meerkats, serval cats, kangaroos, wallabies and emus. There
is also a bistro, a kiosk, a playground and a picnic area.
Those who wish to see both the zoo and Werribee Mansion (see
previous entry) can purchase a joint ticket which is available from
either attraction and which is valid for three months from date of
purchase.
Point Cook RAAF Museum
The RAAF base at Point Cook was Australia's first such
institution, being established in 1921. It is claimed to be the oldest
continually-operating military base in the world. The attached aviation
museum is regarded as the finest such institution in Australia. It is
said to house the largest collection of military aircraft in the
Southern Hemisphere, with items dating back to 1916. Some of the
vintage craft are still in operating condition and are sometimes flown
for visitors to the museum. The museum also has 'interactive airfield
events' on a daily basis. For information on forthcoming events ring
the info-line on (1902) 240 553.
Extensive displays of memorabilia relate to the history
of the RAAF, of Point Cook, and the role of women in Australia's
20th-century military conflicts. There are numerous special exhibits,
including one on World War I flying ace, Baron von Richtofen.
The museum is located at the end of Point Cook Rd. The
simplest way is to take the Point Cook Rd exit off the Princes Freeway
at the western edge of Laverton and follow the signs. Alternatively,
follow Duncans Rd out of Werribee, cross over the freeway, turn left
into Aviation Rd and, at its end, turn right into Point Cook Rd. Public
transport is available daily from Flinders St station on board the
Werribee Park shuttle which takes in Werribee mansion, the RAAF Museum,
the Point Cook homestead and the coastal park. Bookings are essential,
tel: (03) 9748 5094.
The museum is open from 10.00 a.m. to 3.00 p.m. from
Tuesday to Friday and from 10.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. on weekends and
public holidays. Guided tours are available on weekdays. Bookings for
the tours are available during business hours, tel: (03) 9256 1300.
Recorded information is available by ringing (1902) 240 553. The museum
shop can be contacted on (03) 9256 1040.
Point Cook Coastal Park
200 metres before you reach the base, as you head south
along Point Cook Rd, there is a turnoff to the left into Point Cook
Coastal Park, a well-maintained and landscaped wetlands park which
represents one of the last relatively unspoiled reef ecosystems in Port
Phillip Bay. It possesses a substantial lookout tower, picnic shelters,
free gas barbecues, two childrens' playgrounds, change rooms, clean
toilets, and paved walks to the unspoilt shore which boasts a swimming
beach, walking trails and a plenitude of birdlife which can be observed
from Spectacle Lakes birdhide or from the Cheetham Wetlands Tower. The
latter provides views over a series of ponds populated in summer by
birds migrating from the northern hemisphere for the winter, including
the eastern golden plover from Siberia and Alaska. These ponds were
used between the 1920s and the early 1990s by a company which used them
to extract salt by evaporation.
An information centre operates at the beach
picnic area and a touch tank permits visitors to get a closer look at
the local marine life. The shade shelters can be reserved for a fee but
the barbecues cannot be reserved. Disabled facilities include special
parking spaces, toilets and a wheelchair-accessible path to the picnic
grounds, the edge of the beach and the Spectacle Lakes birdhide.
The wetlands, saltmarsh and beach sand flats are
visited by a wide range of birds, including the endangered
orange-bellied parrot and the rare Altona skipper butterfly can be
found on the shores of RAAF Lake. The Marine Reserve, declared in 1982,
protects all native flora and fauna in the park (including shellfish
and snakes). It forbids fishing on the reef within 200 metres of the
high-tide shoreline mark, along with spearfishing, open fires, cats,
dogs and horses.
The park's vegetation was altered by European settlement and
now consists of remnant basalt plains grassland, with areas of coastal
salt marsh, grassy wetland, sedgeland and aquatic species. Replanting
of original tree species is underway.
The park is open daily from 8.00 a.m. to 5.00 p.m. on
weekdays in winter (opening at 8.30 a.m. on weekends), with hours
extended to 8.00 p.m. in summer, tel: (03) 9395 1132.
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The stables at Point Cook
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Point Cook Homestead
Once you are in the park grounds, there is a
signposted turnoff on the left then a right turn onto Point Cook
Homestead Rd (gravel) which leads to Point Cook Homestead and stables,
on the edge of Port Phillip Bay. This large, single-storey bluestone
house was built in stages from around 1850 to 1857 for Thomas Chirnside
who used it as the family residence until the completion of Werribee
Mansion (see earlier entry); the whole of the area once being part of
the Chirnside estate.
The homestead is essentially Classical in style but each wing
dates from a different period and hence there is some variety of
design. The substantial, single-storey stables were constructed in a
vernacular fashion, prior to 1861, of random-coursed bluestone.
The homestead is open to the public for a fee from 10.00 a.m.
to 4.00 p.m. on weekdays and until 5.00 p.m. on weekends. There are
educational tours and catering, picnic, barbecue and kiosk facilities,
tel: (03) 9395 1293.
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View of Melbourne from Point
Cook
homestead
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Riverbend
Historic Park
Just to the north-west of Werribee is Riverbend Historic
Park, an ideal picnic spot on the Werribee River where, in 1889, the
Chaffey brothers undertook early experiments with the irrigation of
farmland (see entry on Mildura).
Rivergum Animal Farm
If you head north-west out of Werribee on Ballan Rd and
turn right into Hobbs Rd it will lead to Rivergum Animal Farm where you
can experience life on the land, milking cows, feeding chickens,
bottle-feeding lambs and kids, taking a hay-ride pulled by Clydesdales,
fishing or strolling along the riverbanks. There are picnic-barbecue
facilities and it is open daily but bookings are essential, tel: (03)
9741 5495.
Serendip Sanctuary
Serendip Sanctuary offers an excellent experience
of a wetlands environment rich in fauna with plenty of fun activities
and educational guidance and an opportunity to observe native fauna at
close quarters without making them aware of the human presence.
It features over 150 species common to the western plains of
Victoria. Activities for children include a ponding site where they can
catch invertebrates and a search through some bushland for six hidden
wooden animals (designed to teach them that there are animals present
in the bush if they are willing to look carefully enough). At the
visitors' centre there are lizards on display, an 'underwater world',
an activities room with a CD-ROM on the local wildlife and a theatrette
featuring the mating dances of brolgas and other interesting footage.
From the centre nature trails lead past wildlife (such as
free-ranging kangaroos, wallabies, emus and pademelons) in natural
habitats and on to birdhides permitting close and unobtrusive
observation among the marshes, lakes and billabongs. Here video cameras
broadcast the view more widely. There is a ranger who conducts
curriculum-based environmental education activities and a 'farm dam'
which demonstrates the compatibility of farming and wildlife as well as
providing a refuge and a linking corridor for migratory species. The
sanctuary's captive breeding program creates an opportunity of viewing
rare and threatened species such as brolgas, Australian bustards and
magpie geese.
To get there follow the freeway towards Melbourne. Take
the turnoff to Lara (into Forest Rd) about 12 km from Geelong's city
centre (signposted for You Yangs Regional Park) then, after a further 6
km, turn right into Windermere Rd. The entrance is to your left, at 100
Windermere Rd, Lara.
Opening hours are 10. 00 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. daily and
entrance to casual visitors who are happy to wander about on their own
is free. For those wishing to visit as a group and receive a guided
tour, the cost is $4.50 per person. Those who want both the guided tour
and a drive around the ring road, the cost is $5.60 per person. There
are picnic areas with free electric barbecues and disabled access is
provided. For further information ring (03) 5282 1584.
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Motels
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Comfort Inn & Suites Werribee
6 Tower Rd
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 9944
Rating: ****
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Monte Villa Motor Inn
78 Old Geelong Rd
Hoppers Crossing 3029
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9748 7700
Rating: ****
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Werribee Park Motor Inn
112 Duncans Rd
P.O. Box 437
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 7222
Rating: ***
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Hotels
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Commercial Hotel
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 2322
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Racecourse Hotel
Cottrell St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 3171
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The Bridge Hotel
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 3302
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Tudor Inn Werribee
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 2806
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Apartments
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Comfort Inn & Suites Werribee
6 Tower Rd
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 9944
Rating: ****
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Restaurants
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Accetta's Woodfired Pizza House
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9742 4888
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Baffetti Bistro
Synnot St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 8989
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Blueys Bar & Grill
Cnr Heath's & Derrimut Rds
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9748 4000
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Cherry Grill
Cherry St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 0066
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Chirnside Tavern
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9742 4486
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Florio's Pasta House
Station St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9731 0055
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Jakkajan's Thai Restaurant
Synnot St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9742 3279
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La Porchetta Pizza Restaurant
Shop 8 Werribee Plaza
Cnr Heath & Derrimut Rd
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9748 4888
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Master Wok Chinese Restaurant
Synnot St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 7007
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Meerkat Restaurant & Function Centre
K Rd
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9742 2441
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Monte Villa Motor Inn
78 Old Geelong Rd
Hoppers Crossing 3029
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9748 7700
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New Great Wall Restaurant
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9742 6172
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Silver Chopsticks Chinese Restaurant
Barnes St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 7554
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Taco Bill Mexican Restaurant
Synnot St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 0439
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Uncle Leo's Pizza Bistro
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 2634
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Werribee Family Restaurant
Shop T56
Werribee Plaza
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9749 4302
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Werribee Italian Pizza & Restaurant
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9741 0695
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Cafés
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Cafe Aroma
Watton St
Werribee
VIC
3030
Telephone: (03) 9742 2744
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