Toorak, Victoria

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Toorak
MelbourneVictoria

Royal Terrace on Williams Road
Population: 13,127 (2006)[1]
Established: 1850s
Postcode: 3142
Area: 4.3 km² (1.7 sq mi)
Property Value: AUD $2,130,000 [2]
Location: km (5 mi) from Melbourne
LGA: City of Stonnington
State District: Malvern, Prahran
Federal Division: Higgins
Suburbs around Toorak:
Richmond Burnley Hawthorn
South Yarra Toorak Kooyong
Prahran Armadale Malvern

Toorak is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is in the Local Government Area of the City of Stonnington. The suburb is located 6 km south-east of the CBD, on a rise at a bend in the Yarra River. In popular Australian culture, the name Toorak has become synonymous with wealth. The suburb has long had the reputation of being Melbourne's most elite, and ranks among the most prestigious in Australia.

Toorak is located south of the Yarra River. The river separates Toorak from Richmond, a suburb that, although close in proximity to Toorak, does not share its prestige.

Melbourne's celebrity suburb is undeniably Toorak. But whereas the peninsula positioning of the Points Darling and Piper protects residents from the prying eyes of the proletariat, the same effect is achieved in Melbourne by jamming the city's richest suburb hard up against the Yarra River. Like a medieval moat, the Yarra River separates leafy Toorakian order from the scrambled chaos of Richmond.

— Bernard Salt[3]

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The suburb was named after Toorak House, a residence built by James Jackson, a merchant in 1849. The word "Toorak" may have come from Aboriginal words of similar pronunciation, meaning black crow or reedy swamp[4].

Toorak House served as the residence of the second Governor of Victoria, Captain Sir Charles Hotham, from 1854 to 1855. Toorak House then served as residence of three successive Governors of Victoria until 1874. Bishopscourt in East Melbourne was then used before the present Government house was occupied in 1876.

Toorak House still stands today in St. Georges Road, and set the architectural tone for the suburb. Toorak House is presently owned by the Church of Sweden abroad. It also houses the Consulate of Sweden. The Swedish Church is open for visitors daily[5].

Toorak is serviced by three railway stations, Toorak, Hawksburn and Heyington, and a tramline that runs along Toorak Road.

A study by the Department of Primary Industries revealed the following facts about Toorak[6]:

  • In Toorak, 29.6 per cent of persons were employed in the industries of finance, property and business services. The metropolitan average is 14.6 per cent.
  • The proportion of Toorak residents aged 15 and over with a Bachelors degree or higher is 31.0 per cent. The metropolitan average is 13.4 per cent.
  • Toorak has the highest percentage of children attending non-government schools in Melbourne.
  • There are very few infants and toddlers in Toorak. The proportion of the Toorak population who are infants or toddlers (those aged 0 to 4 years of age) is 3.8 per cent. The metropolitan average is 6.9 per cent.

Four wheel drives line the streets of Toorak.
Four wheel drives line the streets of Toorak.

In Australian slang (particularly in Victoria), a "Toorak tractor," "Toorak taxi," "Toorak tank," or "Toorak truck" are pejorative names for a 4WD (SUV) vehicle. The reference to the wealthy Melbourne suburb alludes to the ownership and use of such vehicles as status symbols rather than for their designed off-road abilities.

Even though the term might lead some to think this phenomenon is localized in Toorak, official statistics show that in Melbourne, working-class suburbs such as Werribee (3103), Frankston (3003), Narre Warren (2687) and Dandenong (2672) all have more 4WDs registered than Toorak (1270)[7].

Toorak has many references in popular culture, besides the "Toorak Tractor" reference mentioned earlier. The Skyhooks also had a song called "Toorak Cowboy". Ted Baillieu, the Victorian opposition leader, was often derided as "the toff from Toorak" by Rob Hulls.

Because of the scarcity of water in Australia, restrictions have been established on water use. In Victoria, statistics from South East Water reveal that breaches of water restrictions were spread "across Melbourne but there are obviously pockets which seem to attract more interest than other suburbs." Areas like Toorak and Brighton have had a higher proportion of water breaches than other suburbs. A water patrolmen said that some Toorak and Brighton residents had a "what-me-worry attitude" to the threat of $500 fines[8].

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