Overall CityScore

65.26

CityScore based on streets reviewed in Balwyn

Review this City
  • CityVIBE 3.5/5
  • CityWIRED 4/5
  • CityHEALTH 3.5/5
  • CityVALUE 3.5/5
  • CityESSENTIALS 3.5/5

Recommended for

  • Families with kids (44%)
  • Retirees (31%)
  • Couples (19%)
  • Singles (6%)
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Best Streets in (and around) Balwyn

beautiful family residential street with its own park.

- merv
A mix of high quality housing incl new dwellings on large blocks, town houses and well maintained older properties. Whitehorse Road is one of the best strip shopping precints in Melbourne, North Balw...Full review

A perfect street to raise a family

- Mattie
Fantastic area to live, close to private schools and inner city living. Many parks for walking or playing with kids.

Great access to Deepdene Park

- melbournefan
Across the road from the park, Crest Avenue, is a very steep street, tree lined with zero traffic issues. Very quiet and leafy. A mix of older 70's style homes, good size blocks, none with fences with...Full review

Nice quiet street backing onto Belmore Park

- JVS
Chatfield Ave is a small street with no more than 20 homes. Downward slope crossing Oakdale Avenue. Many non-descript houses with the main feature being it's proximity to Belmore Park, Camberwell Gram...Full review

Beatiful street, mansions and older homes.

- melbournefan
Deepdene Road, Balwyn is a cut through between Mont Albert Road and Whitehorse Road, has a number of newer mansions on the street. Lots of traffic up towards the OLGC School (Whitehorse Road end) whic...Full review

Balwyn CityGuide

Balwyn is in the Local Government Area of the City of Boroondara.

The suburb developed in the post WWII boom and was populated by a mixture of professional and working class families, although it is now primarily professional and mercantile, this being the demographic that can afford the higher real estate prices. The initial boom occurred along the Whitehorse Road tramline, which defined the lower class Deepdene factory (such as the Wade handbag and the Jarvis-Walker fishing rod factories) and shop strip and the Balwyn shops around the intersection with Burke Road.

South of the tramline was generally elite while the slopes down to the north was populated by aspiring middle classes, workers and frugal professionals such as teachers and bank managers. With Deepdene State School at its Western extreme, it drew a mixed student population that contrasted with the student population of Balwyn High School located in the area that became known as North Balwyn, which was populated later than the rest of the suburb by a more uniformly comfortably-off demographic.

Balwyn is also home to the Maranoa Gardens, a native garden developed by citizens. The suburb has been immortalised by the Skyhooks single named after the suburb, 'Balwyn Calling'.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Balwyn".

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Top Local Experts

melbournefan

melbournefan

I love all things real estate, particularly in my home...
StreetCred: Level 3 (674 points) Member Since: August 23, 2007
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