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Lyneham, Australian Capital Territory

Suburb of Canberra, Australia

Lyneham, Australian Capital Territory

Suburb of Canberra, Australia

FieldValue
typesuburb
nameLyneham
cityCanberra
stateact
imageFile:Lyneham Wetlands, Canberra 2017 1.jpg
captionLyneham wetlands 2017
alternative_location_mapAustralia ACT districted Canberra
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Canberra
mapframeyes
map_typenomap
pop5,703
pop_year
pop_footnotes
postcode2602
elevation575
area5.5
lgaNorth Canberra
stategovKurrajong
fedgovCanberra
coordinates
dist14
dir1N
location1Canberra CBD
dist219
dir2NW
location2Queanbeyan
dist386
dir3SW
location3Goulburn
dist4283
dir4SW
location4Sydney
near-nMitchell
near-neDowner, Watson
near-eDickson
near-seBraddon
near-sTurner
near-swO'Connor
near-wO'Connor
near-nwKaleen
est1928

| near-n = Mitchell | near-ne = Downer, Watson | near-e = Dickson | near-se = Braddon | near-s = Turner | near-sw = O'Connor | near-w = O'Connor | near-nw = Kaleen

Lyneham () is a suburb of Canberra, Australia in the North Canberra district. It is named after Sir William Lyne, premier of New South Wales from 1899 to 1901. The suburb name was gazetted in 1928, but development did not commence until 1958. The streets of Lyneham are named after artists and people associated with the development of early Canberra.

Points of interest

Lyneham has many attractions including nature parks and bushland, proximity to the centre of Canberra, the Old Canberra Inn (the earliest licensed pub in Canberra), Tilley's Devine Cafe and Gallery, and a number of sporting facilities. Also located in Lyneham is Exhibition Park in Canberra (EPIC), which annually hosts Australia's best known car festival, Summernats, the Royal Canberra Show and the National Folk Festival.

St Ninian's Uniting Church in Brigalow Street is the second-oldest church in Canberra, opened in 1873. It was founded as a Presbyterian Church by the Scottish community, many of whom had come to the area as shepherds. It has been heritage-listed by the ACT Heritage Council. The Sakyamuni Buddhist Centre, also known as Van Hanh Temple is a large Vietnamese Buddhist temple located on Archibald St.

Character

St Ninian's Church, Canberra's second-oldest church
Lyneham shops

The style of the suburb has been evolving since development commenced in 1958 at the north-western periphery of what is now 'inner' Canberra. The older homes built in 1958-59 (many of which catered to the sizeable influx of Commonwealth Public Servants' families, who were being relocated with their respective Departments' headquarters from Melbourne), now sit beside modern townhouse developments, while individual blocks are being 'gentrified' by either extensive renovation or demolition and rebuilt homes. Having mainly been substantially established since the 1960s, Lyneham residents enjoy its leafy streets and established gardens. A scenic wetland was built adjacent to Sullivans Creek in Lyneham to improve downstream water quality. It was opened to the public in April 2012 and it is frequented by wood ducks.

Many of the single houses between Sullivans Creek and Northbourne Avenue have been replaced by two and three-storey flats in recent years. Land adjoining Northbourne Avenue is now zoned to permit redevelopment with 25-metre (about 8 storeys) high flats or 32 metres (about 11 storeys) at the corners of Mouat Street and Macarthur Avenue with Northbourne Avenue and the first such flats were completed on the site of a two-storey motel on the corner of Northbourne Ave and Mouat St in 2013.

North Lyneham

The residential part of Lyneham built to the north of Ginninderra Drive having been developed in the mid to late 1980s was a relatively recent addition to the original suburban homes of 1960s' Lyneham. The original residences on "old" Lyneham, contained within the area bounded by Wattle, Dryandra, Archibald and Mouat Streets and Northbourne Avenue mainly date back to the late 1950s. North Lyneham's main feeder road, Cossington Smith Crescent, loops through the area with other streets coming off it. North Lyneham also has a small shopping centre housing shops, a couple of restaurants and a number of small businesses. North Lyneham backs onto a bush reserve which separates it from the Belconnnen suburb of Kaleen. The walking trails in the reserve are popular with the local residents and provide scenic views of the inner northern suburbs of Canberra to the east and south and Belconnen and the Brindabella Ranges to the west. File:Lyneham, the Pines.JPG|The Pines, townhouses built in the 1980s File:North Lyneham, the Sanctuary 2.JPG|Town houses in the Sanctuary, north Lyneham File:Lyneham high rise 2.JPG|First high-rise flats in Mouat St File:Lyneham Flats.jpg|Lyneham Flats on Northbourne Avenue File:Lyneham Wetlands.jpg|Lyneham Wetlands facing southward at night

Demographics

In the , the population of Lyneham was 5,703, including 69 (1.2%) Indigenous persons and 3,517 (61.7%) Australian-born persons. Only 26.8% (36.5% in 2011) of dwellings were separate houses (compared to the Australian average of 72.3%), while 35.9% were semi-detached, row or terrace houses (Australian average: 12.7%) and 36.6% (24.0% in 2011) were flats, units or apartments (Australian average: 14.2%). 37.9% of the population were professionals, compared to the Australian average of 24.0%. Notably 18.3% worked in government administration, compared to the Australian average of 1.1%, although the ACT-wide average is a very similar 17.1%. Lyneham is favoured by students and young adults with 34.5% of its population in the 20- to 34-year-old age group (compared to the Australian average of 20.5%). The suburb has few children under 15: 11.4%, compared to 18.2% Australia-wide. 37.9% of the dwellings are occupied by single person households, compared to the Australian average of 25.6%. 51.6% of the population had no religion, while 12.4% were Catholic, 7.0% not stated, 5.9% Anglican and 4.6% Buddhist.

Governance

2025 federal election2024 ACT election
Labor
Greens
Liberal
Independent
Labor
Greens
Liberal
Independents for Canberra

|} Lyneham is located within the federal electorate of Canberra and it is represented by Alicia Payne for the Labor Party. In the ACT Legislative Assembly, Lyneham is part of the electorate of Kurrajong, which elects five members on the basis of proportional representation, two Labor, one Green, one Liberal and one Independent.{{cite web |publisher= ACT Legislative Assembly |url= https://www.elections.act.gov.au/elections/previous-assembly-elections/2024-election/2020-list-of-elected-candidates |title=List of elected candidates – 2024 Election|access-date=6 December 2024}} Polling place statistics are shown to the right for the Lyneham polling place at Lyneham Primary School in the 2025 federal

Education

Lyneham is home to Lyneham High School, Lyneham Primary School and Brindabella Christian College Lyneham Campus.

Transport

[[Dickson Interchange

Lyneham is served by five light rail stops: Macarthur Avenue, Dickson Interchange, Swinden Street, Phillip Avenue and EPIC and Racecourse. The first four are located on its eastern edge and only the first two are near the residential areas of Lyneham. It is also served by buses on routes R9, 30, 31, 50 and 51. The Sullivans Creek shared path traverses the suburb and is a busy commuter cycling route.

Sport

Sports facilities within Lyneham include the National Hockey Centre, Thoroughbred Park (Canberra Racecourse), the ACT Netball Centre and Yowani Country Club.

Geology

Silurian calcareous shales from the Canberra Formation is overlain by Quaternary alluvium. This rock is the limestone of the original title of Canberra "Limestone Plains". Greywacke from the Ordovician age Pittman Formation is in the north west.

Notes

References

  1. "Suburb Name search results". ACT Planning & Land Authority.
  2. "A Brief History of the Church". St Ninian's Uniting Church.
  3. "Heritage (Decision about Registration for St Ninian’s Church – nineteenth century elements, Lyneham). Notice 2011". ACT Heritage Council.
  4. "Dickson and Lyneham Wetlands". ACT Environment and Sustainable Development Directorate.
  5. (29 November 2013). "Inner North Precinct Code". ACT Planning and Land Authority.
  6. (18 December 2012). "Northbourne Avenue Precinct Code". ACT Planning and Land Authority.
  7. {{Census 2011 AUS
  8. {{Census 2021 AUS
  9. (23 May 2025). "2025 Federal Election: Lyneham - Polling Place". [[Australian Electoral Commission]].
  10. (19 October 2024). "2024 Results for Kurrajong Candidates at Lyneham Polling Place". [[ACT Electoral Commission]].
  11. (22 May 2025). "Federal Election 2025 - Polling Place Lyneham East". [[Australian Electoral Commission]].
  12. "Lyneham High School".
  13. "Lyneham Primary School".
  14. "Brindabella Christian College".
  15. "Routes by Suburb or Place". Transport Canberra.
  16. Henderson G A M and Matveev G, Geology of Canberra, Queanbeyan and Environs 1:50000 1980.
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