Heidelberg () is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, northeast of Melbourne's central business district, located within the City of Banyule local government area. Heidelberg recorded a population of 7,360 at the 2021 census.

When it was settled, Heidelberg was reached by track from Melbourne via Fitzroy North and, in 1841, the Heidelberg Road Trust was formed. As a form of Local Government, it preceded the Melbourne Town Council. By the late 1840s, the road had a toll bar at Merri Creek, and a Macadam surface. It became a tourist attraction, enhancing Heidelberg's reputation as a desirable place for views, excursions and rural estates. Cattle overlander Joseph Hawdon built his Gothic Banyule Homestead in 1846, overlooking the Yarra Valley.

The Post Office opened on 19 October 1853 as Warringal and was renamed Heidelberg in 1865. Heidelberg was proclaimed a Shire on 27 January 1871.

Heidelberg's rural scenery attracted artists during the 1880s, due to the absence of public utilities or a railway (until 1888), causing houses to be vacant, and available at low rents. Tom Roberts, Arthur Streeton, Frederick McCubbin and other members of the Box Hill artists' camp relocated to Eaglemont in 1888, forming what was subsequently named the "Heidelberg School" of Australian art. Two years later, the Chartersville Homestead was occupied for similar purposes.

Heidelberg was proclaimed a city on 11 April 1934, but its rural space exceeded the urban area. The Heidelberg Town Hall was built in 1937. Subdivision and settlement clustered around Heidelberg Road and the Melbourne to Hurstbridge railway line, which bisected the municipality in a generally north-east direction. Along that line are Darebin, Ivanhoe, Eaglemont, Heidelberg, Rosanna, Macleod, Watsonia and Greensborough. Mont Park was reached by a spur line from Macleod.

Heidelberg West, then and now unserved by a railway, was sparsely settled until the 1950s, when it was built on by the Housing Commission of Victoria. It also provided the site for the athletes' village for the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games.

thumb|left|Burgundy Street Shopping District

By the 1970s, the residential development of the Heidelberg Municipality was complete, except for some areas in Viewbank and Lower Plenty. The shopping areas were mostly strips, but a free-standing centre was built in Heidelberg West in 1956, to a design by the Housing Commission which drew on American trends.

The population of Heidelberg Municipality (before the severances in the 1960s) was 8,610 (1911), 34,401 (1947, excluding Greensborough), and 60,007 (1961). The population in 1991 was 60,468. On 15 December 1994 most of Heidelberg City was united with parts of Diamond Valley Shire and Eltham Shire to form the City of Banyule. Banyule Homestead was built in 1846, and the Old England Hotel on Lower Heidelberg Road first opened its doors in 1848. All of these buildings still stand today.

Demographics

In the 2021 Census, there were 7,360 people in Heidelberg.

Country of birth

67.7% of people were born in Australia. The next most common countries of birth were India (3%), England (2.8%), China (2%), Italy (1.5%) and the Philippines (1.5%)

Language used at home

72.1% of people used only English at home. Other languages used at home included Italian (2.7%), Mandarin (2.7%), Greek (1.8%), Cantonese (1.3%) and Malayalam (0.9%).

Religious affiliation

The most common responses for religious affiliation were No Religion (42.4%), Catholic 25.2%, Anglican (6.4%), Not Stated (5.6%) and Eastern Orthodox (3.8%).

The Austrian Club Melbourne, previously based in Fitzroy, moved to its current Heidelberg premises in November 1984.

Community radio station 96.5 Inner FM is located in Heidelberg, broadcasting from studios located within Warringal Shopping Centre.

Public library branches are managed by Yarra Plenty Regional Library. The nearest library is in Ivanhoe.

Warringal Shopping Centre

thumb|right|Centro Warringal from Burgundy Street intersection

Warringal Shopping Centre (formerly known as Centro Warringal) opened in 1987. It is a compact shopping centre located on Rosanna Road, with a main entrance on Burgundy Street. The centre serves a well defined main trade area population of approximately 41,000 residents from the established suburbs of Heidelberg, Viewbank, Rosanna, Ivanhoe and Eaglemont. The opening of the Austin/Mercy Hospital has seen a shift in the demographic profile with an increase in the number of young professionals moving into the area and an increased demand for the development of multi density housing.

Transport

thumb|right|Banksia Street Bridge, from the Heidelberg side

Private car is the main form of transport in Heidelberg. The main roads are Burgundy Street (the main street), Rosanna Road, Upper Heidelberg Road and Banksia Street (which flows from the Route 40 Highway).

Heidelberg railway station is located in the suburb, on the Hurstbridge line and served by Metro Trains Melbourne.

A local bus transport hub services the area.

There is a network of on-road and segregated bicycle facilities, including the Main Yarra Trail.

Sport

Heidelberg Football Club, an Australian rules football club, competes in the Northern Football League and is based at Warringal Parklands. Heidelberg West Football Club, also in the Northern Football League, plays at Heidelberg Park, opposite Warringal.

Heidelberg United is an Association football club based in the suburb, which competes in the NPL Victoria and recent plays in Australian Championship, a second tier to the A-League. It once competed in the National Soccer League, the precursor to the A-League, and is one of Victoria's largest clubs.

Golfers play at the course of the Heidelberg Golf Club on Main Road in the neighbouring suburb of Lower Plenty.

Notable people

thumb|Gravesite of Australian rules football founder [[Tom Wills, located at Warringal Cemetery]]

  • Jim May (1934–2023) – Chemical engineer and businessman
  • Heath Shaw (1985–) – Australian rules footballer
  • Brent Stanton (1986–) – Australian rules footballer
  • Tom Wills (1835–1880) – Cricketer and pioneer of Australian rules football
  • Abdirahman Farole – President of Puntland (2009–2014)

See also

  • City of Heidelberg – Heidelberg was previously within this former local government area.

References

  • Heidelberg Central