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Growing pains in Melbourne’s booming west
Series

Growing pains in Melbourne’s booming west

In this collection, The Age explores what makes the western suburbs the place to be and what’s holding them back as the number of homes looks set to more than double in some areas over the next decade.

7 stories
From left: Anushka Bharath, Bharath Chellaya, Gisha Bharath and Akansha Bharath outside their Manor Lakes home. They plan to move to Mambourin.

This family moved to Australia’s fastest-growing region. Decades ago, it was ‘unpopular for living’

People are flocking to Melbourne’s west as it’s close to the CBD, affordable and multicultural. But pollution and a lack of public transport and essential services are causing problems.

  • by Sophie Aubrey, Adam Carey and Patrick Hatch
‘It’s beautiful, but we’d like fresh air’: Life inside Melbourne’s most polluted suburb

‘It’s beautiful, but we’d like fresh air’: Life inside Melbourne’s most polluted suburb

Brooklyn residents have suffered odours and dust pollution from heavy industry for years, but there are plans for a greener future.

  • by Sophie Aubrey
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Almost halfway between Melbourne and Geelong, this fast-growing suburb has affordable houses ... and not much more

Almost halfway between Melbourne and Geelong, this fast-growing suburb has affordable houses ... and not much more

Mambourin, on Melbourne’s western fringe, was designed as a beacon of liveability but is now forgotten.

  • by Adam Carey
Pawan Kaur has been forced to walk long distances along an unsafe road to get to her Mount Atkinson home from Rockbank railway station.

Long walks on gravel along dangerous roads: The fast-growing Melbourne suburbs waiting for public transport

In outer western suburbs where car is king and roads are congested, residents are calling for better bus links, Metro trains and more railway stations.

  • by Patrick Hatch
The urban sprawl in Melbourne’s western suburbs.
Opinion

The west I knew was treated as second best, but those days are numbered

Melbourne’s western suburbs have been deprived of infrastructure for decades, but flagging support for Labor could mean Australia’s fastest-growing region will finally be heard.

  • by Adam Carey
Mambourin is a growing suburb on Melbourne’s western fringe.
Editorial

Melbourne’s west is a growing force, and politicians should beware

The western suburbs are changing and growing. Whoever can meet the region’s needs and expectations of services and infrastructure is likely to reap huge rewards.

  • The Age's View
St Albans, pictured in 1973, when it had an 80 per cent migrant population.
Opinion

I grew up in Melbourne’s west. We knew it wasn’t a nice place to live

In many ways the west never existed. We weren’t united by anything other than a vague geography and the discriminating gaze of those on the other side of a bridge.

  • by John Weldon

Original URL: https://www.watoday.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5kugu