Horningsea Park is a
suburb of
Sydney, in the state of
New South Wales,
Australia. Horningsea Park is located 39
kilometres south-west of the
Sydney central business district, in the
local government area of the
City of Liverpool and is part of the
Greater Western Sydney region.
History
In 1819,
Joshua John Moore a British grazier was granted 500 acres in what was then known as Cabramatta. He named his property Horningsea Park after his birthplace, the village of
Horningsea in
Cambridgeshire,
England. In the 1830s, he built a grand house which still stands to this day in Horningsea Park Drive and is listed on the
Register of the National Estate. The house was later home to Count Strzelecki, the Polish-born explorer who named
Mount Kosciuszko.
Transport
Cowpasture Road and Camden Valley Way are the main roads in and out of Horningsea Park, the latter providing connection to
Liverpool and
Camden. Horningsea Park is the terminus for four
Busabout bus services to Liverpool, two via Cowpastures Road and
Hoxton Park, and two via Camden Valley Way,
Prestons and
Lurnea.
People
According to the 2006 Australian
census, Horningsea Park had a population of 3,515. As a relatively new suburb, it had a very high number of people with mortgages (65%), more than double the national average, and a very small number who owned their homes outright (10%). The houses themselves tended to be large with an average 3.5 people per house compared to a national average of 2.6. The average mortgage was $2000 per month, again substantially higher than the national average ($1300). Luckily, the median household income of $1456 per week was also higher than average. A higher than average number of residents were born outside Australia with
Fiji (3.8%) and the
Philippines (3.6%), the most common.
Notable residents
References
External links