Chullora, New South Wales

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Chullora
SydneyNew South Wales

Chullora Recycling Centre
Postcode: 2190
Location: 15 km (9 mi) west of Sydney CBD
LGA: City of Bankstown, Municipality of Strathfield
State District: Bankstown
Federal Division: Blaxland
Suburbs around Chullora:
Regents Park Lidcombe Rookwood
Potts Hill Chullora Greenacre
Yagoona Bankstown Greenacre
Chullora Railway Workshops, service and repair City Rail trains
Chullora Railway Workshops, service and repair City Rail trains

Chullora is a suburb in western Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Chullora is located 15 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government areas of the City of Bankstown and the Municipality of Strathfield. Chullora is located close to the suburbs of Strathfield, Lidcombe and Bankstown.

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[edit] Commercial Area

Chullora is essentially an industrial area with many factories and warehouses, including Tip Top Bakeries and the OfficeMax Sydney warehouse at the Chullora Business Park. Chullora also houses the printing plants for Sydney newspapers and magazines. Fairfax Printers print The Sydney Morning Herald and The Sun-Herald and the News Limited Printers print The Australian, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph. Chullora is also home to the headquarters of Dick Smith Electronics.

Chullora Market Place is a shopping centre on Waterloo Road that features a variety of stores, ranging from large retail outlets to independent small businesses. The centre features 50 shops, including Big W, Woolworths supermarket, Electronics Boutique, Just Jeans and Sanity.

[edit] Transport

Liverpool Road and Waterloo Road are the two main roads that run through the suburb. Waterloo Road is also the main road for the neighbouring suburb of Greenacre. Both suburbs share common amenities.

Veolia Transport and Punchbowl Bus Company provide frequent bus services for this region. The Chullora Railway Workshops previously serviced and repaired City Rail suburban and inter-urban trains, although this has now been outsourced to the private sector. Chullora does not have its own railway station.

[edit] History

The suburb of Chullora was originally part of the area known as Liberty Plains, which was land given to the first free settlers who arrived in Sydney Cove on the 6th January 1793. In the 1950s, many immigrants from Europe were housed in the area. Once established, they moved to other parts of Sydney. Chullora was the name used for one of the estates in this area. Chullora is an Aboriginal word meaning 'flour'. The recent construction of the Tip Top Bakeries, has perhaps brought the suburbs back to its roots.

Main article: Bankstown Bunker

During World War 2, Chullora was selected as the site for a major wartime manufacturing plant. The site once occupied several hundred acres of land surrounded by Rookwood Cemetery, Brunker Road, the Hume Highway and Centenary Drive. The site was said to have been the largest secret manufacturing plant in Australia which was used for the production of military weapons, plane components, tanks, HE Bombs and ordnance. Over two-thousand men and woman were employed to work at the factory on a daily basis. During the war the factory produced components for 700 Beaufort, 380 Beau fighter and up to 50 Lincoln aircraft. Over 54 ACI tanks were built as well as 60 General Lee tanks that were adapted for use in the Australian Military, as were local jeeps in the 70s. The factory also produced 81 cupola turrets for the British Matilda tanks.[1] [2] [3]

An underground "bunker" and tunnel system is located on this site. It is directly under a block flats in Davidson Street and Marlene Crescent. The entrance to the "bunker" is by steel doors set in concrete into the hillside in a railway cutting which runs from alongside the railway line parallel to Marlene Crescent at a platform called the Railwelders and which leads under the block of flats. The doors to this "bunker" were welded up sometime during the late 1980s. The steel doors are no longer visible, and the associated area has been back filled.

Apart from the bunker, there is also a network of storage facilities that extend under the railway workshop. Sometime between 1977 to 1978 the steel access doors were fitted with locks (Railway SL type). The airshafts for this "bunker" are still clearly seen from the Hume Highway and some of them are within meters of the roadway. It has also been alleged that a tunnel approximately four miles long connects this complex with No. 1 Fighter Sector RAAF on the corner of Marion and Edgar Street Condell Park. Access to this network of storage facilities was from a steel door, bolted into the side of a stormwater drain which runs along the old RTA building in Chullora, it then runs under the Hume Hwy and eventually under the rail workshop.

[edit] Sport

The local soccer team is the Chullora Wolves, with their homeground at Lockwood Park.

[edit] Pop Culture

The pizza shop that was used in the TV series Fat Pizza
The pizza shop that was used in the TV series Fat Pizza
  • The television series Pizza was filmed in a pizza shop on the Hume Highway at Chullora. A movie was also made in 2003 based on the same characters called Fat Pizza: The Movie. This shop in Chullora has since been renamed 'Fat Pizza', which was the name used in the TV series and movie.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Lawrence, Joan; Brian Madden and Leslie Muir (1999). A Pictorial History of Canterbury Bankstown. Alexandria, New South Wales: Kingsclear Books, 91-92. ISBN 0-908272-55-3. 
  2. ^ Pollen, Frances (1990). The Book of Sydney Suburbs. Published in Australia: Angus & Robertson Publishers. ISBN 0-207-14495-8. 
  3. ^ Chullora "Bunker" and underground Tunnels. Were they used during WW2?

[edit] External links

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