We'll be moving to Brisbane at the end of the year and would really like
to know the views of people who live there or have spent a significant
amount of time there. It takes a long time to get to know a city well
and we are not going to have that luxury when we go for our initial six
month rental. Trying to get this information from official internet
sites is impossible - believe me, I've tried. So, in your opinion ....
Which are the rich suburbs ?
Which are the poor suburbs ?
Which are the family suburbs ?
Which are the yuppie, dinky suburbs ?
Which are the trendy, arty, bohemian suburbs ?
Which are the retired people's suburbs ?
Which are the overpriced, overrated suburbs ?
Which suburbs have the highest/lowest crime ?
Which suburbs have the most space and which are the most densely
populated ?
Which are the suburbs you wouldn't be seen dead in ?
What are the coatal suburbs of Cleveland, Wellington Point, Manly, and
Wynnum like ? Are they at all 'tacky' ?
OK, generalisations I know but how else could I put it ?
We spent just a few days in Brisbane earlier this year and were very
impressed with the city (as in CBD) but only managed to have a quick
look around Paddington, New Farm, Bulimba, and Hawthorn. Bulimba and
Paddington were quite nice house-wise but the areas seemed a bit devoid
of life. We went to Bulimba because the of the 'thriving Oxford Street
cafe community'. Hmmm... if that is 'thriving' I wouldn't want to see a
quiet suburb !
Anyway, we know Brisbane is going to be very sleepy compared to here
(Brighton, UK) and we can accept that but any personal views on how the
various suburbs/areas shape up would be much appreciated.
--
nick
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
Let's cut to chase. What are your lifestyle needs/expectations/housing
budget?
Cheers
Bill who not only lives nearish to Brighton but has even been there ;-)
"etlniwd" <mem...@britishexpats.com> wrote in message
news:420526.1...@britishexpats.com...
Can't answer your question in its entirety, but can confirm that the
coastal suburbs you mention are good. We live in the suburb of
Capalaba, which is about 25 minutes from the CBD, same time to Brissie
Airport, 40 minutes to gold coast and just under an hour to the
Sunshine coast.
We chose this suburb mainly because we wanted a bit of "acreage" close
enough to the city.
If you want demographic data and crime stats etc. try domain.com.au
- then enter your suburb and it should tell you most of what you
want to know.
BTW, Wellington Point itself is VERY NICE - not a good swimming beach,
but a great place to unwind and take the kids after school for a quick
splash around.
If you want any more specific info. on the "Bayside suburbs" let me know
and I'll try to help.
--
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
Overpriced suburbs would include parts of Calamvale which are about 50K
dearer than Hillcrest or Regents Park which are homes of the same
quality and only about 7 minutes away. Sunnybank is the unofficial
Chinatown so homes there are very expensive, and way too big for the
blocks of land. Artsy places would be South Brisbane (not Southbank),
and New Farm/ Fortitude Valley. New farm is also a big gay area, along
with Spring Hill in the city.
The coastal areas you name aren't at all tacky since they aren't
tourist places. These suburbs are all residential. People don't
really swim there since there are no sandy beaches. The tacky area is
the Gold Coast, which is down the freeway. It's not really tacky but
it is touristy. People tend to drive there to go to the beach. People
choose to live in the bayside suburbs for the boating access and the
cooling sea breezes. It's kind of weird but bayside suburbs have few
apartment buildings even though you'd think the sea views would
attract such building.
As far as crime goes, you can't always tell by the wealth of the suburb.
Some of the suburbs with the highest car thefts are "rich" suburbs.
Heroin is a problem in New Farm, Inala and Darra.
BTW. By 'tacky' I don't necessarily mean touristy. Brighton here in
the UK where I live is very touristy but far from being tacky. By
tacky I mean cheap and nasty, unfashionable. Like Broadmeadows in
Melbourne or Cronulla in Sydney (apologies to those who live there,
not my cup of tea).