Generated by GPT-5-mini| Tallawong | |
|---|---|
| State | New South Wales |
| City | Sydney |
| Lga | City of Blacktown |
| Postcode | 2762 |
| Est | 2017 |
Tallawong Tallawong is a suburb in the Greater Sydney region of New South Wales, located within the City of Blacktown local government area. It was designated as a suburb in 2017 during administrative changes affecting Baulkham Hills, Schofields, and Rouse Hill and is served by transport infrastructure connecting to Sydney Metro Northwest, Blacktown and Parramatta. The suburb is adjacent to growth corridors associated with the Western Sydney Aerotropolis, the Sydney Olympic Park catchment, and planning initiatives linked to the NSW Government and the Greater Sydney Commission.
The suburb's name derives from an Aboriginal word recorded in colonial-era surveys and placename registers, selected during the 2017 gazettal process managed by the Geographical Names Board of New South Wales. Naming deliberations referenced nearby localities such as Marsden Park, Quakers Hill, and Riverstone, and considered historical landowners and cadastral references from the State Archives and Records Authority of New South Wales. The choice aligned with naming conventions overseen by the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment (New South Wales) and echoed precedents set in neighbouring suburbs like Schofields and Box Hill.
The area was part of traditional lands of the Darug people prior to European settlement and lay within the pastoral and agricultural estates established in the early 19th century during expansion from Parramatta and Windsor. Colonial developments included timber-getting, orcharding and rural land grants connected to families recorded in the Land Titles Office and documented in 19th-century maps held by the State Library of New South Wales. Twentieth-century transport proposals for rail and road corridors, including plans associated with Blacktown Airport and the North West Rail Link project, influenced late-20th and early-21st-century subdivision. The 2017 creation of the suburb coincided with major infrastructure projects such as the Sydney Metro Northwest and planning for the Western Sydney Infrastructure Plan, driving residential and commercial development.
Located on the Cumberland Plain, the suburb features landscapes characteristic of the Sydney Basin bioregion with remnant patches of native vegetation related to ecological communities documented by the Office of Environment and Heritage (New South Wales). It lies near riparian corridors feeding into the Hawkesbury–Nepean River catchment and adjoins suburbs such as Schofields, Rouse Hill, and Quakers Hill. Urban planning in the area interfaces with conservation frameworks under the NSW Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 and environmental impact assessments prepared for projects by entities like Transport for NSW and the Infrastructure NSW agency. Nearby green spaces and planned open reserves are part of regional strategies coordinated with the Greater Sydney Commission.
Demographic profiling aligns with data patterns observed across western Sydney growth areas served by suburbs like Marsden Park, Kellyville, and Blacktown. Population characteristics reflect multicultural settlement trends similar to census observations in Liverpool (New South Wales), Bankstown, and Parramatta, with household compositions comparable to neighbouring suburbs catalogued by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Employment catchments span commercial centres including Norwest Business Park, Parramatta CBD, and industrial precincts in Wetherill Park, while commuting patterns interface with transport nodes at Tallawong Metro Station, Schofields Station, and major arterials like Windsor Road and the M7 Motorway.
Administratively the suburb sits within the City of Blacktown local government area and falls under state electoral districts represented in the Parliament of New South Wales and federal divisions represented in the Australian House of Representatives. Local planning and development approvals are processed through the Blacktown City Council in alignment with policy frameworks from the NSW Department of Planning, Industry and Environment and strategic directions from the Greater Sydney Commission. Utility provision and service delivery involve agencies such as Sydney Water, Ausgrid, and health service networks including Western Sydney Local Health District. Community safety and emergency response are coordinated with the NSW Police Force, Fire and Rescue NSW, and the NSW Rural Fire Service where relevant.
Transport infrastructure is a defining feature, with the suburb served by the Sydney Metro Northwest via the Tallawong metro station providing connectivity toward Chatswood and Crows Nest via the City & Southwest extensions. Bus services link to hubs at Blacktown Station, Rouse Hill Town Centre, and Parramatta Station integrating with Opal card ticketing overseen by Transport for NSW. Road access connects to major corridors including the Sydney Motorway Network, M2 Hills Motorway, and arterial roads such as Schofields Road and Windsor Road. Regional freight and logistics movements in the corridor interact with precincts like the Western Sydney Airport construction sites and industrial estates in Eastern Creek.
Education and community facilities serving the area include public and private schools aligned with the New South Wales Department of Education standards and catchments similar to those in Rouse Hill, Schofields, and Kellyville. Early childhood services, sporting clubs, and community centres coordinate with programs from the Blacktown City Council and regional bodies such as Local Sporting Champions and Active Kids. Nearby tertiary institutions influencing the local education landscape include Western Sydney University and technical colleges associated with the TAFE NSW network. Recreational amenities connect residents to open spaces, community halls, and health services located across the Greater Western Sydney region.
Category:Suburbs of Sydney Category:City of Blacktown