Can the history of Rockingham help us understand the future?
It might seem obvious but one of the more intriguing aspects of population forecasting is the numbers. The size of the populations that are forecast at future points in time can either be scary, or represent a challenge.
From the perspective of 2015, it’s difficult to envisage how are cities will look when they have much larger populations. Population projections produced by the ABS indicate that Sydney and Melbourne will reach 6 million people by 2036, and Perth around 3.5 million. But what will this mean for our way of life? Where will these additional people live? How will they get around? Perhaps we can look to the past to understand just how much change our cities have seen in a relatively short space of time.
At .id we have an enviable collection of old street directories and they are fascinating for showing how our cities have changed over the decades.
Recently I completed a forecast for the City of Rockingham in Perth’s southern suburbs. It’s typical of outer suburban areas around Australia in that it has experienced significant outward expansion of its built up area.
The population, particularly in the Baldivis corridor, is growing rapidly. However it also has older established areas that have stable or even declining populations. In other words, it’s a diverse area demographically and this partly reflects its development over a number of decades.
I dusted off the old Perth street directories in .id’s collection and was fascinated to see in the 1974 edition of the Perth UBD, Rockingham as we know it in 2015 barely existed. In fact, it was known as the Shire of Rockingham and the suburb of Warnbro represented the limit of maps! Judging from the street pattern, there was a built up area along the Rockingham foreshore and Shoalwater, but Safety Bay was largely undeveloped, and Cooloongup was just a place name.
By 1985 things had changed dramatically, as shown below. About half the streets in Cooloongup and Waikiki existed and the remainder were planned. Of note is the high school site in Waikiki – in 2015 this is now being developed as housing (but I don’t believe it was ever developed as a high school). The limit of maps in 1985 was still Warnbro, but there was an inset showing the beginning of development in Secret Harbour – an area now nearing its completion.
Source: UBD Street Directory, Perth, 28th edition (1985)
By the 1994 edition, Cooloongup’s street pattern looks much like it does in 2015, and Port Kennedy shows the first signs of rapid development. The 1994 edition shows detailed maps all the way down to Mandurah, but the former seaside villages of Golden Bay and Singelton are separate settlements accessed only from the Mandurah Road – the full length of Warnbro Sound Avenue had yet to be completed.
The population of Rockingham is forecast to reach 196,312 in 2036. This is a significant increase on the 2011 population of 109,415. There is still a significant supply of residential land in Rockingham and the City will continue to attract young families seeking relatively affordable home owning opportunities. The current focus of urban development is the Baldivis corridor and it will remain so for the foreseeable future. Our forecasts assume more than 20,000 new dwellings in Baldivis over the forecast period. However development fronts in Karnup will become more important over time, particularly when necessary transport infrastructure is upgraded. Other areas such as Golden Bay will see their greenfield land supply exhausted in the next decade or so and as their populations mature over time, ie following the suburb life cycle.
But while most suburbs in Rockingham will continue to grow, others have exhausted their supply of greenfield land, and with limited opportunities for redevelopment, their populations will remain stable or decline. As described above, Cooloongup grew steadily throughout the 1980s and 1990s, when young families moved into the suburb – much as they are now doing in Baldivis and Golden Bay. Cooloongup’s population, reached a peak in the late 1990s, but since the 2001 Census it has declined as the children of the families have matured and moved out to form their own households elsewhere. The major change in household types since 2001 has been a decline in family households with children, and an increase in lone person households.
But while Rockingham’s population will be approaching 200,000 in the late 2030s, let’s put this change in perspective. In 1986, the population was just 32,845 and in the twenty five years to 2011 it trebled in size (I’m assuming no change in geographic boundaries). Rockingham added more than 76,570 people to its population over that time, and in the next twenty five years is assumed to add another 87,000.
Certainly population growth brings about its planning challenges – but these are not new. In the case of Rockingham, rapid population growth has been the norm for a number of decades. Their planners are aware of these challenges and demographic tools such as forecast.id enable them to plan effectively for the future.
Australian cities will continue to grow and change over the coming decades. This is inevitable, but it always has been. The components of demographic change, and the way they operate in Australia determines this. We have high levels of net overseas migration, and there continues to be more births than deaths. The 2036 numbers for Sydney and Melbourne in particular seem unimaginable in 2015, but the same could be said for population forecasts completed in the past – I’m more than certain that when population forecasts of 4 million were made for these cities back in the past, these numbers, and their implications for metropolitan planning, seemed unimaginable.
What’s important is that the numbers are used for effective forward planning and that the how and why of population change is understood. Of course whether or not we’ve done this in the past is open for debate, and another blog (or two, or three….).
A very interesting write up on Rockingham. What you may not realise is that Rockingham circa 1960s and 70s (and probably even earlier) was a beach holiday destination for Perth. A number of Perth families had holiday homes (fibro shacks) along or close to the foreshore in Rockingham or Shoalwater. So they would vacate Perth and head down to Rockingham (and beach) for the long summer holidays or for summer weekends. That pretty much explains the early development being within walking distance of the beach. Rockingham, like other beach holiday destinations in Perth (e.g. City Beach, Mandurah) has become part of the suburban sprawl as Perth has grown over the years.
Hi Beth,
Thanks for your comment. I did know that Rockingham had a past life as a holiday destination – in fact even today when you drive around some of the streets closer to the beach you can tell that there are still holiday homes around. A quick look at the Census data also shows that some suburbs in Rockingham have higher dwelling vacancy rates so that’s another indication. Other Australian cities have their own equivalents eg the northern beaches of Sydney. All part of our ever evolving cities and regions!
My daughter, son-in -law and family moved to Port Kennedy some 7 to 8 years ago. They recently purchased a property and live in Lakelands which is about 10 mins by road north from Mandurah.. My son-in-law is a bricklayer and has never been out of work. He also did some time as FIFO but has since returned to the trade. There are whole suburbs pegged out for future development and have been for some time. I expect that depending on economic progress, future population numbers will grow much faster than present data indicates. Merry Christmas and I look forward to your useful and interesting articles in 2016
Thanks Len. We recently updated Rockingham’s forecast and there is certainly a lot of construction going on at the moment and a lot of development in the pipeline. It’ll be interesting to see what happens in the next few years because there are macro level trends in WA that will impact on the numbers at smaller areas of geography such as LGAs, especially in terms of population gain from interstate and overseas migration. From a professional perspective I’m looking forward to the release of LGA population data from the ABS for the year ended June 2015 to see how this pans out numerically (probably the end of March/beginning of April).
Also in the 1960s Rockingham was on the Urban/country boundary and whilst it was against the law to purchase alcohol in the city on a Sunday – all one need do was to go for a Sunday drive to Rockingham (very little traffic), and have a drink while the kids enjoyed the beach.