词条 | North Narrabeen, New South Wales |
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| name = North Narrabeen | city = Sydney | state = NSW | image = North Narrabeen sand.JPG | caption = North Narrabeen Beach | image2 ={{maplink |frame=yes |frame-width=300 |frame-height=250 |frame-align=center |text=North Narrabeen |zoom=13 |type=shape |stroke-colour=#C60C30 |stroke-width=3 |title=North Narrabeen }} | lga = Northern Beaches Council | postcode = 2101 | est = | pop = 5,852 | pop_year = {{CensusAU|2016}} | pop_footnotes = [1] | area = | stategov = Pittwater | fedgov = Mackellar | near-nw = Ingleside | near-n = Warriewood | near-ne = | near-w = Elanora Heights | near-e = Tasman Sea | near-sw = | near-s = Narrabeen Lagoon | near-se = Narrabeen | dist1 = 25 | dir1 = north | location1= Sydney CBD }} North Narrabeen is a suburb in northern Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 25 kilometres north of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of Northern Beaches Council. North Narrabeen is part of the Northern Beaches region. North Narrabeen lies on the northern shores of Narrabeen lagoon, bounded by Warriewood to the north, Elanora Heights to the west and extends east to the ocean at Narrabeen Head. Narrabeen is opposite on the southern shore of the lagoon. The northern section of Narrabeen Beach is known as North Narrabeen Beach. This ocean beach, together with the North Narrabeen Surf Lifesaving Club, are to the south of the lagoon in the suburb of Narrabeen.[2] History{{Unreferenced section|date=March 2008}}The first land grants were made to John Lees (40 acres), Philip Schaffer, (50 acres), and James Wheeler, (80 acres), along the south bank of Mullet Creek. Alex Macdonald was granted {{convert|80|acre|m2}} at the beach in 1815 and west of this land JT Collins had {{convert|93.5|acre|m2}} by 1857. During the nineteenth century travellers had to ford the lake until the 1880s when the first bridge opened. A second bridge at the mouth of the lagoon in Ocean Street was built in 1925. The extension of tram services to Narrabeen in 1913 provided easier transport, and the whole area around the lake became popular for holidays and camping. A large camping ground became established on the north shore of the lagoon. In 1946 the Wakehurst Parkway was opened to North Narrabeen connecting the whole Pittwater area directly to Frenchs Forest and Seaforth. PopulationIn the 2016 Census, there were 5,852 people in North Narrabeen. 73.8% of people were born in Australia. The most common countries of birth were England 6.9% and New Zealand 1.7%. 85.9% of people only spoke English at home. The most common responses for religion in North Narrabeen were No Religion 34.5%, Catholic 23.4% and Anglican 18.7%.[1] EducationNorth Narrabeen is home to a primary school and a high school:
References1. ^1 {{Census 2016 AUS|id=SSC12999|name=North Narrabeen (State Suburb)|accessdate=4 September 2017|quick=on}} {{Coord|-33.7065|151.2884|format=dms|type:city_region:AU-NSW|display=title}}{{Sydney Northern Beaches suburbs}}2. ^{{Cite web | url = http://beachsafe.org.au/beach/nsw310a | title = North Narrabeen | publisher = Surf Life Saving Australia | accessdate = 2013-06-05 }} 3 : Suburbs of Sydney|Surfing locations in New South Wales|Northern Beaches Council |
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