Bundall, Queensland


Bundall is a suburb of the City of Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia. At the 2016 Census, Bundall had a population of 4,523.

Geography

Bundall is west of Surfers Paradise and the Nerang River. Sorrento is a neighbourhood within Bundall.

History

The name Bundall is from the Aboriginal word for a species of prickly vine. The locality was originally established by British landowner Edmund Henry Price in 1862. The northern boundary of the area runs from the southern Nerang Riverbank to The Arts Centre Gold Coast. It then continues south, bordering the present day Village High Road, alongside Benowa. The locality of Sorrento is within the southern section of the suburb of Bundall.
Bundall is also the home of the Bundall Iceland Ice Rink, home of the Bartercard Gold Coast Blue Tongues ice hockey club, Queensland's only team in the Australian Ice Hockey League.

Cultural precinct

A cultural precinct may be built on the Evandale site that currently incorporates the Gold Coast Arts Centre. The project may begin at the beginning of 2014. The City of Gold Coast's vision is that when completed, the Gold Coast Cultural Precinct will include drama, music, dance, art, new media and public sculpture.

Slatyer Avenue

Slatyer Avenue is one of eleven local streets named after young men who died on active service in World War II.
When the Bradbrook family farm at Bundall was subdivided for housing in the 1950s, Slatyer Avenue was named after two brothers – Allan and Gordon Slatyer, the only children of Francis Leichhardt and Hilda Slatyer of Surfers Paradise.
Allan, an RAAF leading aircraftman, died in a training accident at Wagga Wagga on 29 August 1941. He was 18 years old.
Gordon, an AIF infantryman, was killed in action on 3 August 1942 at El Alamein, Egypt. He was 22 years old.

Demographics

In the, Bundall recorded a population of 4,523 people.
The median age of the Bundall population was 42 years, 4 years above the national median of 38.
65.5% of people were born in Australia. The most common countries of birth were New Zealand 7.4% and England 4.4%.
80.0% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin at 3.1%.
The most common responses for religion were No Religion 28.7%, Catholic 24.1% and Anglican 21.1%.

Notable people

Notable people from or who have lived in Bundall include: