Zillmere

Zillmere is located approximately 13km north of the Brisbane CBD, and is home to a mix of young families and retirees It offers residents comparatively affordable housing with easy access to modern facilities and leisure activities. For this reason it is not uncommon for residents to look to upgrade their homes within the immediate area. Zillmere is broken down into about 40 per cent light to medium industrial and 60 per cent residential houses with a few townhouse developments mixed in. The excellent facilities in and around the area have seen the popularity of Zillmere remain steady, influencing price growth in a similar manner. Facilities such as hospitals, schools and shops are readily available to residents of Zillmere. Chermside offers residents access to two hospitals and a major shopping centre featuring all major retailers and a restaurant and cinema/entertainment complex. Residents also have easy access to Toombul Shopping Centre. Leisure facilities around Zillmere include plenty of bike ways, walk ways, and picnic and barbeque spots near lagoons and wetlands are also available in neighbouring Boondall. Concerts are close by at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre also in Boondall. Families are well serviced by three schools in Zillmere and numerous others in the surrounding suburbs catering to both primary and secondary aged children. Public transport is also good, with four train stations in the vicinity (Virginia, Boondall and Zillmere) and city express bus services running at regular intervals. Major roads such as Gympie Road or Sandgate Road put the commute to Brisbane city at around 25 minutes. The Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast are also easily accessible via the Gateway Motorway. Source: REIQ

Fast Facts about Zillmere
  • Population 8,000
  • Median Property Price House: $443,750 Unit: $355,000
  • Median Rent House: $370 PW Unit: $350 PW
  • Number of schools 3
  • Location 13Km north of Brisbane
Zillmere is located approximately 13km north of the Brisbane CBD, and is home to a mix of young families and retirees It offers residents comparatively affordable housing with easy access to modern facilities and leisure activities. For this reason it is not uncommon for residents to look to upgrade their homes within the immediate area. The excellent facilities in and around the area have seen the popularity of Zillmere remain steady, influencing price growth in a similar manner.  Public transport is also good, with four train stations in the vicinity (Virginia, Boondall and Zillmere) and city express bus services running at regular intervals. Major roads such as Gympie Road or Sandgate Road put the commute to Brisbane city at around 25 minutes. The Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast are also easily accessible via the Gateway Motorway. Source: REIQ
Zillmere is broken down into about 40 per cent light to medium industrial and 60 per cent residential houses with a few townhouse developments mixed in. Source: REIQ
Families are well serviced by three schools in Zillmere and numerous others in the surrounding suburbs catering to both primary and secondary aged children. Source: REIQ
Leisure facilities around Zillmere include plenty of bike ways, walk ways, and picnic and barbeque spots near lagoons and wetlands are also available in neighbouring Boondall. Concerts are close by at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre also in Boondall. Source: REIQ
The Turrbal Aborigines occupied the region north of Brisbane River, including the area covered by Zillmere. With European settlement, the area came to be known as Zillman's Waterholes, named after Johann Leopold Zillmann (1813–1892), a pioneering Lutheran missionary who served at the mission station nearby at Nundah. In January 1872, the Brisbane Courier described Zillman's Waterholes as being situated between Cabbage Tree Creek and Downfall Creek. It was settled with twenty-seven small farmers residing on the land. At the time there were "two chapels, a brickyard and pottery". The settlers grew pineapples, pigs and other small crops. After the North Coast Railway Line was extended to Petrie in 1888, the railway station servicing the area was named Zillmere. By the time the first housing estate was marketed in 1897, the area was also being called Zillmere. A slaughterhouse and curing works was established in 1898 by J.C. Hutton Pty Ltd to slaughter and process pigs from regional farms.
Zillmere in the 1950s showing State Housing Commission Projects and migrant barracks
During the 1950s, the Housing Commission reclaimed farmland to construct prefabricated houses imported from France. This established Zillmere as a suburban centre. Migrant barracks near Church Road were used to resettle post-war European immigrants until they were destroyed by fire in the mid 1950s. Today Zillmere is approximately 60% residential and 40% industrial. In recent years parts of its shopping district have been updated as part of the Brisbane City Council's urban renewal project. Source: Wikipedia
Chermside offers residents access to two hospitals and a major shopping centre featuring all major retailers and a restaurant and cinema/entertainment complex. Residents also have easy access to Toombul Shopping Centre. Source: REIQ
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Zillmere

Zillmere is located approximately 13km north of the Brisbane CBD, and is home to a mix of young families and retirees It offers residents comparatively affordable housing with easy access to modern facilities and leisure activities. For this reason it is not uncommon for residents to look to upgrade their homes within the immediate area. Zillmere is broken down into about 40 per cent light to medium industrial and 60 per cent residential houses with a few townhouse developments mixed in. The excellent facilities in and around the area have seen the popularity of Zillmere remain steady, influencing price growth in a similar manner. Facilities such as hospitals, schools and shops are readily available to residents of Zillmere. Chermside offers residents access to two hospitals and a major shopping centre featuring all major retailers and a restaurant and cinema/entertainment complex. Residents also have easy access to Toombul Shopping Centre. Leisure facilities around Zillmere include plenty of bike ways, walk ways, and picnic and barbeque spots near lagoons and wetlands are also available in neighbouring Boondall. Concerts are close by at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre also in Boondall. Families are well serviced by three schools in Zillmere and numerous others in the surrounding suburbs catering to both primary and secondary aged children. Public transport is also good, with four train stations in the vicinity (Virginia, Boondall and Zillmere) and city express bus services running at regular intervals. Major roads such as Gympie Road or Sandgate Road put the commute to Brisbane city at around 25 minutes. The Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast are also easily accessible via the Gateway Motorway. Source: REIQ

Fast Facts about Zillmere
  • Population 8,000
  • Median Property Price House: $443,750 Unit: $355,000
  • Median Rent House: $370 PW Unit: $350 PW
  • Number of schools 3
  • Location 13Km north of Brisbane
Zillmere is located approximately 13km north of the Brisbane CBD, and is home to a mix of young families and retirees It offers residents comparatively affordable housing with easy access to modern facilities and leisure activities. For this reason it is not uncommon for residents to look to upgrade their homes within the immediate area. The excellent facilities in and around the area have seen the popularity of Zillmere remain steady, influencing price growth in a similar manner.  Public transport is also good, with four train stations in the vicinity (Virginia, Boondall and Zillmere) and city express bus services running at regular intervals. Major roads such as Gympie Road or Sandgate Road put the commute to Brisbane city at around 25 minutes. The Gold Coast and Sunshine Coast are also easily accessible via the Gateway Motorway. Source: REIQ
Zillmere is broken down into about 40 per cent light to medium industrial and 60 per cent residential houses with a few townhouse developments mixed in. Source: REIQ
Families are well serviced by three schools in Zillmere and numerous others in the surrounding suburbs catering to both primary and secondary aged children. Source: REIQ
Leisure facilities around Zillmere include plenty of bike ways, walk ways, and picnic and barbeque spots near lagoons and wetlands are also available in neighbouring Boondall. Concerts are close by at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre also in Boondall. Source: REIQ
The Turrbal Aborigines occupied the region north of Brisbane River, including the area covered by Zillmere. With European settlement, the area came to be known as Zillman's Waterholes, named after Johann Leopold Zillmann (1813–1892), a pioneering Lutheran missionary who served at the mission station nearby at Nundah. In January 1872, the Brisbane Courier described Zillman's Waterholes as being situated between Cabbage Tree Creek and Downfall Creek. It was settled with twenty-seven small farmers residing on the land. At the time there were "two chapels, a brickyard and pottery". The settlers grew pineapples, pigs and other small crops. After the North Coast Railway Line was extended to Petrie in 1888, the railway station servicing the area was named Zillmere. By the time the first housing estate was marketed in 1897, the area was also being called Zillmere. A slaughterhouse and curing works was established in 1898 by J.C. Hutton Pty Ltd to slaughter and process pigs from regional farms.
Zillmere in the 1950s showing State Housing Commission Projects and migrant barracks
During the 1950s, the Housing Commission reclaimed farmland to construct prefabricated houses imported from France. This established Zillmere as a suburban centre. Migrant barracks near Church Road were used to resettle post-war European immigrants until they were destroyed by fire in the mid 1950s. Today Zillmere is approximately 60% residential and 40% industrial. In recent years parts of its shopping district have been updated as part of the Brisbane City Council's urban renewal project. Source: Wikipedia
Chermside offers residents access to two hospitals and a major shopping centre featuring all major retailers and a restaurant and cinema/entertainment complex. Residents also have easy access to Toombul Shopping Centre. Source: REIQ
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Zillmere