State Library of South Australia logo Timeline
SA Memory. South Australia past and present, for the future




Colonel Light Gardens: a model garden suburb
Title : Colonel Light Gardens: a model garden suburb Colonel Light Gardens: a model garden suburb
Add To My SA Memory
Creator : South Australia. Garden Suburb Commission
Place Of Creation : Adelaide
Publisher : Collotype Ptr.
Date of creation : 1921
Format : Pamphlet
Contributor : State Library of South Australia
Catalogue record
The State Library of South Australia is keen to find out more about SA Memory items. We encourage you to contact the Library if you have additional information about any of these items.
Copyright : Reproduction rights are owned by State Library of South Australia. This image may be printed or saved for research or study. Use for any other purpose requires permission from the State Library of South Australia. To request approval, complete the Permission to publish form.
Description :

Colonel Light Gardens was developed in the 1920s as a 'model garden suburb' with a distinctive community identity. In 1914 Charles C Reade, a leading proponent of the garden city movement which had an emphasis on an optimal living environment for all residents, toured Australia lecturing in town planning. Following these lectures, the South Australian Government purchased 'Grange Farm', part of the William Tennant Mortlock estate, in 1915 in order to establish a garden suburb. However, throughout World War One, the property was used as an army training camp.

During this period, Reade was appointed South Australia's (and Australia's) first government Town Planner and created designs for 'Mitcham Garden Suburb' - later re-named Colonel Light Gardens. Design features included a radial street pattern (in contrast to the more usual Adelaide suburban grid pattern), private detached homes (based on the Californian bungalow), numerous reserves and tree-lined streets and strict controls for the streetscape such as street frontages and placement of utilities. The Garden Suburb Act detailing a development plan was passed in 1919.

This booklet was published in 1921 to promote the new suburb and attract buyers. 'Comfort, convenience and beauty' were attainable, and by the mid-1920s around 60 blocks of the north-east section had been purchased, with numerous homes built or under construction. In 1924 the Labor Government, through the State Bank, instigated the metropolitan mass housing 'Thousand Homes Scheme' to provide low cost, affordable, attractive homes, particularly for returned soldiers and working class citizens. Most of these homes were built in the southern and western sections of Colonel Light Gardens, and by the end of the decade, housing development in this suburb was mainly completed.

Today Colonel Light Gardens is 'considered the most complete and representative example of a garden suburb in Australia' and is recognised as a State Heritage Area.

Subjects
Related names :

Reade, Charles C.

Period : 1927-1939
Region : Adelaide metropolitan area
Further reading :

Garnaut, Christine. Colonel Light Gardens: model garden suburb, Darlinghurst, N.S.W.: Crossing Press, 2006

Knight, Philip. Colonel Light Gardens walk brochure, [Mitcham, S. Aust.]: City of Mitcham, 1996

Miller, Robert J. A history of the Colonel Light Gardens communities, [Port Elliot, S. Aust.: R.J. Miller], c1993

Internet links :

City of Mitchamsee: About Council: Local History: Places: Colonel Light Gardens

Colonel Light Gardens Historical Society Inc

Manning Index of South Australian historysee: Places names of South Australia: Colonel Light Gardens (newspaper references)

State Heritage Areas of South Australiasee: Colonel Light Gardens [SA Department for Environment and Heritage]


Navigation

Home

About SA Memory

Explore SA Memory

SA Memory Themes

Search

My SA Memory

Learning

What's on

Contributors