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Where we live: The changing face of Victoria’s neighbourhoods

In this series, The Age profiles Victorian suburbs and towns to reveal how they’ve changed over the decades.

48 stories
Flemington

How housing, hope and, yes, even horses have shaped this suburb

It’s home to Australia’s most famous racecourse, but there is so much more to Flemington.

  • Sophie Aubrey
Sunbury suburb profile.

People flocked here for city living, country style. But will its historic heart beat on?

Sunbury faces the challenges of uniting the old and the new, but still can’t decide whether it is a suburb of Melbourne, a regional town or a satellite city.

  • Rachael Dexter
Belgrave

Beautiful, but deadly: The undeniable lure of life in the hills

For decades Belgrave has attracted many artists and writers. What is it about life here that inspires residents to defy the hazards?

  • Benjamin Preiss
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Chadstone

Three days inside the climate-controlled confines of Chadstone sent this reporter into a daze

It seems every Melburnian has a Chaddy story. The shopping mecca has drawn generations, who have worked, wandered, spent and even got married in the precinct.

  • Stephen Brook
World-class croissants, tarot readers, violin repairs: The Melbourne suburb of Bentleigh has it all

How this ‘daggy’ suburb became a rising cultural hotspot (with world-class croissants)

Indulging in a sublime pastry while having a rubber stamp custom-made, your violin repaired and your tarot read. Welcome to the suburb named after a corrupt former premier considered ‘Bent by name, bent by nature’. It’s a rich mosaic of all things ordinary and gloriously niche.

  • Bridie Smith
European migrants fled the inner city for the big blocks of Reservoir. Now, “Rezza” is considered cool – just make sure you say it right.

The historical planning quirk that means only single dwellings are allowed in this suburb

One of Melbourne’s biggest suburbs is preserved in amber-coloured brick, with a focus on family, pride and an easy way of identifying an interloper.

  • Tom Cowie
The most famous story about Little River isn’t about Little River at all.

The fight to save a hidden Hollywood, only a stone’s throw from Melbourne

No one goes to Little River. Even the train station is shut. You get your coffee at the servo. And those are just some of the reasons why the locals love it.

  • Liam Mannix
Anthony Hopkins (left) and Russell Crowe starred in the 1992 movie Spotswood.

From Smellbourne to Softwood: The small but enduring suburb of Spotswood

The inner-west neighbourhood has a tiny population but it has claims to fame: It is the birthplace of Melbourne’s modern sewage system and the subject of a movie starring Oscar-winners Russell Crowe and Anthony Hopkins.

  • Brittany Busch
If you Google “Derrimut”, the top result is a gym franchise, and one of its main claims to fame is actually in the next suburb over – but that out-of-the-way reputation is what has attracted families.

Most people don’t even know where this suburb is. That suits residents to a tee

If you Google ‘Derrimut’, the top result is a gym franchise, and one of its main claims to fame is actually in the next suburb over – but that out-of-the-way reputation is what has attracted families.

  • Hannah Hammoud
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Richmond is one the rise.

Some locals call this suburb ‘the island’ and it’s on the rise

Known to locals as ‘the island’, Richmond is a hub for healthcare, business, public transport and hospitality. The footy club’s done OK too.

  • Madeleine Heffernan
The suburb that lost its grunge, but kept its cutting-edge cool.

The suburb that lost its grunge, but kept its cutting-edge cool

The Italians and Greeks are no longer quite so numerous, but a $20 barber cut can still be had in Northcote, where there is plenty of live music, and an abundance of lesbians.

  • Alex Crowe
Once a painter’s paradise, this suburb has swapped towering gums and dense bush for looming skyscrapers and the Suburban Rail Loop.

The name of this vibrant, foodie paradise was drawn out of a hat

Once a painter’s paradise, this suburb has swapped towering gums and dense bush for looming skyscrapers and the Suburban Rail Loop.

  • Angus Delaney
Ringwood GIF

Ringwood keeps its feet on the ground as lofty future takes shape

The clock tower remains an icon but also serves as a yardstick to measure the scale of change and development in the suburb.

  • Patrick Hatch
Mernda: End of the train line – life on Melbourne’s outer fringe.

End of the train line: Life on Melbourne’s fringe

Shiny new build homes surround the station and then give way abruptly to green paddocks with cows grazing in them.

  • Cara Waters
Diamond Creek suburb profile.

The urban fringe suburb that used to be known as ‘Tradie Town’

No one knows how Diamond Creek got its name but the locals have a favourite story: about a bull who met his end near the water.

  • Brittany Busch
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Yarraville gif

How a derelict theatre revived a whole suburb and attracted Hollywood royalty

Much like the solar system, the suburb of Yarraville revolves around its own Sun. The popular art deco theatre has many crediting it with helping revitalise the inner west.

  • Caroline Schelle
New money follows old money, and money -- lots and lots of money -- has been in the first suburb south of the Yarra for a long time.

Tracksuits and Tan walkers: Wealth, ambition and Melbourne’s Lululemon elite

Wearing Adidas in South Yarra? Chances are you’re an outsider in one of Melbourne’s most glitzy suburbs.

  • Liam Mannix
A pedestrian walks through Carlton Gardens on a frosty August morning.

Rich man, poor man, gangland, parmesan: Melbourne’s constantly shifting suburb

Perched on the edge of Melbourne’s CBD, Carlton has risen and fallen with the city’s fortunes. After the gangland war, it is forging a new path.

  • David Estcourt
Life in Clifton Hills.

Spawned from inner-city muck, this suburb full of lawyers is getting younger

On Gold Street in Clifton Hill there is a stark reminder of the suburb’s past and future. On one side is a primary school – on the other side, an aged care home.

  • Angus Delaney and Josh Gordon
Willi GIF

‘If Brighton and Daylesford had a baby’: The seaside cul de sac that could have been Melbourne’s CBD

It has no traffic lights and a “graceful, provincial” feel, but happy locals in this suburb still have a clear view of Melbourne’s skyscrapers.

  • Rachael Dexter

The gracious, spacious suburb people move to – and never leave

They call Ivanhoe a “long-held suburb” for a reason. But residents are being asked to handle growth upwards, not outwards.

  • Carolyn Webb
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Phillip Island is known for its stunning beaches – from the spectacular and treacherous open coastline at Cape Woolamai to the placid waters of Western Port at Cowes.

Our island home: Phillip Island and its residents, both human and non-human

Phillip Island’s population is booming and tourism surging. Can its precious wildlife and environment be protected? It’s a delicate dance.

  • Benjamin Preiss
Morris Moor in Moorabbin.

From tobacco factory to artistry, this suburb is the southside’s northside

Creatives, breweries, patisseries and young families are springing up in the suburb’s once-gritty industrial precinct, which used to be home to soft drink manufacturers and big tobacco companies.

  • Melissa Cunningham
Life in Glen Waverley.

This suburb is ‘centre of the universe’. Can it keep up with demand?

Among Chinese migrants, there is a term used to describe Glen Waverley. ‘Yu zhou zhong xin’ means ‘the centre of the universe’.

  • Sophie Aubrey
A Collingwood street scene.

The rich used to send it their sewage, now this suburb is an oasis of creatives

Once a place where the poorest endured toxic run-off from Melbourne’s wealthy, Collingwood is reaching for an affluent, sustainable future. It’s not all smooth going.

  • Tony Wright
Werribee

The town that shed its lingering smell wants to shed its lingering reputation

Bordered by market gardens and a giant sewage treatment farm, the former farm town of Werribee is experiencing irresistible population growth.

  • Adam Carey
Ian and Lisa Waters at their communal tennis court in Doncaster East.

The part of Melbourne with 1500 tennis courts, a ‘Bunnings hotel’ and no train line

Doncaster is known for the shopping centre and having no railway links, but the large blocks that attracted families in the past are making way for towers and denser living.

  • Tom Cowie
Nail Aykan

Melbourne’s migrant and manufacturing heart has taken some hits, but it’s still burning with ambition

Waves of migrants have called Broadmeadows home, wooed by cheap housing and plentiful jobs. As they brace for future growth, residents hope better education and community services are part of the plan.

  • Patrick Hatch
St Kilda’s Palais Theatre.

How St Kilda remains St Kilda against all odds

St Kilda is a place constantly in transition. While cash is flowing into the bayside suburb, it’s also an area that locals will fight doggedly to protect.

  • Cara Waters
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They call it ‘MoPo’: Dame Edna’s hidden gem of the north is changing

Even the concreted-over creek is being brought back to life as Moonee Ponds ascends into the sky.

  • Rachael Dexter
Tom and Dorothy Thorpe have lived in Burwood for 71 years.
  • City life

Burwood was ‘the bush’. Now it’s a university hub with towers to come

It was once conservative, culturally homogenous and rough in parts. These days it’s young, ethnically diverse and dominated by a university.

  • Madeleine Heffernan
Kevin Chamberlin, former Melbourne Lord Mayor and North Melbourne resident.

The suburb trying to avoid the fate of Docklands as towers shoot up

North Melbourne has long been gentrified, and its mixed-income residents have always co-existed, but a windfall of government and private investment could change that.

  • Najma Sambul
Hanna El Mouallem, whose family owns the Dendy Deli, on Dendy Street Beach in Brighton.

Brighton isn’t all Karens and mansions – but it would help if they locked their doors

Locals love the Bayside bubble, but police say locals leaving homes unlocked is allowing young offenders to get inside and steal car keys.

  • Stephen Brook
Merrick Watts in the Eltham Hotel main bar where he used to work.

Merrick Watts’ simple rule during Eltham pub fights: ‘Grab the till and run’

Once Eltham was an “amazing dichotomy between ruthless bogans and the arts”. Nowadays, the leafy suburb is fighting not to look like everywhere else.

  • Clay Lucas
Agathe Kerr with some of the offerings that have put her South Melbourne market pâtisserie stall on the international tourist map, thanks to TikTok.

More than just a market, South Melbourne is a village too

Built on the success of the gold rush, South Melbourne has ridden the highs and lows of Victorian history. It’s carved out a place on the edge of the CBD.

  • Wendy Tuohy
Torquay

Big-city problems surfing in on Torquay as newcomers embrace a sea change

The Torquay community is fiercely protective of its surrounding environment – both ocean and land – as its population boom threatens its coastal character.

  • Benjamin Preiss

Other series

The 2026 MICF has kicked off

Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2026

This year’s laugh fest has kicked off, with more than 2000 performers stepping up to the mic. Here, our writers take a closer look

  • 10 stories
Sam Mitchell flies the flag after Matthew Lloyd’s hit on Brad Sewell.

Hate of origin: Inside football’s most intense rivalry

Essendon and Hawthorn have hated each other for more than 40 years, from some old-fashioned thuggery and a fake drug scandal in the mid-80s to last year’s failed bid by the Hawks to poach the Bombers’ captain.

  • 5 stories