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Reid, Australian Capital Territory

Reid
CanberraAustralian Capital Territory
Euree St, Reid, Australian Capital Territory.JPG
Euree St
Reid IBMap-MJC.png
Coordinates 35°17′0″S 149°08′30″E / 35.28333°S 149.14167°E / -35.28333; 149.14167Coordinates: 35°17′0″S 149°08′30″E / 35.28333°S 149.14167°E / -35.28333; 149.14167
Population 1,583 (2011 census)
 • Density 452/km2 (1,171/sq mi)
Established 1928
Postcode(s) 2612
Area 3.5 km2 (1.4 sq mi)
District North Canberra
Territory electorate(s) Kurrajong
Federal Division(s) Canberra
Suburbs around Reid:
Braddon Ainslie
City Reid Campbell
Parkes

Reid (postcode: 2612) is a suburb of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia. With a population of 1,583, located directly next to Civic, Reid is one of the oldest suburbs in Canberra.

Separating the suburbs of Reid and Campbell is Anzac Parade, a ceremonial boulevarde running along Canberra's primary design axis (the land axis) from Lake Burley Griffin to the Australian War Memorial.

Located in Reid are the Canberra Institute of Technology and St John the Baptist Church, which is the oldest church in Canberra.

The foundation stone of St John the Baptist Church was laid in 1841 and it was consecrated on 12 March 1845. It listed by the ACT Heritage Council.

Most of the suburb was constructed in 1926 and 1927 to provide housing for public servants in preparation for the opening of the provisional Parliament House in 1927. It was a housing precinct planned on Garden City principles and is now heritage-listed. The Uniting Church (now the Canberra Korean Church) on Coranderrk Street was built in 1927 and is also heritage listed.

Reid was named in 1928 after Australia's fourth Prime Minister, Sir George Reid. It was previously considered to be part of Ainslie. The streets in Reid are named after aboriginal words.

The four-storey Bega flats (containing 114 two-bedroom flats) were completed east of Cooyong street and south of Ainslie in 1957 in order to cope with a critical lack of accommodation for public servants transferred to Canberra. The ACT Heritage Council described them as having been designed in the Post-War International style "similar to post-war housing in Europe, particularly in English new towns. The fine proportions, crisp detailing and low scale of [the Allawah Court] and their siting continuing the street pattern made them more architecturally successful than the three eight-storey blocks of flats along Currong Street" (nearby in Braddon). The Heritage Council declined to heritage list the buildings and despite some local opposition it is proposed that they be demolished and replaced by more modern and denser accommodation along with some commercial uses.


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