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I recently visited Glebe Point Road & noted how lovely & green the shopping strip looked.
Glebe Point Road is in the City of Sydney Council LGA. Glebe has always been a heavily treed area & the canopy includes Glebe Point Road. Most of the street trees I first saw as a young woman are still there.
In the last couple of years Sydney Council has planted extra street trees along Glebe Point Road as part of a major makeover of the shopping strip. These trees were 4 metre high when they were planted. This had an instant greening effect & must have prevented vandalism. There are permeable surfaces around all the street trees level with the footpath. Large mature trees such as Camphor laurels have been retained & gracefully create a canopy across the road.

Showing benches facing each other so people can meet, hang around & talk. This is placemaking. The benches are not connected to a cafe. Below the hanging baskets is a bike rack
Two years ago I noticed that very large hanging baskets filled with red Begonias were installed at regular intervals along both sides of Glebe Point Road. These flowering baskets are vibrant & beautify the streetscape. I am unaware whether the Begonias are replaced at intervals or pruned periodically to allow for new growth, but after at least 2 years they are continuing to bloom. I’m taking a guess that they are Begonia acutifolia, which will grow in full sun & pretty much flower all year. I applaud City of Sydney Council for this initiative.
The hanging baskets full of Begonias is a relatively cheap way to add colour & beauty & it would be great if Marrickville Council copied this. Imagine hanging baskets of flowers all along King Street & along our other main shopping strips. Begonias can be easily propagated from leaf cuttings.
The revamp of Glebe Point Road has other great features. The footpath has been widened in parts & street trees that grow to a significant height have been planted in these areas. Widening the footpath overcomes the presence of shop awnings, a common problem in Sydney when it comes to street trees. It also allows a wider area for pedestrians & for areas where café/restaurant seating can be provided without impacting on passing pedestrians. A few car park spaces have been lost, but the overall benefit outweighs this loss.

Showing the arty bench which I love & the street tree with a reasonable sized trunk & permeable surface
City of Sydney Council has also installed a number of great looking park benches. They are artistic in form & eye-catching. My guess is that these would be more expensive than the usual bench designs, but they too are worth it. Small things like these ‘dress up’ the street & beautify the streetscape. Once a street becomes better looking, graffiti tags lessen. Research on the whole has found that the more dowdy the area, the more tags there are & the more difficult it is to prevent repeat tagging.
Although Glebe Point Road has always been a shopping destination, the presence of nearby Broadway would have had a massive impact on the smaller shops when it was built, just like what will happen if the Marrickville Metro expansion goes ahead. Sydney Council has fought back by making Glebe Point Road a pretty pIace to shop. The Glebe Markets held there in the school playground with lots of tall shady trees also draws the crowds.
I believe people are more likely to visit shopping strips that keep with the times & look good. If the strip is ugly, people go elsewhere. City of Sydney Council have achieved a good balance of beauty & convenience at Glebe Point Road. It is also a friendly place for the residents & must encourage them to do their shopping on Glebe Point Road.
Festival of the Trees: When I think about festive trees I think of Christmas trees. As it isn’t Christmas, the next tree I would call ‘festive’ is the Fig tree because it is so large, brimming with life & has the amazing ability to make me feel good. Fig trees it is.
I love Fig trees, any type & the bigger the better. I love that they grow very tall & if left unpruned, can look like a mammoth upturned bowl of leaves. The Hill’s Fig is my favourite. I love the colour of its leaves & the way its branches get a whitish look & grow skyward.
Fig trees have featured in the greater part of my life. They are all over Balmain were I spent a good chunk of my adult life & were in the grounds of most places I worked. I’ve spent hundreds of hours sitting under Figs working, reading & chatting with friends. I’ve had picnics & held parties under them. I’ve even had a ‘first kiss’ underneath one. Unfortunately I have never lived with a Fig tree on the property, though I have had friends who did.
I don’t live close to a Fig tree these days, but in the past I did. I used to love listening to the bats eating the figs in summer. In particularly hot summers, the fruit would ferment & the bats would become drunk & fight amongst themselves, which made it difficult to get to sleep at times. After a couple of summers, the bats’ behaviour became white noise & I would have to specifically tune in to hear them.
I also like to watch bats as they fly around. Just last month I spent half an hour watching the bats circle the Fig trees at a local park. Quietly, the bats flew around & around. After a while, I realised it was play.
Sometime I will get myself organised to go to the east entrance of Wolli Creek to watch the thousands of bats fly out for the night. I am told it is quite a spectacle. As previously mentioned, the bats in the city are also beautiful to watch & I think this is a terrific bonus to tourism for Sydney.
I love the thick branches of Fig trees. I particularly like the way part of their root system is above ground. I like the roots that descend from their branches ready to support the branch as it gets bigger & heavier. I like the knots that develop after a branch is cut off &, of course, I love their trunks.
I like how dark & cool it can be when there are many mature Figs planted close to each other. Other than being in the water, there is nowhere cooler on a hot summer day. I even like that it takes a while for the rain to get to you if you are taking refuge from the weather by standing under a Fig.
Sydney City Council puts Fig trees to great advantage by using their spectacular size & canopy to highlight many areas in the city & surrounding suburbs. The fairy lights wound around the branches of the avenues of Figs in Hyde Park & make it a very romantic place after dark. I think they add more fairy lights during the Festival of Sydney & this immediately creates a magical party feel.
Leichhardt Council has many old Fig trees throughout the LGA. They have recently planted Fig trees every 4 metres along Lilyfield Road (which is at least a couple of kilometres long). Apart from being a beautiful feature to the street-scape, they also hide the railway line. Give the trees a few years to grow & this thoroughfare will look tremendous, with a huge canopy spilling over the road. I predict property prices here will rise even more.
Marrickville Council has its own Figs including the oldest Fig in Sydney, though I’m not absolutely sure of this. The St Stephen’s Fig was planted in 1848. See – http://savingourtrees.wordpress.com/2010/02/24/st-stephens-fig/ It is most certainly the oldest in the LGA.
Another very old Fig tree is on a private property in South Street Tempe. This is also a very special tree. Then there is the ancient Morton Bay Fig in the IKEA development that the community is concerned about. Council also planted a ring of Figs in Tempe Reserve that I hope I live for long enough to see mature.
I would think most Councils in Sydney have a significant quota of Fig trees as these were popular in the early 1900’s. Now many are getting old (read senescent in ‘Arborist Speak’) & I fear they will be replaced with something like Tuckaroos. If this happens, it will be such a loss.
If I were a Town Planner, I would insist that a Fig tree was planted at as many street corners as possible. Imagine the dramatic entrance to ordinary suburban streets if this is done. They do this in the Sunshine Coast to great effect. Shopping strips are kept cool by these trees & people linger just to sit in their shade. Because shoppers linger they spend more. Research has shown 11% more.
I would also make Fig trees mandatory in public parks & in the grounds of hospitals, because a green outlook helps people feel emotionally good as well as increase the body’s healing ability. I would have Fig trees in school grounds to protect the children from the sun & stimulate their imagination, because Figs are magical trees & easily the stuff of fairy tales & tropical islands. Children, particularly girls, learn better when they can see trees during study. Boys tend to be calmer in leafy surrounds. The Fig tree is a giant in this regard.
To my mind the most amazing Fig in Australia is the ‘Curtain Fig’ in North Queensland. http://rainforest-australia.com/additional_Curtfig_photos.htm to see photos. To quote from the site:
- It is one of the largest trees in north Queensland.
- To count the tangled roots of the Curtain Fig would take a week.
- Its curtain of aerial roots drops 15 metres (49 feet) to the ground.
How can I get Marrickville Council to plant one of these?







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