Central Park

Covering almost 19 acres, Central Park is embellished with avenue trees, shrubs and flowerbeds and adjoined by an open oval for cricket, soccer, and other team sports.  

It is home to one of the oldest conservatories in Victoria and is one of a handful of Edwardian public gardens.  

Sports grounds

Central Park Oval (soccer and cricket)

Sports

Soccer and cricket.

Facilities

2 soccer pitches, 2 synthetic cricket wickets and public toilets.

Pavilion

Central Park Pavilion

Size

2.5 hectare.

Clubs

Central Park Rangers, Highlander United Soccer Club, Toorak Prahran Cricket Club, St Andrews Gardiner Cricket Club, and Malvern Cricket Club.

Apply to hire sports grounds

Eco-art installation

Lost Lands Found

Amidst Central Park's carefully maintained green spaces in Malvern East, a special eco-art installation brings a message of reconnection with our local landscapes.

Lost Lands Found is a 4x4 metre living installation packed with indigenous flowers, grasses, herbs and lilies that once flourished throughout Victoria prior to European settlement. Less than 1% of this vibrant habitat remains today.

The space exists as a small window into the past, a place to pause, reflect, and reconnect with the land and the unique native flora that once existed in Stonnington, now re-established within the modern gardens we know today. Creator, Wemba Wemba-Wergaia educator and ecologist Dean Stewart explains that Lost Lands Found intends to “revive some of the lost connections between people and place, community and earth in a real and intimate way (in order) to reconcile ourselves with the land.”

Lost Lands Found includes over 60 densely planted species that provide a home in which native insects can thrive. Visitors are encouraged to get to know local Stonnington flora and identify native plants that can be easily added to home gardens of any size to provide habitat and support local biodiversity.

“The deeper you look, the deeper you understand! Reconciliation is not just between black and white; it is a reconciliation of us all, as a people, back with the land. For we are all the newest custodians and caretakers of these ancient lands, which we now all call our home.”
– Dean Stewart

History

In 1906, Malvern Council purchased an undeveloped land on the Gascoigne Estate. The area had formed part of a golf course that spanned over the nearby Hedgeley Dene Gardens.

The park was laid out with its sportsground and recreational gardens in 1908.

For more information, contact the Stonnington History Centre.

Public transport

The nearest public transport services are:

  • Tram route 5 along Wattletree Road
  • Bus route 624 along Burke Road

Use Public Transport Victoria's Journey planner.