Homebush is made up of a number of areas that were developed at different times. The modern suburb is bounded roughly by
Saleyards Creek in the west and
Powells Creek in the north and east. In the northwest, since 1992 it has been divided from the suburb of
Sydney Olympic Park in the
City of Parramatta by the
A3 arterial road; prior to that, the northwest boundary was Boundary Creek. In the south, it is divided from the suburb of Strathfield by an irregular boundary roughly following the local artery road formed by Arthur Street, Broughton Road and Beresford Road, but which brings all of the properties facing that road within the boundaries of the suburb of Strathfield. The boundary has repeatedly changed since 1977, after north Homebush became part of Strathfield Municipality. The Homebush village centre (extending much further south than today's boundary) was first carved out of the suburb of Strathfield, eventually to be combined with north Homebush to form the modern suburb. The southern part of the historical suburb of Homebush (between Broughton Road and Albyn Road) is now part of the suburb of Strathfield. The area to the north of the railway that formed the historical Municipality of Homebush is now in the suburbs of Homebush and Homebush West (Flemington). Small strips to the northwest and northeast are in Sydney Olympic Park and North Strathfield respectively.
Homebush South (Homebush Village) Homebush South, also called
Homebush Village, is a locality comprising the part of the suburb of Homebush to the south of the railway. Homebush South has a population of 2,806 and a population density of 4,306 people per square kilometre. "Homebush South" was gazetted as a "neighbourhood" in 1992. Homebush South consists of the bulk of the
Village of Homebush estate which was first subdivided in 1878. This development was subdivided from the larger
Underwood Estate and is today split between the suburbs of Homebush and
Strathfield. The land had boundaries of The Crescent, Homebush, Beresford, Coventry and Bridge Roads. Homebush Village became part of Strathfield Municipality, proclaimed in 1886. Within the estate, Broughton, Abbotsford and Burlington Roads and Rochester and Meredith Streets were also gazetted. In the December of that year, 381 house blocks were auctioned. By the end of the century, many large houses and substantial villas had been built. In the 20th-century house construction continued and most blocks had been built on by the end of the 1920s. Due to boundary changes after North Homebush was incorporated into Strathfield in 1947, the historic "Village of Homebush" estate is today partly in Homebush South and partly in the suburb of Strathfield. The western boundary of Homebush South is
Saleyards Creek, which flows through Airey Park and divides Homebush South from Flemington village, in the suburb of Homebush West. The creek also serves as the boundary between the cadastral units (used for land title purposes) of the
Parish of Concord (to the east, including Homebush) and the
Parish of Liberty Plains (to the west, including Flemington). The Homebush Village centre lies on a section of Rochester Street close to the railway, which forms the "high street" of the village. The commercial buildings along the village high street are largely preserved from the 19th century and are protected as a heritage conservation area. Today, the village centre is populated by numerous cafes and restaurants, as well as independent businesses such as a bakery, a flower shop, a newsagency, a butcher, a bank, a post office, a pharmacy, doctors' surgeries and grocery stores. These shops extend to The Crescent, opposite
Homebush railway station. While there are low-to-medium-rise apartment blocks around the village centre, most of Homebush South is made up of freestanding residences. Reflecting the age and well-preserved condition of these residential streets, significant parts of the former Village of Homebush are protected as heritage conservation areas, including almost the entirety of Abbotsford Road, which runs east-west across most of the Village, as well as parts of Meredith Street. Because the southern part of the village of Homebush is now administratively part of the suburb of Strathfield, various sites previously identified with Homebush are no longer within the boundaries of the suburb. These include the Homebush War Memorial in Davey Square, at the southern tip of the village of Homebush. Homebush Public School, opened in 1885, is in the village centre.
Homebush Boys High School is located on the western edge of Homebush South. A girls' school,
Strathfield Girls High School, is located nearby in Strathfield and also serves Homebush South. Strathfield's main library is located on Rochester Street in Homebush South. The Catholic Seminary of the Good Shepherd, a training institution for priests, is also located in Hommebush South. Homebush South is connected to North Homebush via two road connections: Subway Lane, which passes under the railway line to the west of the station, and Bridge Road, which passes over the railway line further west.
Notable or heritage listed houses in the Village of Homebush estate • Billesdon built 1915 for Stephen Rabone to a design by Rupert Minnett. • Broughlea built c.1881 for Horatio Aylward, a solicitor in the firm of Aylward and Wild. • Camden Lodge 1917 built as Canlidgy for Robert Trevethan and designed by
Alfred Gambier Newman. The house was burnt out on 2012 and in 2023 the front of the house is being restored with James Phillips of Weir and Philips doing the heritage work and Litera Trotta architects designing the new two level rear wing with underground parking. • Dunkeld (now Edensor) was designed by
Joseph Alexander Kethel and was built in 1906 by pastoral agent and tennis player John Peate Duguid (1875–1961). The house was then owned by James Pearce (1857–1916), who was the proprietor of the Strathfield Flour Mills. • Florenceville built c.1880 by John Shiply • Hawthorn built c.1886 for Frederick William Binney to a design by Cyril and Arthur Blacket. Binney was Secretary of the Newcastle-Wallsend Coal Company and the Northern Collieries Association. • Ingera built c.1894 for William Norton • Rothsay built c.1884 for stockbroker Samuel Thompson (1821–1910) • Wellbeck built c.1892 for solicitor Albert Nicholson. In 1902 the house became known as Warwick when Emily Forrester (the widow of
William Forrester of
Warwick Farm) owned the house. Emily Forrester died at Warwick, Homebush, in 1917.
North Homebush North Homebush, the part of Homebush north of the railway, is bisected by Parramatta Road and the M4 Western Motorway. It has a total population of 8,966, of which the vast majority (7,797 people) is concentrated in the area south of the M4 motorway and north of the railway. Because North Homebush is much better integrated with
North Strathfield and
Concord West, and Homebush South with Strathfield, than the two halves of Homebush are to each other, government planning documents refer to North Homebush and North Strathfield together, as the "
Homebush Precinct". The "Homebush North Precinct" as defined by state government planning documents in fact lies in North Strathfield and Concord West, outside the suburb of Homebush completely. The North Homebush area was developed slightly later than Homebush South. Although Edward Powell's Half Way House Inn on Parramatta Road had been established early in the life of the colony, the rest of the area was largely used for grazing. In the 1870s, stockyards (for the sale of livestock by auction) were erected adjacent to the station. In 1881, an attempt was made to subdivide the part of the former Home Bush Estate north of Parramatta Road, as the "Homebush Park Estate". However, this and subsequent subdivision proposals were not successful, and other than the lots adjacent to Parramatta Road, most of the land remained unsold and was sparsely populated. When the
NSW Government abattoirs were moved from Glebe to present-day
Sydney Olympic Park, the stockyards were closed and replaced by
Flemington stockyards, further west, in 1883. Hotels and other businesses were established in the area adjacent to the stockyards, servicing stockyard and abattoir workers. This area was centred on the intersection of Knight Street with Parramatta Road. In 1947, North Homebush became part of the Municipality of Strathfield. With the decline of industry and the increase of traffic congestion along Parramatta Road after
World War II, many of the shops formerly located in the North Homebush commercial area are now shut or abandoned, similarly to other parts of Parramatta Road. At least for the time being car sales yards continue to flourish along Parramatta Road but this main artery through North Homebush has now been re-zoned high density residential, with mid- and high-rise apartment blocks proliferating. The only commercial area along Parramatta Road which remains thriving is in the extreme west of this part of the suburb. It is part of Sydney Markets Plaza and serves the Sydney Markets at Flemington. The construction of the
M4 Motorway in the 1970s led to the demolition of some of the fine houses of North Homebush, such as "Pomeroy House". North of the M4 Western Motorway, the suburb boundaries extend further west to the western bank of Saleyards Creek. A large portion of this area is occupied by former industrial land, now redeveloped into parklands, office parks and the
DFO Homebush shopping centre. Other nearby commercial areas are the 'Bakehouse Quarter' in neighbouring
North Strathfield and the Homebush Village centre in Homebush South. As a postal town (for
Australia Post purposes) the name "
Homebush" refers only to North Homebush. There are no schools in North Homebush, but the area is served partly by Homebush Public School and partly by North Strathfield Public School. It is also within the catchment areas of Homebush Boys High School and Strathfield Girls High School.
Heritage listings Homebush has a number of heritage-listed sites. This includes the following state heritage listed site: • Great Southern and Western railway:
Homebush railway station. ==Governance==