Herston was first settled by
Europeans in the 1850s.
Sir Robert Herbert, Queensland's first premier, built a farm in the area, and lived in the farmhouse with his then Attorney-General,
John Bramston. They named their house
Herston, a combination of their surnames, which eventually became the name of the suburb. It has been speculated that the two men may have been in a kind of
homosexual relationship at the time or at least a kind of very strong and intimate male friendship. Many of Herston's streets were named after local identities of the time. Bowen Bridge Road and
Bowen Park were named after
Sir George Bowen, Queensland's first governor. Butterfield Street was named after local schoolmaster William Butterfield. Hetherington Street was named after coal industry identity John William Hetherington, and Garrick Terrace got its name from James Francis Garrick, the man who purchased Herston from Herbert and Bramston. Royal Children's Hospital Special School opened on 11 August 1919. As the name suggests, the school provided education to children who were patients in the hospital. On 1 December 2014 it became the Royal Brisbane and ACT for Kids Campus of the Lady Cilento Children's Hospital School. On 1 January 2019 it became a campus of the
Queensland Children's Hospital School (reflecting the name change of the
Lady Cilento Children's Hospital). St Joan of Arc Catholic church opened on Sunday 5 December 1920 when it was blessed and opened by
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Brisbane,
James Duhig. St Joan of Arc Catholic School opened on 14 July 1924 under the
Sisters of the Presentation. The school closed in 1968. From the eastern side of the suburb was served by frequent
tram services along Bowen Bridge Road, with routes converging from
Chermside,
Kalinga (until 1962),
Stafford, and
Grange. These services combined to provide the suburb with an off-peak service of a tram every 2½ minutes along Bowen Bridge Road in the late 1950s. This service ceased in December 1968. From the western side of the suburb was served by trams which ran along Kelvin Grove Road. This service also ceased in December 1968. Herston Methodist Church opened on Saturday 24 March 1923 on the corner of Aberleigh and Scott Roads (). It was an unpretentious hardwood building . The church was still operating in 1990 but had closed prior to March 2020. On 13 October 1928 St Luke's Anglican Mission Hall was dedicated by
Archbishop Gerald Sharp. Although Herston was within the parish of
Holy Trinity Church at
Fortitude Valley, Herston residents had wanted a closer place of worship. The mission hall was in a converted residence with the front rooms being used as a chapel and a Sunday School. A new church was dedicated on 29 April 1962 by Archbishop
Reginald Halse and consecrated on 18 October 1964 by Archbishop
Philip Strong. Its closure on 7 May 1993 was approved by Assistant Bishop Wood. The
Queensland Children's Hospital opened on 29 November 2014, adjacent to the
Mater Misericordiae Hospital, in South Brisbane, with the Royal Children's Hospital and the Mater Children's Hospital closing immediately as their patients were transferred to the Queensland Children's Hospital. In November 2014, the Queensland Government sought applications from developers to develop the site into a mixed-use precinct which would complement the adjacent health and educational facilities. Three lead developers were short-listed in July 2015. On 1 October 2015, the government issued a call for detailed proposals from the two remaining shortlisted parties to develop the site,
Stockland having withdrawn. The remaining proponents were
Frasers Property Australia with
Australian Unity and
Lendlease with Trinity Health. On 9 December 2015, the government announced that part of the development would include a government-funded
Specialist Rehabilitation and Ambulatory Care Centre (SRACC) with 100 rehabilitation beds and 32-day surgery beds with seven
operating theatres and three
endoscopy rooms. The project to redevelop the Herston Quarter site is expected to cost the Queensland Government over ten years to develop a mixed health, aged care, residential and retail precinct. On 14 August 2016,
Premier of Queensland,
Annastacia Palaszczuk announced that
Australian Unity had won the tender for the redevelopment, and there were expected to be 700 construction jobs and 1000 ongoing jobs on the site. It was announced to include a 132-bed specialist rehabilitation and ambulatory care centre for burns, stroke and other recovering patients. Further stages will have a private hospital for day-surgery, a residential aged-care home for over 100 people, research facilities, accommodation for 250 medical students, nurses scientists and visiting experts. The development will be overseen by the
Metro North Hospital and Health Service. On 25 August 2016,
HASSELL was announced as the design partner for the Herston Quarter project.
Watpac was announced as the builder. The Herston Quarter was declared a "Priority Development Area" (PDA) on 18 November 2016 by the
Queensland Government under the
Economic Development Act 2012. The declaration of a PDA removes the affected land from the planning and development processes of both the
Sustainable Planning Act 2009 and
Brisbane City Plan 2014. The PDA is managed by
Economic Development Queensland within the
Department of Infrastructure, Local Government and Planning. On 6 July 2017 the PDS (Proposed Development Scheme) was released for consultation. On 6 August 2017, the State Government released development plans for the Herston Quarter project. == Demographics ==