Lansvale took its name from a combination of the names of the neighbouring suburbs of
Lansdowne and
Canley Vale. This area was a most popular recreational site of the early twentieth century. Latty's Pleasure Grounds, the Butterfly Hall, Hollywood Park and the Lansdowne Reserve were popular ventures which fringed the river and lakes system. The amusement parks were struggling by the time of the
Great Depression and eventually the land that they occupied was acquired by the council for public reserves. It is a little-known fact that the first games of Rugby League football in Australia, in early 1908, were trial games that took place in Lansvale, at Latty's Pleasure Grounds. This was before the first official competition games tookplace at venues closer to the City of Sydney, and well before professional Rugby League clubs came to the further western suburbs of Sydney, such as Parramatta, Canterbury-Bankstown and Western Suburbs. The suburb developed in the 1950s when the peripheral areas of Bankstown municipality assumed identities of their own. One popular housing estate is known as
River Heights, where stylishly designed houses with every modern detail and a luxurious finish have been built. A local landmark is
Lansdowne Bridge, a sandstone bridge built between 1834 and 1836, designed and supervised by
David Lennox. The bridge is listed on the (now defunct) Register of the National Estate.
Magic Kingdom was an amusement park that operated in Lansvale from the 1970s to the 1990s. == Heritage listings ==