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The Hunter Region of New South Wales is a river valley 180 kilometres long and 200 metres wide long.
It is on the Pacific Ocean on Australia’s east coast between 31.5 and 33 south and 150 and 152 east, with a sub-tropical climate.
This region has Australia’s largest regional population with 570,000 people. Its capital, Newcastle (just 30 minutes drive from HEZ) is Australia’s largest non-metropolitan city and the nation’s sixth largest city.
The Hunter has bucked the trend of regional centres close to metropolitan areas, keeping a separate identity, economy, and workforce.
Community leaders are now positioning the Hunter as a satellite hub to Sydney for entrepreneurship, trade, and research. A plan to make the Port of Newcastle at the mouth of the Hunter River, NSW’s next major shipping container port, is cementing this push.
Mines, wines, and people
HEZ is located in the Cessnock Local Government Area - home to over 45,000 people.
Here the mellow curving valleys of Pokolbin’s world-famed wine district give way to proud former mining cities and towns such as Cessnock, Kurri Kurri, Stanford Merthyr, Abermain and Pelaw Main.
Its people reflect the entrepreneurial spirit of strong industries such as wine and manufacturing and, at the same time, down-to-earth no-nonsense qualities.
Village residents enjoy rural living with its fresh air, more sedate pace, and freedom, while the City of Cessnock’s Vincent Street offers alfresco dining.
Investment in Cessnock over recent years has exceeded all expectations with an 80 per cent increase in development approvals by Cessnock City Council in just two years.
In fact, Cessnock has been Australia’s second best economic performer of the past five years according to the 2003 State of the Regions report, growing faster than areas such as Ballarat in Victoria and Noosa on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.
Most Cessnock people have welcomed the HEZ project with open arms as it holds the promise of solid industrial and commercial jobs for their sons and daughters.
Cessnock along with Port Stephens and Maitland achieved a 2.1% population growth rate during July 2002 and June 2003, this being the highest population rate in the Hunter region.
Cessnock Local Government Area currently has a workforce of approximately 15,700 people (residing in the LGA). With up to 15,000 people expected to work on HEZ, employment in the LGA would almost double.
Tourism and Recreation
Your staff will want to play as well as work here.
Wonderful beaches to the east, the calm waters of Lake Macquarie to the south; the bays of Port Stephens to the north; and the famous Hunter vineyards and productive land to the West… nestled in gentle mountains.
Just a few minutes drive from HEZ is Pokolbin - Australia’s oldest wine growing district, it’s the undisputed cellar door capital and offers a gourmet lifestyle with some of the nation’s best restaurants. Pokolbin alone boasts 50 wineries with dozens of world-class resorts, prestige golfing and bed and breakfasts – all scattered throughout rolling vine-covered hills.
The Hunter’s Semillons Variatel Chardonnay and Pinot Noir are now international success stories.
Sandy beaches stretch the length of the Hunter’s coastline, recently found to be the most pristine on the NSW coast.
The Barrington Tops are less than an hour from HEZ and provide endless walking trails through stunning world-heritage listed mountain scenery.
Nearby Maitland and surrounding villages like Morpeth are heritage treasures with stone mansions that have survived from the early 19th Century.
An hour north of HEZ is Port Stephens a deep safe waterway twice the size of Sydney Harbour, where dolphins trail every boat seen on these tranquil waters.
The Hunter’s Myall Lakes is one of the largest water systems on the New South Wales coast. You’ll find sandy, shallow shores, sheltered spots, and safe swimming. Surrounding the lakes is the Myall Lakes National Park – rainforest and wilderness with a myriad of Australian native animals.
Newcastle’s Foreshore district regularly attracts tens of thousands of people for holiday celebration concerts, firework displays, and picnics. The new Honeysuckle area is transforming the city with markets, restaurants, hotels, playgrounds and parks.
Schools and University
The Hunter is fast becoming a centre for educational excellence, offering innovative educational options for students and scoring international research successes.
There are over 67,000 students enrolled at more than 300 Hunter primary and secondary schools. The Hunter’s public and private schools include several grammar schools and a range of Catholic, Anglican, and other specific purpose schools. There are also academically streamed government schools.
The Hunter is consistently represented amongst NSW’s top Higher School Certificate students.
The Hunter Institute (TAFE) offers a range of flexible full-time and part-time courses from vocational education through to trade level, associate diploma and certificate levels to some 50,000 students a year.
Faculties include:
- Access and general education
- Arts and media
- Business
- Engineering
- Health and community services
- Information and communications technology
- Primary industry construction and environment
- Tourism and hospitality
- Transport and maritime services
The University of Newcastle has 22,000 students, two campuses, and five faculties:
- Business and Law
- Education and Arts
- Engineering and Built Environment
- Health
- Science and IT
One of its high profile success stories is the University’s medical school, which ushered in a new era of problem-solving medical training internationally.
There are a substantial number of students undertaking PhDs, Masters, and Doctorates at the University.
Where to Live
In a survey by popular finance magazine Australian Business Monthly, Newcastle was named as the nation’s best city.
The magazine polled people on 17 criteria from employment, house prices and wages through to hospitals, schools and lifestyle. Newcastle was found to be the best city in Australia to live in, and Maitland, just north of HEZ, came in third.
The Hunter boasts affordable residential choice, accommodation and building sites. With the Hunter’s median house prices around half of Sydney’s, workers will enjoy Hunter life with less financial pressure.
You can choose from five acre rural blocks to houses perched over ocean, bay or lake; a semi-detached Federation in inner Maitland or Cessnock; or a brand new home from one of the new housing estates springing up around Kurri Kurri.
Currently, the Hunter’s median house price is $260,000 compared to a median house price for NSW of $362,000 and for Sydney of $470,000 (September 2003).
Booming Economy
The Hunter is now one of the most successful economic and consistent performers in regional Australia. It is fast becoming Sydney’s expansion zone.
The Hunter has grown faster than the rest of Australia in the service sector – education, health, and tourism, and the region’s manufacturing has transformed itself, particularly in knowledge intensive areas.
Major industrial projects such as Tomago Aluminium , One Steel, Donhad and Comsteel have diversified the region’s industrial credentials.
It has built on traditional strengths in manufacturing, mining, and maritime services, to enter new export markets in wine, horse bloodstock, call centres and film and television.
Today the Hunter is home to 110 wineries producing 40 million litres of wine a year.
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