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Suburb Insight

Living in Everton Park: The Vineyard That Became a Family Suburb

27 May 2026Β· Beverley Gibbons

Nine kilometres north-west of the CBD, Everton Park started with a 1870s vineyard named after a Liverpool district, grew slowly for half a century as a rural outpost, then exploded in the 1960s and 70s β€” going from 351 people to 8,370 in just twenty years. Today it's one of Brisbane's most solid fam

Everton Park's story is the story of Brisbane's middle ring in miniature. A slow rural start, a vineyard named after a distant city, decades of near-silence β€” and then a population explosion in the 1960s and 70s that turned a scattering of farms into a proper suburb almost overnight. The people who arrived in that boom are still here, ageing in place, while a new generation of families knocks down their post-war homes and builds something new. That cycle β€” arrival, settlement, renewal β€” is what makes Everton Park what it is.
White Street, Everton Park β€” looking east towards the suburban heart
Present Day

White Street, looking east through Everton Park's residential heart. The suburb was fully settled by the mid-1970s, and the housing stock tells that story: 1960s and 70s brick homes on generous blocks, steadily being refreshed by a new generation of families drawn by the school precinct and proximity to the city.

Photo: Kgbo / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

McDowall's Vineyard (1870s–1899)

In the 1870s, Thomas McDowall established a vineyard on his property north of Kedron Brook. He named his estate after Everton, a district of Liverpool, England β€” the inner north-eastern suburb that sits above the Mersey. His was one of the more pleasant rural enterprises in an area otherwise known for slaughter yards and fellmongeries. The Bunya railway timber reserve (1874) was to the north-west, keeping a sawmill in operation in Everton Park from 1886 to 1911.

The railway line from Brisbane to Enoggera opened in 1899 and extended to Gaythorne in 1916. An Everton Park postal receiving office opened at the corner of South Pine Road and Gordon Parade that same year β€” the exact spot that would become the suburb's commercial centre. Residents walked down South Pine Road, crossed Kedron Brook at McDowalls Bridge (named after Thomas himself), and caught the train at Enoggera. A store was added to the post office in 1908. Postage stamps went on sale in 1912. The suburb was, very slowly, coming to life.

By 1910–30, the population had crept from about 100 to 300. A primary school opened in 1934 β€” originally called Bunyaville for the nearby forest park, it was soon renamed Everton Park State School. The population was approaching 400 by the mid-1950s. For a century after McDowall planted his vines, the area was still a rural backwater.

The Boom (1960s–70s)

Then the 1960s arrived, and everything changed. Everton Park's population exploded:

1954: 351 people
1976: 8,370 β€” a twenty-four-fold increase in just over twenty years.

Everton Park State High School opened in 1961 on the eastern side of the new shopping centre. The Everton Park drive-in neighbourhood shopping centre opened on Stafford Road in 1969, across from the old post office corner. Everton Park East (near Stafford Heights) and Everton Park North (towards Bunyaville forest) were recognised as settled localities.

The suburb was fully settled by the mid-1970s. The blocks were generous, the homes were solid brick, and the families who moved in were the kind of people who stayed. The 1991 census counted 7,758 people β€” barely changed from the 1976 peak. Everton Park was done growing. What came next was maturation.

Everton Park Library β€” opened 2024 as part of the suburb's renewal
Present Day

The Everton Park Library, opened in 2024 β€” a sign of the suburb's ongoing renewal. New community infrastructure sits alongside the 1960s shopping centre and the 1970s homes, creating a layered urban fabric that tells the story of each generation's contribution.

Photo: Kgbo / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Everton Park Today β€” $1.25M and Renewing

Everton Park in 2026 is home to about 10,100 people, 10.8km from the CBD. The median house price is $1.25M β€” up 80% in five years. A three-bedroom house on Pullen Road recently sold for $1.35M. A four-bedroom on Flockton Street β€” one of the original 1960s homes β€” went for $1.65M.

The knockdown-rebuild wave is transforming the housing stock. The 1960s brick homes that defined the suburb for fifty years are steadily making way for modern residences designed for a new generation of families. The 2024 library opening added new community infrastructure. Northside Christian College (1,100+ students, established 1985) and the North West Private Hospital are both within the suburb boundaries β€” anchors that most suburbs this size can't match.

The Brookside Shopping Centre in Mitchelton is five minutes west. The shopping strip on South Pine Road serves daily needs. Teralba Park sits next to Kedron Brook, connecting residents to the bikeway network. The rental yield for houses is 2.7% β€” low, but reflecting the suburb's dominance by owner-occupiers.

Schools

Everton Park's school line-up is genuinely impressive for a suburb its size: Everton Park State High School (well-regarded public, opened 1961), Northside Christian College (Prep–12, ~$8k/yr, 1,100+ students), Prince of Peace Lutheran College (Primary, ~$7k/yr, small class sizes), and Everton Park State School (est. 1934). Combined with nearby Kedron State High School and Padua College in Kedron, families here have more quality options than almost any comparable middle-ring suburb.

Who Should Buy Here?

Everton Park is for families who want the established middle ring at its best β€” a suburb that's fully formed, with a strong school precinct, generous blocks, and the quiet confidence of a place that doesn't need to sell itself. It's for buyers who look at Stafford and see potential but want something more settled. For people who appreciate that a century of slow growth followed by a decade of explosive change produced something worth preserving.

McDowall's vineyard is long gone. The slaughter yards and fellmongeries are history. The sawmill closed in 1911. But the name he chose β€” Everton, after a Liverpool district he probably never visited β€” is still on the map, still on the mail, still on the school uniforms of the kids who play in Teralba Park on weekends.

Not bad for a grape grower with a dream.

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