Petrie
About Petrie
The suburb of Petrie is now a suburban village built on land that was once used for pine plantations and agriculture, which gives it a slightly rural feel. Petrie has a small-town country feel but has all the amenities professionals and families could need. A number of parks, playgrounds and lakes make getting outdoors easy without even having to leave the suburb.
Facilities
The Petrie railway station provides access to regular train services to Brisbane, Ipswich, Caboolture and the Sunshine Coast.
The town centre includes establishments; such as retail, commerce, cosmetology, health, education, sport and mechanical industries and establishments. There are also police, fire brigade and ambulance establishments in the town centre.
Education
USC Moreton Bay opened in 2020 on the former Petrie Paper Mill site. This university is the first full-service university campus in the Moreton Bay Region, delivering more education opportunities for local students.
Primary educational facilities include Our Lady of the Way Catholic Primary School, Petrie State School and Kurwongba State School. Mt Maria College is the only secondary educational facility in Petrie, however more schools can be found in neighbouring suburbs.
Things to see and do in Petrie
- Mungarra Reserve
- Sweeney Reserve
- Wyllie Park
- Youngs Crossing Park
- Old Petrie Town
History of Petrie
The origin of the suburb name can be traced back to an early inhabitant, Tom Petrie. Tom Petrie was a highly regarded individual in the area through his community work and his cooperation with the local Aboriginal inhabitants. The suburb was named Petrie a year after his death in 1911, previously it had been known as North Pine.
Petrie became increasingly urbanised during the 1970s, following on from the initial boost given by the completion of the Australian Paper Mills factory east of the railway station in 1957.
The Latest
Opening up 1400 new students
More than 1400 new students were welcome to Queensland’s newest university campus last week as part of Orientation activities at USC Moreton Bay.
Exhibition gets personal
Moreton Bay Regional Council is lifting the lid on taboo items from over the decades at the It’s Personal exhibition on display at Pine Rivers Heritage Museum.
Student numbers smash forecasts
USC Moreton Bay, Queensland's newest university based at Petrie, will soon have 3000 students enrolled, far more than originally forecast for its second year.
What's on this Australia Day
It’s time to zinc up, slap on those thongs and pull out your green and gold or red, white and blue to mark 2021 Australia Day in the Moreton Bay Region.
Uni makes 1400 offers
The University of the Sunshine Coast (USC) has so far made almost 1400 offers of study for Semester 1 this year at its Moreton Bay campus in Petrie.
Markets open over the Holiday season
While some Moreton Bay markets will be taking a break over the Christmas and New Year holiday period there are still plenty markets open so you can still enjoy the buzz of market shopping, the hustle and bustle, the smell of food, the sun on your face and the thrill of a unique or bargain find!
Still waiting to break drought
We may be facing the wettest summer in a decade, but Seqwater’s dams, which supply the Moreton Bay Region, are still in a ‘drought response’ phase.
Parks and playgrounds poised for holiday fun
Looking for ways to get your kids active and outside these school holidays? Here’s eight parks across the Moreton Bay Region that should do the trick.
Research to help reset, regroup, recover
Twenty businesses from across the Moreton Bay Region have been involved in a USC research project to explore how they’ve responded to the COVID-19 pandemic. It’s hoped the findings will help others recover well beyond next year.
Sign-up for Home Alone
Pet owners across the Moreton Bay Region and Queensland are being urged to register with the RSPCA Qld’s Home Alone service.