24,407
residents (2021 Census)
29.5%
169.4%
population growth 2016–2021
30 parks
9.8% of 54.4 km² suburb area
26 km
from Melbourne CBD
Population growth 2016–2021
+169.4%
From 9,060 to 24,407 residents one of Melbourne's highest growth rates. Thousands of new homes built each year on land previously used for farming and grassland.
Land clearing rate
Ongoing
Active development continues across Wollert's northern and eastern precincts. Every new estate stage clears grassland and displaces existing pest populations into already-built homes nearby.
Edgars Creek headwaters location
17 km creek
Edgars Creek the largest tributary of Merri Creek has its headwaters in Wollert's grasslands. The creek corridor is the primary wildlife and rodent travel route through the suburb.
Estate wetlands built into new stages
Multiple
Lyndarum North, Aurora, and Arramont all include constructed wetlands as part of their stormwater management systems. These wetlands support mosquito breeding habitat for properties within walking distance.
🏗️ Aurora estate (Epping / Wollert boundary)
Government Victoria's master-planned estate with 7,000+ residents. Edgars Creek runs through it. Formal Kangaroo Management Plans confirmed wildlife pressure. New homes on recently cleared grassland. Pest risk: ants and spiders from land clearing, rodents from Edgars Creek, possums from established creek vegetation.
🌳 Lyndarum North (220 Craigieburn Road East)
Framed by River Red Gums and wetlands along Craigieburn Road East. Walking paths weave through constructed wetlands. New homes directly adjacent to native vegetation corridors. Pest risk: possums from River Red Gums, spiders in new garden beds, mosquitoes from estate wetlands, rodents from wetland margins.
🏘️ Arramont estate
Master planned estate in Wollert's developing northern section. Active ongoing land clearing for new stages means displaced pest populations are continuously entering already-built homes. Pest risk: the highest ongoing pest displacement pressure of all three Wollert estates due to most active current development.
🏠 Older Wollert properties (pre-2010)
Original Wollert residential streets near Epping Road and Summerhill Road older homes with ageing roof structures adjacent to the Brickworks industrial land. Pest risk: rodents from the Brickworks precinct and Epping Road corridor, possums in ageing roof voids, redback spiders in established gardens.
🛍️ Aurora Village shopping centre
Coles, ALDI, specialty food retailers on Edgars Road within Aurora estate. Food retailers, cafés, and bin enclosures in a busy family-oriented shopping precinct. Pest risk: German cockroaches in food tenancy kitchens, flies in food service areas, rodents near bin storage HACCP pest programs required for compliance.
🏭 Brickworks Limited plant (Epping Road)
Australia's largest brickmaker operates in Wollert with significant clay extraction areas, industrial operations, and large open land. The industrial and open-land environment sustains high rodent and bird populations. Properties on Epping Road nearest the Brickworks precinct are in the suburb's highest industrial-fringe rodent pressure zone.
🐀 Rats and mice
Driven by three overlapping sources: the Edgars Creek headwaters corridor running through the Aurora estate, the Brickworks industrial precinct on Epping Road, and the large undeveloped grassland sections in Wollert's northern and eastern areas still awaiting development. Rodents follow drain lines from the creek and grassland margins into estate homes through garage gaps and unsealed pipe penetrations.
Rodent control →
🪳 German cockroaches
Primarily a commercial pest issue in Wollert — concentrated in Aurora Village food tenancies (Coles, ALDI, cafés and specialty retailers on Edgars Road). Residential cockroach infestations are less common in Wollert's very new homes but increase in homes approaching 5+ years as kitchen structures age and grease accumulates in hard-to-reach areas.
Cockroach control →
🕷️ Redback and white tail spiders
Extremely common across all three Wollert estates displaced from adjacent grassland and farmland as development expands. New retaining walls, garden beds with loose mulch, garage corners, and outdoor storage areas in estate homes provide ideal harborage. Spider populations are highest in years 1–3 after home construction as displaced ground populations establish in new structures.
Spider control →
🐜 Black house ants and coastal brown ants
One of Wollert's most frequent residential pest calls. New homes on clay-rich volcanic basalt soil with disturbed ground provide ideal ant colony conditions. Unsealed gaps around plumbing penetrations through new slabs give ants direct access to kitchens and bathrooms. The clay soil also retains moisture near slab edges, which attracts ants year round.
Ant control →
🐝 European wasps
Nesting underground near open grassland reserve edges and in the large roof voids of new estate homes. The undeveloped grassland sections between Wollert's estates provide ideal underground wasp nesting habitat, with queens establishing nests in spring and reaching peak colony size February to April. Same day removal available do not attempt to treat wasp nests yourself.
Wasp removal →
🦝 Common brushtail possums
Wollert is literally named "where possums abound" in the Woiwurrung language and the possum population remains substantial today. River Red Gums in Lyndarum North, the Edgars Creek corridor through Aurora, and the estate wetland vegetation all sustain large possum populations. New homes with unsealed eave linings or omitted vent covers during construction are entered almost immediately. Wollert has the highest possum-in-roof call-out rate of any suburb in this guide.
Possum removal →
🦅 Birds (mites and nesting)
The Edgars Creek riparian corridor and estate wetlands support abundant birdlife native species including the tawny frogmouth and nankeen night-heron have been recorded along the creek within Wollert. Sparrows, starlings, and Indian mynas nest in roof voids and under solar panels in the estate homes. Bird mites migrate into living areas when birds vacate nests at the end of breeding season.
Bird proofing →
🦟 Mosquitoes
An increasing issue in Wollert due to the estate-integrated constructed wetlands in Aurora, Lyndarum North, and Arramont, plus the Edgars Creek riparian wetland zones. The Lyndarum Wetland and Pine Park Wetland Playground are both near residential streets. Standing water in these wetlands supports mosquito breeding from October to April for properties within 500 metres.
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