Electoral district of Florey
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Electoral_district_of_Florey an entity of type: SpatialThing
Florey is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. It is named after scientist Howard Florey, who was responsible for the development of penicillin. It is a 21.25 km2 (8.20 sq mi) suburban electorate in Adelaide's north-east, taking in the suburbs of Ingle Farm, Modbury North, Para Vista, Pooraka, Valley View, and Walkley Heights, as well as parts of Modbury and Northfield.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Electoral district of Florey
rdf:langString
Florey
xsd:float
-34.82860946655273
xsd:float
138.679443359375
xsd:integer
3716120
xsd:integer
1084890140
xsd:double
21.25
rdf:langString
Electoral district of Florey in the Greater Adelaide area
rdf:langString
Metropolitan
rdf:langString
Electoral District map
rdf:langString
Map of Adelaide, South Australia with electoral district of Florey highlighted
rdf:langString
sa
xsd:string
-34.82861111111111 138.67944444444444
rdf:langString
Florey is a single-member electoral district for the South Australian House of Assembly. It is named after scientist Howard Florey, who was responsible for the development of penicillin. It is a 21.25 km2 (8.20 sq mi) suburban electorate in Adelaide's north-east, taking in the suburbs of Ingle Farm, Modbury North, Para Vista, Pooraka, Valley View, and Walkley Heights, as well as parts of Modbury and Northfield. Florey was created at the electoral redistribution of 1969 as a notionally safe Labor electorate, and was first contested at the 1970 election. Mostly it was safely held by the Labor party until the 1989 election when it became the minority Labor government's most marginal electorate. Florey was one of the first electorates to fall to the Liberals at the 1993 election landslide. It was regained by Labor's Frances Bedford at the 1997 election.
xsd:integer
1970
xsd:integer
26734
xsd:integer
2018
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
7551
<Geometry>
POINT(138.67944335938 -34.828609466553)