- Street:
- 7 Amberley Way
- ZIP:
- 3093
- City:
- Lower Plenty
- State:
- Victoria
- Country:
-
Description
Directions to Amberley
The Edmund Rice Centre Amberley is situated in the suburb of Lower Plenty, between Eltham and Greensborough.
Ring Road Route
- Exit Ring Road at its termination at Greensborough Highway (turning right).
- Travel south and cross Grimshaw Street. Travel this Highway until Yallambie Road and turn left (just before the Simpson Army Barracks).
- Travel along Yallambie Road to its end (veer right at the Roundabout).
- Turn left into Main Road.
- Travel right into Old Eltham Road (there is a blue directional sign ‘Amberley’).
- Turn right into Bonds Road (again there is a blue directional sign ‘Amberley’).
- Bonds Road continues around to the right (again there is a blue directional sign ‘Amberley’).
- Turn left into Amberley Way. ‘Amberley’ is at the end of the road.
Eastern Freeway Route
- Exit the Eastern Freeway at Bulleen Road, turning towards Bulleen/Templestowe.
- Travel Bulleen Road north, it will become Templestowe Road, then Foote Street.
- At the intersection with Williamsons Road, turn left. This road becomes Fitzsimons Lane after the large roundabout.
- Travel towards Eltham, and with Westerfolds Park on your left, cross the Yarra River.
- Turn left into Rosehill Road, a sign will indicate ‘Amberley’ another ‘Rosanna Golf Course’.
- Travel this road veering left into Bonds Road.
- Turn left into Amberley Way. ‘Amberley’ is at the end of the road.
View Larger Map
EventList powered by schlu.net
Community Noticeboard
Interfaith Calendar
Check out the Interfaith Calendar for the month ahead.

We, as leaders of faith communities, need to develop a more inclusive view of the religious other, to recognise the humanity of the religious other as a starting point. We need to recognise the essential equality of all human beings regardless of religious beliefs. We need to affirm the mutuality and interdependency of all people... We may need even to extend this and recognise that religious other may, just may, have at least some access to the Truth. We may need to accept that the religious others also adopts more or less the same set of essential universal ethical-moral principles we share; that the religious other has feelings of pain and pleasure just like us; that the religious other has similar expectations about their children and family and the preservation of life, property and security; and that the religious other has the same fears and anxieties about the world and the future, just like us.