Victoria names ‘Democracy Place’ in honour of Greeks

·

To commemorate Greek National Day on March 25, thousands gathered at Melbourne’s Shrine of Remembrance. They came to honour the 1821 uprising against 400 years of Ottoman rule, but a brief announcement before the march – almost lost to the afternoon heat – may prove to be the day’s most lasting legacy.

Standing before the eternal flame, Minister for Tourism, Sport and Major Events Steve Dimopoulos, representing Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan, announced that a site behind Parliament House will be renamed “Democracy Place.”

Steve Dimopoulos makes the announcement of naming of Democracy Place
Steve Dimopoulos makes the announcement of naming of Democracy Place. Photo: The Greek Herald / Mary Sinanidis.

“On behalf of the Premier Jacinta Allan, I’m proud to announce that the Victorian Government will rename the place to Democracy Place,” he said, “in recognition of one of the greatest gifts that Greece has given us and the world.”

As Dimopoulos later told The Greek Herald, this is not simply a name change, but a deliberate statement about where democracy resides. The site, tucked behind Parliament along Macarthur Street and Treasury Place, forms a quiet but critical link between Parliament House and 1 Treasury Place, the seat of the Premier’s office.

“It is the walkway and greenery… that takes you from Parliament House to the seat of government,” he said. Premiers walk it, staffers move through it, and decisions pass along it. By naming this transit point “Democracy Place,” the government has framed the literal path of power with the values that guide it.

Views of Democracy Place (2)
Views of Democracy Place. Photo: The Greek Herald / Mary Sinanidis.
How the idea took shape

The concept emerged in the lead-up to a planned visit by Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis. The government wanted a gesture that would endure.

“We had a conversation,” Dimopoulos said, referencing discussions between Premier Allan and Greek members of Victoria’s government: Kath Theophanous, Nick Staikos, and Lee Tarlamis. What could meaningfully honour both Greece and Victoria?

For Tarlamis, the answer came with personal insight. “I know how difficult it is to name a place, having gone through that process myself with Lemnos Square,” he told The Greek Herald. “But this has the Premier’s backing, which makes it truly significant.”

He also clarified the geography. “It’s not a renaming of Treasury Place itself, but the formal naming of a currently nameless section – a triangle of land behind Parliament,” he explained. “Between Macarthur Street and the government buildings… that space will be known as Democracy Place.”

This stretch of land is already steeped in history. It is the same path former Premier Daniel Andrews walked when he announced his resignation, leaving Parliament and crossing toward government offices one final time.

Premier Allan, said, “Democracy Place recognises the enduring legacy of Hellenism and its greatest contribution to Australia and the world: democracy.”

More than a name

Dimopoulos placed the moment in a broader frame. He spoke of 1821 not as distant history, but as a reminder that democracy is not a given, it is something fought for, carried, and renewed.

In Melbourne, home to one of the largest Greek diasporas in the world, that legacy is not abstract. It lives in the families and businesses built from the ground up.

If the name is the beginning, the question now is what follows. To truly honour the title, the space may require more than a designation. A statue or a physical marker would invite people to stop, rather than just pass through, anchoring the idea of democracy in the same way the precinct honours past leaders.

For now, though, it exists as something quieter: a name, announced in the heat, and placed gently into the heart of Victoria’s political landscape.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Dr Yianni Cartledge traces the stories of Ikarians in Australia through archival research

Inspired by his own family history and the broader migrant experience, Dr Yianni Cartledge has published a book exploring Ikarian migration.

Elfa Moraitakis included among the most powerful people in Western Sydney

Elfa Moraitakis has been named among the most powerful people in Western Sydney in The Daily Telegraph’s list.

Chicago family returns ancient Greek artefacts to Greece

Five ancient Greek artefacts spanning from the 6th century BC to the Roman period have been returned to Greece by a family from Chicago.

Kefalonia beach voted as the second best beach in the world

Fteri Beach has been ranked the second most spectacular beach in the world for 2026 in the annual World’s 50 Beaches list.

Frank Alexopoulos says leaving construction job transformed his approach to fatherhood

Frank Alexopoulos says a call to Lifeline during a difficult period in his life transformed the way he approached fatherhood.

You May Also Like

Italy returns Parthenon fragment to Athens in nudge to UK

Italy will return a piece of the Parthenon Frieze to Greece, after it was on loan as part of a cultural exchange.

Grecian Chic: This is how Ancient Greek Art has influenced fashion

Once you explore and understand Ancient Greek art, you can find resemblances and its influence everywhere in modern fashion.

Chris Anastasi and Nathaniel Anthony from Muscle Nation land huge deal with Coles

Muscle Nation co-owners Chris Anastasi, 37, and Nathaniel Anthony, 31, have landed a huge deal with Coles.