Our Publications
Centennial Park produces a range of brochures and we provide them here in electronic form for you to view at your leisure.
You will find a mix of brochures ranging from one that provides an overview of Centennial Park with its beautiful gardens and facilities, through to pricing brochures for burial and memorial gardens, ‘Coping With Grief’ and a ‘Questions and Answers’ brochure.
If you can’t find what you are looking for here please just give us a call on 8276 6011, Monday to Friday 9 am to 5 pm.
The following files can be downloaded in PDF format.
Brochures
Burial Options (1,276kb)
Burial Options — Greek (1,326kb)
Burial Options — Italian (1,282kb)
Centennial Park Overview (4,721kb)
Chapels Facilities (1,508kb)
Coping With Grief (1,721kb)
Gardens Map (493kb)
Memorial Options (1,862kb)
Questions & Answers (1,789kb)
Urns (1,463kb)
Annual Reports
2009–2010 Annual Report (997k)
2008–2009 Annual Report (586k)
2007–2008 Annual Report (1412k)
2006–2007 Annual Report (1418k)
2005–2006 Annual Report (1456k)
2004–2005 Annual Report (1174k)
Expired Sites List & Information
The most recent expired sites listing can be downloaded in PDF format, using the link below.
Expired Sites (196kB)
Under South Australian legislation all grave and memorial sites carry limited tenure. This ensures cemeteries can maintain their facilities to an appropriate standard. Licence fees provide an income stream that is required for ongoing maintenance of gardens and grounds.
Limited tenure also enables cemeteries to manage the issue of limited space. Based on current rates, without being able to re-use grave and memorial sites, Centennial Park will reach full capacity for first time burials within 20 years.
Centennial Park is a limited tenure cemetery, meaning that burial and memorial positions are licenced for a set period of time. For burial it is 50 years and for memorial, 30 to 99 years.
Prior to expiry of the licence, Centennial Park sends a letter to the licence holder. This becomes complicated if the licence holder has not notified us of any address changes.
We also place notification on the grave or memorial when the site has expired asking the licence holder or any other interested party to contact us. Advice is also published in the Public Notices in The Advertiser and The Australian directing readers to the Centennial Park web site for a detailed listing.
If after these actions and a minimum period of 2 years has elapsed, licence holders for these expired sites can not be contacted, control of the sites reverts to Centennial Park, and they may be re-used.
The process of re-using a gravesite is treated with dignity, care and respect. Skeletal remains are carefully recovered from graves and are individually placed into ossuary boxes and reinterred at a lower depth in the same grave. In the case of cremated remains, they will be removed and re-interred at a dedicated unmarked location within Centennial Park.
Licence holders who do not want a site to be re-used can renew or extend the licence.
Licences can be extended for a minimum of five years and up to a maximum of 99 years, then a new licence must be issued. The right to extend or renew a licence can be taken up by anyone.
This means as long as there is a person interested who is willing to pay the licence fees, a grave or memorial can be secured from generation to generation.
We urge anyone holding a licence for a grave or memorial site to keep the licence with their personal documents and to notify Centennial Park of address changes.
We are happy to provide a copy of the full policy upon request.
Note: Some files may take several minutes to download, depending on your the speed of your internet connection.



