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Crown Sydney (also referred to by its street address of One Barangaroo and informally known as Packer’s Pecker) is a skyscraper in Barangaroo, New South Wales, Australia. Designed by WilkinsonEyre , it stands at a height of 271.3 m (890 ft) with 75 floors, making it the tallest building in Sydney and 4th tallest in Australia .
One Sydney Harbour is a skyscraper complex in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.It includes 808 apartments in three towers, and is being built by Lendlease. [2] The three towers are 247 metres (72 floors), 230m (68), and 104m (29) tall respectively. [3]
Barangaroo is an area of central Sydney, Australia. It is at the north-western edge of the Sydney central business district and the southern end of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. It is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney. The area was used for fishing and hunting by Indigenous Australians prior to colonial settlement.
In August 2000, Walt Disney Internet Group (WDIG) entered the mobile content market in Japan with an agreement with NTT DoCoMo to launch the Disney-i content service. [3] In November 2003, WDIG and Index Corporation agreed to "develop and distribute Disney-branded mobile content for the Chinese market" and that Index would, in conjunction with China Mobile, work to launch the Disney Mobile ...
The International Towers is a commercial skyscraper complex in the Sydney central business district, in the Barangaroo area. The complex comprises three main office towers; Tower 1 at 217 metres (712 feet), Tower 2 at 178 metres (584 feet), and Tower 3 at 168 metres (551 feet). Construction on the towers began in 2013 before completion in mid 2016.
Watkin Tench, a British marine who came to Australia onboard the First Fleet, described in his first-hand account A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson several encounters with Barangaroo. [6] At the first meeting between the colonists and Barangaroo in October 1790, he described how Bennelong presented her wearing a petticoat ...
The Disney features produced before The Living Desert (1953) were originally distributed by United Artists and RKO Radio Pictures, and are now distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. Some films produced by Walt Disney Pictures are also released through the parent company's streaming service, Disney+. [1] [2]
Barangaroo station was the endpoint for the two TBMs that bored the 8.1-kilometre (5.0 mi) tunnels from Marrickville to Barangaroo. The station was also the start point for the TBM that bored the two 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) tunnels to Blues Point on the other side of Sydney Harbour. [6]