Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It runs north from Flinders Lane to Collins Street, between Elizabeth Street and Swanston Street. The laneway is famous for its vibrant bars, cafes, restaurants and boutiques. It also features some of Melbourne's most well-known examples of street art and graffiti and the precinct has been used in tourism campaigns for the city. [1]
Degraves Street is a pedestrian precinct and thoroughfare in the Melbourne central business district in Victoria, Australia.It is a short, narrow laneway that runs north–south from Flinders Street to Flinders Lane and is situated in-between Swanston and Elizabeth streets.
Market Street is one of the north–south streets in the Melbourne central business district, Australia, part of the Hoddle Grid laid out in 1837. Market Street is the only major deviation to the Hoddle Grid , in that it only runs between Flinders Street and Collins Street , such that its vista is terminated by the art-deco Temple Court ...
Flinders Lane. Flinders Lane is a minor street. The street runs parallel to and to the north of Flinders Street and as a narrow one way lane takes on the name of the wider main street. The street was the centre of Melbourne's rag trade for the middle decades of the 20th century and is still home to small boutique designers.
Flinders Lane is a minor street and thoroughfare in the Melbourne central business district of Victoria, Australia.The laneway runs east–west from Spring Street to Spencer Street in-between Flinders and Collins streets.
The Nicholas Building in 2018. The Nicholas Building is a landmark historic office and retail building located at 37 Swanston St, at the intersection of Swanston Street and Flinders Lane, in the Melbourne central business district, Victoria, Australia.
During the 1980s many former warehouses at the southern end of King Street (and in nearby Flinders Street) were converted into night clubs. King Street subsequently became Melbourne's main nightclub district, with some of Melbourne's largest clubs including Clique Lounge Bar, Tramp, Inflation, La Di Da, Brown Alley & Sorry Grandma along the strip.
The Hoddle Grid and its fringes remained the centre and most active part of the city into the mid 20th century, with retail in the centre, fine hotels, banking and prime office space on Collins Street, medical professionals on the Collins Street hill, legal professions around William Street, and warehousing along Flinders Lane and in the ...