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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 ]
Anecdotally, unit 74 of the Sirius building became somewhat of an unofficial Sydney landmark; its sign displaying ‘One Way! Jesus’ clearly visible to Harbour Bridge commuters. [6] The sign was in place for around 10 years, although the owner of the sign, Owen McAloon, and his motivations to spread a Christian message remained generally ...
Campbell's Stores are a rare example of mid nineteenth century warehousing in Sydney and the only building of its type remaining on the foreshores of Sydney Cove and Sydney Harbour. The collection of late nineteenth-century goods handling equipment is a rare assembly of different types of such equipment in a single location, providing a unique ...
Port Jackson, commonly known as Sydney Harbour, consisting of the waters of Sydney Harbour, Middle Harbour, North Harbour and the Lane Cove and Parramatta Rivers, is the ria or natural harbour of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The harbour is an inlet of the Tasman Sea (part of the South Pacific Ocean).
Balmain Colliery This is a list of industrial sites on or adjacent to the foreshore of Port Jackson, including Sydney Harbour, North Harbour, Middle Harbour, Lane Cove River, Parramatta River, and the islands within those waterways. Sydney now has relatively few foreshore industrial sites compared with earlier times, and this list is mainly of historical interest. This list may not include all ...
The glass style building was designed by Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp (FJMT), [1] a Sydney-based architectural firm and construction was carried out by Grocon, a Melbourne-based developer. [ 2 ] Located at 161 Castlereagh Street , a large pedestrian plaza links Castlereagh Street with Pitt Street . [ 2 ]
View east across Sydney Cove, c. 1841 East Circular Quay lined with warehouses, c. 1892 Along the waterfront in East Circular Quay, c.1906 East Circular Quay c.1900-1927. The Bennelong Apartments sit on the eastern side of Sydney Cove or Circular Quay. This was the site of the first landing by Europeans in Sydney, on 26 January 1788.
In 1932, the Sydney Harbour Bridge was opened, and Sydney Ferries Limited's annual patronage dropped from 40 million to about 15 million. As part of economy measures, most older and/or larger steamers were put up for sale. In 1933, Lady Chelmsford was the first Sydney Ferries Limited vessel to be converted to diesel. [7]