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Potts Point is located 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) east of the Sydney central business district and is part of the local government area of the City of Sydney. Potts Point sits on a ridge immediately east of Woolloomooloo, west of Elizabeth Bay and Rushcutters Bay and north of Darlinghurst. The suburb has a roughly trapezoidal shape, and at its ...
Jenner House is a heritage-listed residence located at 2 Macleay Street in the inner city Sydney suburb of Potts Point in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by Edmund Blacket and built in 1871, with an 1877 third-floor addition designed by Thomas Rowe .
Minerva Theatre in Kings Cross (1939) Grace Building (1930) This is a list of buildings in Sydney completed in the Inter-War Art Deco, Streamline Moderne and Functionalist styles that are historically significant. Apartment and residential buildings The Edgewater flats, 1937. Staircase, Belgenny, Taylor Square Entrance, Wychbury, Potts Point Adereham Hall, 71 Elizabeth Bay Road, Elizabeth Bay ...
Gowrie Gate is an Art Deco building located at 115 Macleay Street, Potts Point, Sydney, Australia. Situated on the south-west corner of Macleay Street and Orwell Street it was designed by Architect, Dudley Ward and built by S.D.C. Kennedy & Bird Pty. Ltd with building works completed in 1938. [1]
The Yellow House at 57–59 Macleay Street, Potts Point, was an artists' collective that existed from 1970 through to the beginning of 1973 in Sydney, Australia.The collective was established by artist Martin Sharp on his return from London at the beginning of 1970.
A graduate of St. John’s University in Queens, N.Y., Slattery worked for the Sheraton Hotel corporation beginning in the 1970s. While working at a hotel in Queens, Slattery became close to his boss’s son, Morris Horn. The two joined forces with other investors to start a property management company, buying up older hotels across New York City.
A Rancho Cucamonga man carried out a string of car break-ins at L.A. County cemeteries as people attended funerals, visited loved ones and friends, the D.A. says.
Kenilworth was built on land that was originally part of the 1831 grant to Thomas Barker and Alexander Macleay. [3] Both men built houses on their land and Macleay's Elizabeth Bay House still survives. Barker's house, Rosyln Hall, [4] was designed by Ambrose Hallen but was demolished in 1937. The Roslyn Hall estate was subdivided into seven ...