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Crs17 1931 Gipps Ward Master Spreadsheet
Gross Number of Slated, Annual Record Assessment Name of Owner or Landlord of House, Warehouse or Brick, Stone, Shingled or No. of No. of Value in Control Item Ward Year Page Book No. of House Situation Name of Person Rated property Shop Wood or Iron otherwise Floors Rooms Pounds Remarks NSW Government. (SHT). Lessee CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 1 25 George St North Margaret G O'Reilly Tooth & Co. Ltd. Mercantile Hotel Brick Flat 2/8/B 18 £866 From Gloucester Street CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 2 27 George St North NSW Government. (SHT) House & shop Brick Flat 3 8 £156 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 3 29 George St North John Henry Bull NSW Government. (SHT) House Brick Iron 2 7 £78 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 4 31 George St North Zoe R Caswell NSW Government. (SHT) House Brick Iron 2/attic 7 £104 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 5 33 George St North Daisy Pattison NSW Government. (SHT) House Brick Iron 2/attic 6 £104 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 6 35 George St North James Henry Hughes NSW Government. (SHT) House Brick Iron 2 6 £104 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 7 37 George St North NSW Government. (SHT) House Brick Iron 2 6 £104 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 8 39 George St North Nicholas L Garal NSW Government. (SHT) House Brick Iron 2 6 £104 CSA027352 17/6/33 Gipps 1931 1 9 41 George St North Olaf Albert Bronson NSW Government. -
Z323 Tooth and Company Deposit 4 Download List
Z323 Tooth and Company deposit 4 Download list Z323 - Tooth & Company Limited Box No Description Date Range RETAIL OPERATIONS DIVISION COUNTRY MANAGERS OFFICE HOTEL FILES c. -
Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012 Under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979
2012 No 628 New South Wales Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012 under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 I, the Minister for Planning and Infrastructure, pursuant to section 33A of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, adopt the mandatory provisions of the Standard Instrument (Local Environmental Plans) Order 2006 and prescribe matters required or permitted by that Order so as to make a local environmental plan as follows. (S07/01049) SAM HADDAD As delegate for the Minister for Planning and Infrastructure Published LW 14 December 2012 Page 1 2012 No 628 Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012 Contents Page Part 1 Preliminary 1.1 Name of Plan 6 1.1AA Commencement 6 1.2 Aims of Plan 6 1.3 Land to which Plan applies 7 1.4 Definitions 7 1.5 Notes 7 1.6 Consent authority 7 1.7 Maps 7 1.8 Repeal of planning instruments applying to land 8 1.8A Savings provision relating to development applications 8 1.9 Application of SEPPs 9 1.9A Suspension of covenants, agreements and instruments 9 Part 2 Permitted or prohibited development 2.1 Land use zones 11 2.2 Zoning of land to which Plan applies 11 2.3 Zone objectives and Land Use Table 11 2.4 Unzoned land 12 2.5 Additional permitted uses for particular land 13 2.6 Subdivision—consent requirements 13 2.7 Demolition requires development consent 13 2.8 Temporary use of land 13 Land Use Table 14 Part 3 Exempt and complying development 3.1 Exempt development 27 3.2 Complying development 28 3.3 Environmentally sensitive areas excluded 29 Part 4 Principal development standards -
Attachment D
Attachment D Design Competition Jury Report ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN COMPETITION REPORT 210-220 GEORGE STREET SYDNEY 25 AUGUST 2017 PREPARED FOR POLY AUSTRALIA URBIS STAFF RESPONSIBLE FOR THIS REPORT WERE: Director Clare Brown Consultant Toni Walter Project Code SA6404 Report Number 210-220 George Street, Architectural Design Competition Report (FINAL) JURY MEMBER ENDORSEMENT Name Signature Date Peter Mould 20 August 2017 Helen Lochhead 21 August 2017 William Smart 21 August 2017 Xiaowei Xue 21 August 2017 Steve Wang 23 August 2017 Baijian Yang 21 August 2017 © Urbis Pty Ltd ABN 50 105 256 228 All Rights Reserved. No material may be reproduced without prior permission. You must read the important disclaimer appearing within the body of this report. urbis.com.au CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Introduction ........................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1. Overview ............................................................................................................................................... 1 1.2. Site Description ..................................................................................................................................... 2 1.3. The Proponent ...................................................................................................................................... 2 1.4. The Consent Authority ......................................................................................................................... -
Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH)
t'tk Office of NSW-- Environment GOVERNMENT & Heritage ED18/314 018/11242 The Hon Paul Green MLC Committee Chair Portfolio Committee No 6 - Planning and Environment Parliament House Macquarie Street SYDNEY NSW 2000 By email: [email protected] Dear Mr Green Thank you for your letter about the inquiry into the music and arts economy in NSW. I appreciate the opportunity to provide a submission on behalf of the Office of Environment and Heritage (OEH). I attach a list of music and arts venues listed on the State Heritage Register (SHR) under the Heritage Act 1977. It includes cafes, restaurants, bars, gallery spaces and live music venues. This list is indicative only and is based on current use information recorded in the OEH's statutory heritage database, which does not always accurately reflect the various iterations and mixed uses of SHR items. The list shows venues listed on the SHR only. Venues operating out of heritage-listed premises protected under local environmental plans at the local government level are not included. OEH does not collect or hold data that would allow it to report on the number of music and arts venues that have been 'lost' over the past 20 years. The Basement operates from the modern commercial building at 7 Macquarie Place Sydney. This property is not listed on the SHR and therefore is not protected under the Heritage Act. I note the committee's interest in heritage listing or an equivalent statutory mechanism to protect iconic music venues in NSW, and specifically to prevent their closure. -
Accelerating Net-Zero High-Rise Residential Buildings in Australia
Accelerating Net-Zero High-Rise Residential Buildings in Australia Final Report transport | community | mining | industrial | food & beverage | carbon & energy Prepared for: City of Sydney Client representative: Chris Derksema Nik Midlam Date: 31 August 2016 In association with: Inspired thinking embracing the challenges of a changing world. Acknowledgement pitt&sherry would like to acknowledge the organisations and individuals who made this project possible. Firstly the Carbon Neutral Cities Alliance (CNCA) and philanthropies which funded this work in recognition of the global imperative for net-zero buildings as an essential part of a low-carbon and prosperous future. The City of Sydney for scoping and commissioning this work, with assistance from the City of Melbourne. Also the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, The Green Building Council of Australia, the Property Council of Australia, the NSW Department of Planning and Environment, members of the City of Sydney Residential Stakeholders Working Group and staff and others who have all provided input to this report. Very considerable contribution was made to this report by Mike Rainbow and Jan Talacko of ark resources, particularly in Chapters 3 and 4. We would like to acknowledge the developers whose actual buildings in Sydney and Melbourne were modelled, Ecove Pty (Australia Towers) and Innovative Construction & Development Pty Ltd (EQ Tower). Finally, we would like to acknowledge the large number of excellent comments received on the draft report from a wide range of stakeholders, which we have done our best to reflect in this final report. Prepared by: Philip Harrington Date: 31 August 2016 Reviewed by: Mark Johnston Date: 31 August 2016 Authorised by: Philip Harrington Date: 31 August 2016 Revision History Rev Description Prepared by Reviewed by Authorised by Date No. -
Australia's Martial Madonna: the Army Nurse's Commemoration in Stained
Australia’s Martial Madonna: the army nurse’s commemoration in stained glass windows (1919-1951) Susan Elizabeth Mary Kellett, RN Bachelor of Nursing (Honours), Graduate Diploma of Nursing (Perioperative) A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Queensland in 2016 School of History and Philosophical Enquiry Abstract This thesis examines the portrayal of the army nurse in commemorative stained glass windows commissioned between 1919 and 1951. In doing so, it contests the prevailing understanding of war memorialisation in Australia by examining the agency of Australia’s churches and their members – whether clergy or parishioner – in the years following World Wars I and II. Iconography privileging the nurse was omitted from most civic war memorials following World War I when many communities used the idealised form of an infantryman to assuage their collective grief and recognise the service of returned menfolk to King and Country. Australia’s religious spaces were also deployed as commemorative spaces and the site of the nurse’s remembrance as the more democratic processes of parishes and dioceses that lost a member of the nursing services gave sanctuary to her memory, alongside a range of other service personnel, in their windows. The nurse’s depiction in stained glass was influenced by architectural relationships and socio- political dynamics occurring in the period following World War I. This thesis argues that her portrayal was also nuanced by those who created these lights. Politically, whether patron or artist, those personally involved in the prosecution of war generally facilitated equality in remembrance while citizens who had not frequently exploited memory for individual or financial gain. -
Borg MP-FH20-21 Betty Borg Transcript
NSW DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING ‘Millers Point Oral History Project’ INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT INTERVIEWEE: Betty Borg TAPE NUMBERS: MP-FH20-21 (2 Tapes) INTERVIEWER: Frank HEIMANS DATE AND PLACE: 30 August 2005 at Brighton-Le-Sands NSW DURATION OF INTERVIEW: 101 minutes, 45 seconds RESTRICTIONS ON USE: Nil Note: The opinions expressed in this oral history interview are those of the interviewee and do not necessarily represent in whole or in part the position of the Department of Housing, the Government Architect’s Office, the Department of Commerce or the Oral History Consultants. 00:01 START OF TAPE MP-FH20 SIDE A 00:01 Tape identification 00:20 Betty for people who are listening to this tape can you tell me a little bit about yourself, for instance can you tell me your full name first. My full name is actually Elizabeth, but I’m known as Betty, that is my alias and everybody knows me by that. Also they probably know my voice when I’m talking. I grew up in Millers Point after being born in Paddington Women’s Hospital on 7 April 1930 and I spent almost fifty-five years in Millers Point until we finally moved out to Brighton-le-Sands. What was your maiden name Betty? 01:01 Scanlon. I come from an Irish background with my father, his father was born in Tuncurry and his father was born in Ireland. But my mother is actually the one that is descended from The Rocks and they go back to 1884 to Campbell’s Wharf, which is now the Overseas Terminal. -
The Work of the Nsw Government Architect's Branch- 1958-1973
THE WORK OF THE NSW GOVERNMENT ARCHITECT'S BRANCH- 1958-1973 M. ARCH.DEGREE THESIS FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW SOUTH WALES Russell C.Jack 1980 The material contained in this thesis has not been submitted for a higher degree to any other university or institution. IC RUSSELL C. JACK. A—..^ */ '9&o ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. The author wishes to thank:- Richard E. Apperly, his supervisor, for constructive advice, encouragement and assistance throughout the thesis. E.H. Farmer for several long interviews, the loan of personal material and for valuable assistance in reading and correcting draft material. The late Cobden Parkes for an interview in 1977. J.W. Thomson, the present Government Architect, for reading and correcting draft material and his permission to use the many facilities of the Government Architect's Branch. G.P. Webber and P.B. Hall for similar assistance in reading and correcting draft material. The following members both past and present, of the Government Architect's Branch who have helped the author with interviews or answered his questionnaire:- A. Andersons especially, for many discussions and the loan of a number of his own documentary records of the Branch's work. D. Anderson, S. Bishop, P. Bridges, A. Brunker, R. Bryant, D. Churches, E. Claire, D. Coleman, A. Correy, R. Dinham, M. Dysart, L. Glendenning, W. Kingston, R. Kirkwood, 0. Kosterin, L. Kristensen, B. MacDonald, J. McKinney, J. Nicholas, D. Orr, J. Paynter, P. Proudfoot, J. Rabong, L. Reedman, V. Selig, B. Sneyd, C. Still, K. Thirsk, D. Turner* J. Van der Steen, C. Weatherburn and K. -
The York Street Wall
THE YORK STREET WALL A conservation study of an early high rise streetscape in York Street Sydney. Final Submission Colin Brady B.Sc. t3.Arch. Subject ref. 39.llOG Graduate Project M:B:ENV. Nov 1987 ABSTRACT The high rise building emerged as a key element in the growth of western cities through the period 1870-1940. This report based upon surviving examples in York Street Sydney examines the emergence of the early high rise building type and its formation of a characteristically walled streetscape from which the report takes its title. With a view to establishing the cultural significance of this grouping (streetscape) this report traces the varying forces behind its development. The development of Sydney 1 s streetplan from 1788, the economic boom and recession of the late 19th Century and the continuous importation and adaption of technologies are reviewed in terms of their effects upon the growth of York Street. As essential as the physical and economic factors in terms of growth was public and professional acceptance of the high rise building. The debate as to the acceptability of this new building form and its correct aesthetic treatment in Sydney is discussed in parallel to the physical growth of York Street. A case is established for an internationally accepted image of the high rise city streetscape based upon North American precedents both real and conceptualised. The adaptation of this imagery to York Street is explained as the basis for the overall cohesiveness of the divergent architectural styles evident in the street. Examination of documentary evidence and the buildings remaining from the period points to a sharp termination of these generative forces at the outreak of World War 2. -
Aerial Imagery 1955 22-26 Playfair Street, the Rocks, NSW 2000
Aerial Imagery 1955 22-26 Playfair Street, The Rocks, NSW 2000 ¯ m 0 5 1 Legend Site Boundary Buffer 150m Scale: Data Sources: Historical Aerials: © Land and Property Coordinate System: Date: 20 April, 2017 Information (a division of the Department of Finance GDA 1994 MGA Zone 56 05010025 Meters and Services) Lotsearch Pty Ltd ABN 89 600 168 018 39 Aerial Imagery 1943 22-26 Playfair Street, The Rocks, NSW 2000 ¯ m 0 5 1 Legend E Site Centre Site Boundary Buffer 150m © Land and Property Information 2015 Scale: Data Sources:Aerial Imagery © Land and Property Coordinate System: Date: 24April 2017 Information (a division of the Department of Finance GDA 1994 MGA Zone 56 05010025 Meters and Services) Lotsearch Pty Ltd ABN 89 600 168 018 40 Aerial Imagery 1930 22-26 Playfair Street, The Rocks, NSW 2000 ¯ m 0 5 1 Legend Site Boundary Buffer 150m Scale: Data Sources: Historical Aerials: © Land and Property Coordinate System: Date: 20 April, 2017 Information (a division of the Department of Finance GDA 1994 MGA Zone 56 05010025 Meters and Services) Lotsearch Pty Ltd ABN 89 600 168 018 41 Historical Maps 1956 22-26 Playfair Street, The Rocks, NSW 2000 m 0 5 1 Legend Site Boundary Buffer 150m Scale: Data Sources: Ciity Building Surveyor Sheets (Sheet2) Coordinate System: Date: 21 April 2017 Building Regulation Branch - City Building Surveyor's GDA 1994 MGA Zone 56 0 25 50 100 Meters Department, Council of the City of Sydney Lotsearch Pty Ltd ABN 89 600 168 018 42 Historical Maps 1948 22-26 Playfair Street, The Rocks, NSW 2000 m 0 5 1 Legend Site -
Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012 – Millers Point Amendment
ATTACHMENT A ATTACHMENT A PLANNING PROPOSAL: SYDNEY LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL PLAN 2012 – MILLERS POINT AMENDMENT ATTACHMENT A Planning Proposal Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012 ‐ Millers Point Amendment October 2014 ATTACHMENT A Table of Contents Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 2 Background ............................................................................................................................................. 3 Part 1: Objectives and intended outcomes ........................................................................................... 7 Part 2: Explanation of provisions ........................................................................................................... 8 Part 3: Justification ............................................................................................................................... 10 Part 4: Mapping .................................................................................................................................... 17 Part 5: Community consultation .......................................................................................................... 18 Part 6: Project Timeline ........................................................................................................................ 19 Appendix A Draft Maps Appendix B dState an Local Heritage listed items Appendix C Privately owned non heritage listed properties