Darling Harbour Authority Act 1984
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6.0 Bibliography
753 6.0 Bibliography 6.1 Primary Sources 1828 Census, National Archives Copy, HO 10/25. Barker papers A 5398/3, No. 73, Schedule of deeds 14 March 1851 (Mitchell Library). Historical Indexes, NSW Registry of Births, Deaths & Marriages, Attorney General & Justice. Available at http://www.bdm.nsw.gov.au/familyHistory/searchHistoricalRecords.htm [accessed 9/07/2013]. [House of Commons] 1842 Report from the Select Committee on the Improvement of the Health of Towns, (Interment of Bodies), [Communicated by the Commons to the Lords], Ordered to be printed 4th August 1842. Available at http://books.google.com.au/books?id=YRBcAAAAQAAJ &dq=lime%20burials&pg=RA1-PR1#v=onepage&q&f=false [accessed 18/11/2013]. Levey, S. 1794-1846 Solomon Levey estate papers A 5541, No. 1, Deed of copartnership between Daniel Cooper and Solomon Levey, Merchants, 5 May 1826, W. C. Wentworth (Mitchell Library). Available at http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/discover_collections/society_art/jewish/business/levey/index.ht ml [accessed 27/02/2012]. 6.1.1 City of Sydney Archives City of Sydney Rate Assessment Books, 1845-1948. City of Sydney Archives. Available at http://photosau.com.au/CosRates/scripts/home.asp. City Surveyor’s Office, Minute Paper, 17th March, 1919, CRS 34/149/19:1. 6.1.2 Land & Property Information Bk 7 No. 844 dated 1844 Bk 10 No. 643 Bk 11 No 420 Conveyance dated 16 June 1827. Bk 12 No. 944 Bk 13 No. 201 Bk 28 No. 191 dated 1 July 1853 Bk 41 No. 67 Conveyance dated 30 November 1855. Bk 71 No. -
Mirvac Harbourside Darling Harbour Preliminary Geotechnical
Mirvac Harbourside Darling Harbour Preliminary Geotechnical Assessment Report 27 September 2016 This page has been left intentionally blank Harbourside Darling Harbour Prepared for Mirvac Level 28, 200 George Street Sydney NSW 2000 Australia Prepared by Coffey Geotechnics Pty Ltd Level 19, Tower B, 799 Pacific Highway Chatswood NSW 2067 Australia t: +61 2 9406 1000 f: +61 2 9406 1002 27 September 2016 Document authorisation Our ref: GEOTLCOV25340AA-AD For and on behalf of Coffey Pawan Sethi Principal Geotechnical Engineer Quality information Revision history Revision Description Date Author Reviewer Signatory v1 Creation 19/02/2016 MF STP MF V2 Preliminary Geotechnical Assessment Report – 19/4/2016 CL STP STP Following Client Review V3 Preliminary Geotechnical Assessment Report – 13/7/2016 MF/PS PKW PS Changed to two level basement V4 Preliminary Geotechnical Assessment Report – minor 27/9/2016 PS RJB PS update Distribution Report Status No. of copies Format Distributed to Date v1 1 PDF Lachlan Attiwill 19/02/2016 V2 1 PDF Lachlan Attiwill 19/04/2016 V3 1 PDF Steve McFarlane 13/07/2016 V4 1 PDF Lachlan Attiwill 27/09/2016 i ii Table of contents 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 1 2. Proposed development.............................................................................................................. 1 2.1. Background .................................................................................................................... -
Darling Harbour, Sydney
TRENCH REPORT Area 7: Murphy’s Wharf Darling Quarter (formerly Darling Walk) Darling Harbour, Sydney Area 7 during the excavation looking northwest Amanda Dusting December 2009 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Project Part of Area 7 was within the basement footprint of the Darling (Walk) Quarter site. The development was divided into nine areas based on historic property boundaries and street alignments. Area 7 is the southern-most of these and is bounded on the north by James Street, to the east by Harbour Street, to the south by Liverpool Street the Chinese Gardens and to the west by Tumbalong Park (originally the foreshore of Darling Harbour). Much of Area 7 extended outside the basement area, and therefore was not impacted on by the current development. The excavation of Area 7 was undertaken in two phases: the first between October 29 and December 20 2008 with the second phase from April 7 to April 17, 2009. The programming of the archaeological excavation was linked with the demolition and piling components of the construction works, with each area excavated as it became available after demolition and bulk removal of solid waste. The excavation of Area 7 was a combination of open-area excavation and test trenching, and involved a combination of machine and hand excavation. Mechanical excavators were used for the bulk removal of modern and historic fills and the digging of large test trenches. Manual excavation was employed for more delicate work, such as cleaning structures, removing less extensive fills and digging smaller test pits. Report methodologies The following trench report for Area 7 is divided into chronological phases and sub-phases. -
Heritage Impact Statement
HERITAGE IMPACT STATEMENT Planning Proposal Nos 187-189 Thomas Street, Haymarket April 2020 | J3951 Level 19, 100 William Street, Sydney, NSW 2011 Phone: (02) 8076 5317 0 Executive Summary This Heritage Impact Statement (HIS) accompanies a justification report to inform the preparation of a Planning Proposal for the site at Nos 185-187 Thomas Street, Haymarket. The Planning Proposal will amend the Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012 (SLEP 2012) by changing the building height and floor space ratio development standards of Lot 100 in DP 804958 which apply to the site at Nos 187-189 Thomas Street, Haymarket (the Site). This HIS focuses on the scope and impacts of the Planning Proposal, which relates to proposed changes to planning controls only (no physical works are proposed). The proposal seeks to amend planning controls applying to the Site to allow a future development that will comprise an overall maximum height of 49 storeys (RL 209.80) and approximate commercial GFA of 51,700m2. The accompanying VIA prepared by Virtual Ideas provides accurate renderings of the proposed building envelope within the existing context. The site is located within a sensitive historic context directly adjacent to the former Commercial Building "Sutton Forest Meat" Including Interior (referred to hereafter as the former Sutton Forest meat building) which is an item of local heritage significance in Schedule 5 Part 1 of the Sydney LEP 2012. The site is also located in the vicinity of Christ Church St Laurence group (church, former school and rectory including interiors) and Central Station Railway Group which are both items of State Heritage items on the NSW State Heritage Register listed under the auspices of the NSW Heritage Act 1977. -
European Heritage
Pyrmont Peninsula Place Strategy— Final Report Report prepared for Department of Planning and Environment NSW—July 2020 GML Heritage For Information – Not Government Policy Pyrmont Place Strategy—Final Report, July 2020 Children at the edge of a demolition site (Source: Sydney City Archives) 2 GML Heritage Pyrmont Place Strategy— Non-Indigenous Cultural Heritage Study Report Register The following report register documents the development and issue of the report entitled PyrmontPeninsula—Place Strategy, undertaken by GML Heritage Pty Ltd in accordance with its quality management system. Job No. Issue No. Notes/Description Issue Date 20-0155 4 Final Report July 2020 Quality Assurance GML Heritage Pty Ltd operates under a quality management system which has been certified as complying with the Australian/New Zealand Standard for quality management systems AS/NZS ISO 9001:2016. The report has been reviewed and approved for issue in accordance with the GML quality assurance policy and procedures. Copyright Historical sources and reference material used in the preparation of this report are acknowledged and referenced at the end of each section and/ or in figure captions. Reasonable effort has been made to identify, contact, acknowledge and obtain permission to use material from the relevant copyright owners. Unless otherwise specified or agreed, copyright in this report vests in GML Heritage Pty Ltd (‘GML’) and in the owners of any pre- existing historic source or reference material. Moral Rights GML asserts its Moral Rights in this work, unless otherwise acknowledged, in accordance with the (Commonwealth) Copyright (Moral Rights) Amendment Act 2000. GML’s moral rights include the attribution of authorship, the right not to have the work falsely attributed and the right to integrity of authorship.