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Planning for the Housing Impacts of a Hallmark Event Is Fraught with Difficulties
PLANNING FOR THE HOUSING IMPACTS OF A HALLMARK EVENT: A CASE STUDY OF EXPO 86 By KRISTOPHER N. OLDS B.A., The University of British Columbia, 1985 A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS in THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES The School of Community and Regional Planning We accept this thesis as conforming to the required standard The University of British Columbia April 1988 © Kristopher N. Olds,.1988 In presenting this thesis in partial fulfilment of the requirements for an advanced degree at the University of British Columbia, I agree that the Library shall make it freely available for reference and study. I further agree that permission for extensive copying of this thesis for scholarly purposes may be granted by the head of my department or by his or her representatives. It is understood that copying or publication of this thesis for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written permission. Department of Canrnurrity and Regional Planning The University of British Columbia Vancouver, Canada na. April 26, 1988 DE-6 (2/88) i i ABSTRACT This study proposes a strategy which will assist governments, the sponsors of hallmark events, and community groups to identify and plan for the negative housing impacts of such events. Hallmark events are major one-time or recurring : events of limited duration, developed primarily to enhance the awareness, appeal and profitability of a tourist destination in the short and/or long term. World's Fairs and Olympic Games are two examples of hallmark events. The 1986 World's Fair (Expo 86) in Vancouver provided an opportunity to document the impacts of this hallmark event on the residents of a community which borders the fair site and on the planning practices of the local government. -
Frican the South African 2019
JUNE The South African The South African 2019 Philatelist All about stamps PhilatelistTHE JOURNAL OF THE PHILATELIC FEDERATION OF SOUTH AFRICA SINCE 1932 volume 95:3. 954 www.sapa.africa FREE TO AFFILIATED MEMBERS Tati - Bechuanaland - A newspaper wrapper of 1894 addressed to Sam Edwards NEW ISSUES Perkins Bacon ‘Chalon Head’ Stamps of Natal Twenty Five Years of Democracy Fifty Years Since Man First Walked on the Moon Delving into Perforation Formats of Transkei’s First Definitive Sheets SEPTEMBER 4 to 7, 2019 • BENONI ISSN 0038-2566 2 The SA Philatelist, June 2019. JUNE 2019 Vol 95 Number 3 Whole No 954 The South African Philatelist The Journal of the Philatelic Federation of South Africa ContentsContentswww.sapa.africa Awards: • Large Silver Hafnia 1994, • Silver Bronze Pacific 1997, • Vermeil APS Stampshow1999, • Large Silver Egoli 2001, • Federation Plaque 2004, • Silver España‘06, Literature Award 2006, • Large Silver NZ Literature Exhibition 2007, • Large Silver JAKARTA 2008, • Large Vermeil IPHLA 2012. FEATURES 77 2019 - East Rand 100 Stamp Show and JUNASS 77 The ‘thinking’ behind Federation’s REGULARS THE EDITORIAL BOARD new Website: www.sapa.africa Alan Rose: [email protected] by Jan Hofmeyr Moira Bleazard: [email protected] 76 Letter to the Editorial Board 79 London 2020 Exhibition Robin Messenger: [email protected] open for entries Janice Botes Production Editor: [email protected] 79 Closing dates for future issues Commissioner Patrick Flanagan RDPSA David Wigston: [email protected] Peter van der Molen RDPSA, -
Newsletter ISSN 1171-6029 September 2012 Produced by the PHILATELIC YOUTH COUNCIL of N.Z
Newsletter ISSN 1171-6029 September 2012 Produced by the PHILATELIC YOUTH COUNCIL OF N.Z. (Inc.) PO Box 2979, Shortland St, Auckland 1140 With funding from www.nzpf.org.nz/youth/youth.html In 1838, Alfred Edward Chalon was commissioned the guidance of the engraver William Humphrys. to paint a full length portrait of Queen Victoria of Humphrys was a very skilled engraver and, using England as she appeared at the time of her an instrument known as the burin or graver, he cut coronation, wearing full Robes of State. It was lines and dots into the surface of a small plate of from this painting that the New Zealand design was soft steel and produced the die. adapted. Between 1840 and 1855 there were many letters These stamps are called full face Queens because between the Post Master General for New Zealand they show a frontal view of Queen Victoria, and the printers in London. Finally in February whereas the two later sets showed a side view. This 1855, on the ship Simlah, cases containing design was also used by some other countries and stamps, plates and a printing press were landed in is referred to as the Chalon head. Wellington and then transhipped to Auckland, per Perkins, Bacon & Co. were to be the printers of the Nelson, in March. New Zealand’s first stamps, and requested that The Colonial Secretary took delivery of the stamps Edward Henry Corbould make a water-colour which, after being checked, were released to six sketch of the head and bust of Queen Victoria for New Zealand towns. -
Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand Vol
Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand Vol. 32 Edited by Paul Hogben and Judith O’Callaghan Published in Sydney, Australia, by SAHANZ, 2015 ISBN: 978 0 646 94298 8 The bibliographic citation for this paper is: Micheli, Silvia. “Brisbane, Australia’s New World City: The Making of Public and Institutional Spaces in South Bank from Expo ’88 to the G20.” In Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand: 32, Architecture, Institutions and Change, edited by Paul Hogben and Judith O’Callaghan, 402-412. Sydney: SAHANZ, 2015. All efforts have been undertaken to ensure that authors have secured appropriate permissions to reproduce the images illustrating individual contributions. Interested parties may contact the editors. Silvia Micheli, University of Queensland Brisbane, Australia’s New World City: The Making of Public and Institutional Spaces in South Bank from Expo ’88 to the G20 In 1988 Brisbane hosted the Expo as part of its Australian Bicentenary celebrations. Organised at South Bank, it was an international event that proved a turning point in the city’s development. Positioned on the Brisbane River, in front of the CBD and next to the Queensland Performing Arts Centre, the area became an urban experiment, testing how Brisbane would respond to a central area dedicated to recreation and mass consumption. South Bank Parklands has grown in concert with the adjacent institutional precinct of South Brisbane dominated by the Queensland Cultural Centre, to an extent that today the two areas are recognised under the unifying name of South Bank. Its complexity is generated by the alternation of institutional buildings, leisure structures and public spaces aligned along the river with excellent infrastructure connections. -
Yokohama, July 2018
The 18th International Planning History Society Conference - Yokohama, July 2018 How Urban Spaces Remember: Memory and Transformation at Two Expo Sites Jennifer Minner*, Martin Abbott** * PhD, Department of City and Regional Planning, Cornell University, [email protected] ** PhD Student, Department of City and Regional Planning, Cornell University, [email protected] International Expos can leave long-lasting imprints on host cities. The production and evolution of legacy public spaces from these events deserve scholarly attention. Case studies were conducted at two former expo sites in the US and Australia, focusing on the role of retention, reuse, heritage, and parks conservation in the evolution of public spaces. In preparation for Hemisfair ’68, in San Antonio, Texas, conservationists saved 22 historic buildings out of hundreds demolished. Although only a small proportion of buildings were preserved, preservationists challenged a modernist urban renewal plan and the design became a precedent for incorporating heritage conservation in modern urban design. Today, the Hemisfair site is subject to new redevelopment plans. Calls to preserve remaining modernist pavilions challenge New Urbanist visions for the site. In a second case study, an industrial district was cleared and a working-class neighbourhood transformed for Expo ’88, in Brisbane, Queensland. The site was later redeveloped into the South Bank Parklands. Over time, South Bank evolved through redevelopment and master planning, public outcry, and instances of conservation in and around the expo site. Common to both cases is the conservation of parks, heritage, and artwork, outcomes of individual and collective actions to shape urban landscapes. Keywords: Expos, Mega-events, World’s fairs, Heritage Conservation, Parkland, San Antonio, Brisbane, Historic Preservation, Collective Memory Introduction International expos, or world’s fairs, have restructured and transformed urban spaces in host cities around the world. -
Auction Sales Canada’S Premier Stamp Auction House Since 1924 550 | 551 | 552 | 553
CANADA’S PREMIER STAMP AUCTION HOUSE SINCE 1924 JUNE 18-19 & 21, 2019 AUCTION SALES CANADA’S PREMIER STAMP AUCTION HOUSE SINCE 1924 550 | 551 | 552 | 553 6-2 VATA COURT, AURORA, ON LG4 4B6 CANADA (905) 726-2197 INCLUDING A SPECIAL SESSION AT THE 2019 ROYAL www.maresch.com ©2019 UCS cat val We are happy to bring you our 550th to 553rd unreserved public auction sale. First off, we would like to thank the Royal Philatelic Society of Canada for the privilege of holding an auction at the 2019 Royal Stamp Show, which is being held this year at the Mississauga Hilton, located at 6750 Mississauga Rd, L5N 2L3, in Mississauga, ON. This auction will take place over the course of three days. Sessions One to Three on the evening of Tuesday June 18th and all day Wednesday June 19th at our offices in Aurora. On Friday June 21st at 6pm we will hold our Fourth Session at the 2019 Royal in Mississauga. We’ve arranged for additional viewing of the lots for Friday's session at the Hotel from 10am-5pm. Please note that our offices will be closed on Thursday June 20th. Peter Maresch sitting and William Maresch standing at right. In 1987, Canadian philatelists everywhere were excited about CAPEX 13-21 June 1987. My father and the staff at R. Maresch & Son were the official auctioneers and were busy putting together an auction for the show. As fate would have it, we have an item in this sale that we sold just before CAPEX that was exhibited at the show. -
To Be a Forum for the Nation to Present, Explore, and Preserve the Heritage
G.12 ANNUAL REPORT 2008/09 TONGAREWA PAPA TE ZEALAND NEW OF MUSEUM To be a forum for the nation to present, explore, and preserve the heritage of its cultures and knowledge of the natural environment in order to better understand and treasure the past, enrich the present, and meet the challenges of the future… Directory TE RÄRANGI INGOA MUSEUM OF NEW ZEALAND TE PAPA TONGAREWA Cable Street PO Box 467 Wellington 6140 New Zealand TORY STREET RESEARCH AND COLLECTION STORAGE FACILITY 169 Tory Street Wellington 6011 Telephone + 64 4 381 7000 Facsimile + 64 4 381 7070 Email [email protected] Website http://www.tepapa.govt.nz Auditors Audit New Zealand, Wellington, on behalf of the Auditor-General Bankers Westpac Banking Corporation Photography by Te Papa staff photographers, unless otherwise credited ISSN: 1179 – 0024 1 MUSEUM OF NEW OF MUSEUM Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa Annual Report 2008/09 Te Pürongo ä-Tau 2008/09 In accordance with section 44 of the Public Finance Act 1989, this annual report of the Museum of TONGAREWA PAPA TE ZEALAND New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa for 2008/09 is presented to the House of Representatives. Contents Ngä Ihirangi ANNUAL Part one Overview Statements Ngä Tauäki Tirohanga Whänui 3 Chairman’s Statement 4 REPORT Acting Chief Executive/Kaihautü Statement 6 Tribute to the late Dr Seddon Bennington (1947–2009) 7 2008/09 Performance at a Glance He Tirohanga ki ngä Whakatutukitanga 8 Part two Operating Framework Te Anga Whakahaere 12 Concept 12 Corporate Principles 12 Functions and Alignment with Government -
Harmersep10-2014.Pdf
CONDITIONS OF SALE THE PLACING OF A BID SHALL CONSTITUTE ACCEPTANCE OF THE CONDITIONS OF SALE BIDDING arising from the sale of a re-offered lot be payable to a Non-Complying Bidder. 1. Unless announced otherwise by the auctioneer, all bids are per lot, (c) A defaulting purchaser shall be deemed to have granted Harmers a security interest as numbered in the printed catalogue applicable to such auction (the in property in Harmers possession owned by such purchaser. Harmers shall have “Catalogue”). Harmers International, Inc. (hereinafter “Harmers”), as all the rights afforded a secured party under the New York Uniform Commercial agent for the consignor or vendor, shall regulate the bidding and shall Code with respect to such property an may apply against such obligations all determine the manner in which the bidding shall be constructed. Harmers monies held or received by it for the account against such obligations all monies reserves the right to withdraw any lot prior to the commencement held or received by it for the account of, or due from Harmers to such purchaser. of bidding (without liability to any potential purchaser or agent), to (d) If Harmers takes any legal steps to secure payment of a delinquent account, re-offer any withdrawn lot, to divide a lot and to group two or more the defaulting purchaser shall be liable for all legal and other expenses incurred lots belonging to the same consignor or vendor. Harmers has the by Harmers to secure such payment, including but not limited to a reasonable right to refuse any bid believed not made in good faith, demand a allowance for attorneys’ fees. -
Academic & Professional Publishing
Spring 2019 Academic & Professional Publishing Academic & Professional Publishing Spring 2019 Table of Contents Architecture ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 88–89 Art...........................................................................................21, 89–93 Backlist ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������207–221 Banks & Banking ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������25 Biography / Autobiography & Memoir ������������������������7, 14, 22, 24, 95–109 Business & Economics ��������������������������������������������������������������26–34, 38 Education ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 76–79 Fiction..................................... 1, 6, 8–11, 14–16, 18, 20–21, 23, 109–118 Gardening �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������11 Health........................................................................................... 85–86 History..................................................... 6–7, 15, 23, 45–69, 87, 95, 106 Juvenile / Children’s ��������������������������������������������������������������������� 2–3, 10 Language Studies & Linguistics ����������������������������������������������������117–118 Law �������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������157–206 Literary Collections & Literary Criticism �����������������������������������������119–124 -
Competitive Exhibit Listing Result (By Class) Australia 2013
AUSTRALIA 2013 COMPETITIVE EXHIBIT LISTING RESULT (BY CLASS) Exhibit Frame To No From Frame Name of Exhibitor Country Title of Exhibit Total Medal SP/FEL/GP Remarks CLASS 1 CHAMPIONSHIP CLASS CC-1 1 8 BROWN Gary Australia Aden Postal History till WWI CC-2 9 16 FLETCHER Paul Australia The Postage Due Stamps of Australia The Dominion of Canada: The Small Queens 1870- CC-3 17 24 The Brigham Collection Canada 1897 GPHC Land Cultivation from the Beginning of Agriculture CC-4 25 32 MAGIER Joshua Israel to the Present Time Tasmania: Imperforate Stamps from "Courier" to CC-5 33 40 SATO Koichi Japan "Chalon Head" GPHC CC-6 41 48 SHITARA Mitsuhiro Japan Japan "OLD KOBAN" Series 1876-1879 Philippines - King Alfonso XIII "Baby" Issues 1890- CC-7 49 56 QUE Mario Philippines 1897 CC-8 57 64 SARKISYAN Arkady Russia Dotted numeral cancellations of Imperial Russia GPHC CC-9 65 72 BARRERAS José Alberto Spain Spain 1854-1859 GPHC CC-10 73 80 BERG Jan Sweden Samoa 1836-1895 CC-11 81 88 FELDMAN Hugh United Kingdom Mails carried by water in the USA (1813-1875) STILWELL-WALKER CC-12 89 96 Patricia United States Ireland: Postal History 1657 through to 1890s Exhibit Frame To No From Frame Name of Exhibitor Country Title of Exhibit Total Medal SP/FEL/GP Remarks CLASS 2.1 TRADITONAL - NATIONAL CLASS South Australia - Stamps printed from the Perkins 2.1.1 101 108 BLAKE Michael Australia Bacon Plates 97 LG SP (Material) / GPNC The Errors of NSW, South Australia and Tasmania 2.1.2 109 113 DIFFEN Gary Australia and the History of their Discovery 83 V 2.1.3 114 118 -
TASMANIA 1804 Governor Collins Arrived with Over 400 Convicts from Port Phillip (Victoria)
98114 229 Corinphila221 Corinphila Auction Auction · 28 &· 2329 NovemberNovember 20172018 TASMANIA 1804 Governor Collins arrived with over 400 convicts from Port Phillip (Victoria). 1824 Van Diemen’s Land was proclaimed independant of New South Wales. Prior to Tasmanian postal arrangements were under the authority of the 1825 Chief Postmaster in Sydney, NSW 1828 Errection of General Post Offi ce in Hobart. Appointment of General Postmaster. First legislative Postal Act fi xing letter Colonel David Collins rates. 1st Lt. Governor of Van Diemen's Land 1842 Distance-weight sliding scale abolished. Letters per ½ ounce weight in Hobart and Launceston 2d., Inland letters 4d. 1853 Van Diemen’s Land was renamed Tasmania in August 1853. First adhesive postage stamps issued and use of adhesive stamps on letter mail made compulsory: 1d. per ½ ounce on town letters, 4d. per ½ ounce on inland and ship letters The fi rst stamps printed from steel plates engraved by Perkins Bacon in London. Steel plates were then delivered to the Colony. Corresponding 1d. and 4d. adhesive stamps locally engraved in steel plates by C.W.Coard, printed by H. and C. Best at the ‚Courier‘ Newspaper Offi ce. 1855 New stamp issue printed from steel plates engraved by Perkins Bacon in London. Steel plates were then delivered to the Colony for further printings. 1856 Tasmania was granted self-government. 1870 First Surface printing plates by De La Rue, typographed in the Colony. 1882 Fiscal stamps authorised for postal use. Southwest view of Hobart Town Sokat_Australian States _6142-6468.indd 98 05.10.2017 09:19:39 229 Corinphila Auction · 28 & 29 November 2018 115 Stampless Mail View of Launceston 3377 Gibbons Start price Start price in CHF approx. -
2012 Annual Report 2012 Rna Rna Royal Queensland Food and Wine Show
The RoyAl NAtional AgRicultural and iNdustRiAl AssociAtioN of QueeNsland annual report 2012 1 ANNUAL REPORT 2012 RNA PRESIDENT’S REPORT PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2 Change brings RNA Showgrounds Regeneration Project opportunity. Almost a decade ago we set out to HIGHLIGHTS 3 2012 was a year build on our strong foundation with two of significant MISSION, VISION AND VALUES 4 critical goals in mind—to keep the Royal change for The Queensland Show (Ekka) at its birthplace, RNA CORPORATE 6 Royal National the RNA Showgrounds, and cement Agricultural the long-term financial viability of the THROUGH THE YEARS 10 and Industrial association so that the RNA can continue Association of Queensland (RNA) to fulfil its charter. ROYAL QUEENSLAND SHOW / and a year where we pursued every EKKA 14 opportunity. The RNA’s regeneration project resulted. RNA SHOWGROUNDS 20 We continued with our efforts to unlock Approved in November 2010 with the ROYAL INTERNATIONAL the potential of the RNA Showgrounds ground broken in April the following year, CONVENTION CENTRE 22 for the benefit of all stakeholders and the 2012 focused on redeveloping the iconic community at large, while staying true Industrial Pavilion to create the world- 2 ROYAL QUEENSLAND to the association’s charter. class convention centre. FOOD AND WINE SHOW 26 Your association made significant Other stage one works undertaken DIGITAL INTERACTION 28 headway on the $2.9 billion RNA during the year included the removal of OFFICE BEARERS 31 Showgrounds Regeneration Project— several buildings allowing construction the largest Brownfield development of the Plaza fronting the convention IN MEMORIAM 32 of its kind in Australia.