Below is a 1972 newspaper advertisement promoting a four-bedroom home at Beauty Point (Mosman) for $95,000. According to the RBA Inflation Calculator, this was equivalent to paying the buyer around $1.5 million today. The vendor was Andrew Spring & Co.
Saturday, 30 March 2024
Property Advert of the Week: Beauty Point Home Listing (1972)
Monday, 25 March 2024
Royal Easter Show Flashback: 1999 (Part II)
Highlights of the 1999 Royal Easter Show
Opening DayBelow is a review from The Sydney Morning Herald on March 27 1999.
Robosaurus
Robosaurus made his second Easter Show appearance following his 1994 visit. Daytime and evening sessions gave showgoers plenty of opportunities to see him in action. However, Robosaurus would not return until 2010.
Good Friday
Like the previous year, it was a wet day for the show, with 74,000 passing through the turnstiles by 5pm, down 10,000 on the previous year. At the last show in Moore Park (1997), 164 980 attended on Good Friday.
Fortunately, no events were cancelled despite the poor weather.
Source: Dent, J. 1999. "Ennui rains on Friday's parade". The Sydney Morning Herald, April 3: 4.
The Easter Show WeddingOn the evening of April 9, Kim Moore and Ted Sealey held their wedding ceremony in the Main Arena.
A first for the Grand Parade...
- Billy Thorpe and Jimmy Barnes staged a closing night concert in the Main Arena, which was open to ticketholders only. From 6 pm that evening, free general admission to the rest of the show was provided.
- Troy Cassar Daly & Adam Brand led a country music concert on Easter Sunday
- Two nightly fireworks shows over the Easter Weekend
- Woodchopping celebrated 100 years at the Easter Show
How many attended?
Around one million attended, down from the previous year's record, but historically it would rate as one of the highest-attended shows. The attendance could have rivalled the record if the weather had been more favourable.
What was consumed?
- 750 000 cans of drink
- 530 000 cups of coffee
- 63 000 hotdogs
- 180 000 dagwood dogs
- 350 000 buckets of chips
- 79 000 hamburgers
- 45 000 bags of fairy floss
- 35 000 meat pies
- 16 000 slices of pizza
- 8000 cheese-on-a-stick nibbles
Saturday, 23 March 2024
Property Advert of the Week: New Homeworld (1998)
Monday, 18 March 2024
Royal Easter Show Flashback: 1999 (Part I)
Above: The cover of the preview guide published in The Sun Herald on 21 March 1999. |
This week, I will focus on key facts and the showbags, and I will share feature articles next week. For those following the series redevelopment of East Circular Quay, it will resume on Easter Monday (1 April)
Date: 26 March to 10 April 1999
The Easter Show ran for 16 days in 1997 and 1998, and it will run for 12 days in 2024.
Admission
Tertiary Students - $13
Tertiary Students - $15
Early bird tickets are available with discounts of up to 20% available, with further discounts if entering after 4pm.
Saturday, 16 March 2024
Property Advertisement of the Week: Parkview Gardens, Burwood (1967)
Monday, 11 March 2024
East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): CML's 1990 Scheme
In part six of our series, focusing on the redevelopment of East Circular Quay, I am going to focus on 1989 and 1990 as Colonial Mutual Life (CML) undertook further acquisitions of buildings and sites on the block and proposed their plans to redevelop the site.
Last week, I posted this article from The Sydney Morning Herald from 1988 because it focused on why Unilever House was demolished. The article focused on CML acquiring Lend Lease House for $57 million, which adjoined Bennelong House, which it already owned.
Source: Sing, T. & Chancellor, J. 1988. "Space bonus for Quay block". The Sydney Morning Herald, June 7: 34.
In February 1989, it was reported in The Sydney Morning Herald that CML had purchased another three sites - Hope House, 35-37 Macquarie Street and Unilever Hotel Site. All purchases were undertaken separately and had cost CML $250 million.
Source: Chancellor, J. 1989. "The best block of land in the country cost only $250m". The Sydney Morning Herald, February 10: 1.
Therefore, the purchases would extinguish the hotel that was to replace Unilever House and the Jedobo development next door.
CML presented their plans to redevelop the now combined site that same year to Sydney City Council, though it would be the following year before the first plans were made public.
Source: Chancellor, J. 1990. "Controversial plan for Circular Quay East like a 'wingless 747'". The Sydney Morning Herald, October 24: 8.
The plans were leaked to the public and were "likened to a wingless 747 about to hit the Opera House". The architect was Dino Burattini, the architect behind Melbourne's Rialto Towers and the State Bank Building (52 Martin Place) in Martin Place. The building would rise up to 30 storeys tall.
While that plan didn't get off the ground, CML Would unveil a more realistic scheme the following year, which will be the focus of the next entry in the series. However, next week, with the Royal Easter Show due to commence, I will spend two weeks looking at the 1999 Royal Easter Show as I turn back the clock a quarter of a century.
Entries in this series
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): The first apartment block proposal (1979)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Opera Garden Centre Scheme (1984)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Unilever House Hotel Conversion (1986)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Opera Garden Centre Scheme Revisited (1986)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Unilever House Hotel Conversion (1987)
Saturday, 9 March 2024
Property Advert of the Week: 72 Henrietta Street, Waverley (1964)
Below is a 1964 newspaper advertisement from The Sun promoting the sale of "bachelor units" at 72 Henrietta Street, Waverley. A £310 deposit ($610) would secure your unit. According to the RBA Inflation Calculator, this is equivalent to spending approximately $7775 in today's money.
Source: Landmark Limited. 1964. "Eastern Suburbs Bachelor Units". The Sun, March 6: 42.
Monday, 4 March 2024
East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Unilever House Hotel Conversion (1987)
Welcome to Part 5 of our series on the redevelopment of East Circular Quay. This week, we return to the redevelopment of Unilever House into a hotel.
A fortnight ago, I shared clippings relating to the 1986 proposal by Molena Holdings Pty. Ltd. to convert the 16-level Unilever House (current site of 1 Bennelong) from an office building into a hotel with 223 rooms. The estimated cost was $75 million.
In 1986, conditional approval was given, with final approval granted in 1987.
Source: Howell, A. 1987. "Go-ahead for $100 million hotel at Quay". The Sydney Morning Herald, April 30: 2.
The hotel was to be known as The Grand Luxe Hotel, managed by the Beaufort International Group. Hotel rates were to range from $500 per night to $2000 per night. It was anticipated that the development would be completed by December 1988. Demolition began later that year.
Demolition work came to an abrupt halt in 1988. Civil and Civic were tasked with demolition works but had to vacate the site. The company was unable to respond to a report in The Sydney Morning Herald on February 23 1988. Speculation about the development arose - Was it going ahead? Were there plans to buy 35-37 Macquarie Street and propose an even bigger development? Would it still remain a hotel development, or would an office building be built?
Source: Boson, N. 1988. "Questions remain about Quay hotel project". The Sydney Morning Herald, February 23:32.
However, in March 1988, the demolition of the concrete shell of the building was approved. It was reported that concrete cancer was discovered but was rejected by the developers, citing that the "internal structure did not suit the hotel development".
Source: Reader, R. 1988. "Concrete cancer, bureaucracy cause delays to quay project". The Weekend Australian, March 26-27: 2 (Property Section).
Source: Sing, T. & Chancellor, J. 1988. "Space bonus for Quay block". The Sydney Morning Herald, June 7: 34.
The article above makes a reference to plans by Colonial Mutual Limited (CML) to demolish two buildings it owned further down the strip (Bennelong House and Lend Lease House) and build one office building spanning both sites. CML's plans for East Circular Quay will be the focus of upcoming entries as they become the main player on the block for the first half of the 1990s.
There was criticism of the proposed hotel. Firstly, the concrete shell of Unilever House remained, gaining eyesore status. Simply, demolition of what was left had to occur. Secondly, it was an intrusion, like the other buildings at East Circular Quay, blocking the view of the Sydney Opera House from Circular Quay. The demolition of Unilever House had started to open up the view. Thirdly, the hotel would not cater to tourists who travel on a budget.
The Daily Telegraph explored this in depth on May 20 1988.
Meanwhile, at 35-37 Macquarie Street, Jedobo Pty. Ltd. were still planning to proceed with the development of their site but had shifted to a mostly commercial development with two floors to comprise part residential and part office space. The building was to be 20 storeys tall.
Our series continues next week.
Entries in this series
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): The first apartment block proposal (1979)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Opera Garden Centre Scheme (1984)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Unilever House Hotel Conversion (1986)
- East Circular Quay Redevelopment (Series): Opera Garden Centre Scheme Revisited (1986)
Saturday, 2 March 2024
Property Advert of the Week: The Goldsbrough Pyrmont - Apartment Release (1997)
Below is a 1997 newspaper advertisement promoting a new release of units in The Goldsbrough complex in Pyrmont, including studio, one and two-bedroom apartments. Studio apartments were on sale from $190 000, one-bedroom apartments from $255 000 and two-bedroom apartments with terraces from $485 000.