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Kinkabool is a heritage-listed apartment block at 32–34 Hanlan Street, Surfers Paradise, Queensland, Australia.It was designed by John M. Morton of Lund Hutton Newell Black & Paulsen and built from 1959 to 1960 by J D Booker Constructions (Gold Coast) Pty Ltd.
The Fast-track Approvals Bill project list is a list of the 149 projects seeking approval through the Fast-track Approvals Bill in New Zealand. [1] [2] [3]The list of projects to be included in the Bill was released publicly on 6 October 2024. [3]
The aim of this company was to promote and construct a new type of Queensland residential accommodation; the multi-storeyed home unit complex. Torbreck Kratzman Pty Ltd., the company formed to build the apartments declared bankruptcy prior to the construction of the tower block, and the project was sold to Reid Murray Developments in 1959 ...
Fröbel's series of 20 age-calibrated educational "gifts" had included a set of eight blocks, sized ½ by 1 by 2 inches, or a 1:2:4 ratio, which could be formed into a cube. [2] She founded the City and Country School in 1914 in New York City. [3] In the 1970s, under license from the school, a version of the blocks was sold by a company called ...
When records began in 1974, new homes in New Zealand had an average floor area of 120 m 2 (1,290 sq ft). Average new home sizes rose to peak at 200 m 2 (2,150 sq ft) in 2010, before falling to 158 m 2 (1,700 sq ft) in 2019. [17] In 1966 the New Zealand Encyclopedia recognised seven basic designs of New Zealand houses. [18]
House on a block in Adelaide, South Australia. In Australian and New Zealand English, a quarter acre is a term for a suburban plot of land. Traditionally, Australians and New Zealanders aspired to own a 3- or 4-bedroom house or bungalow on a section of around a quarter of an acre (about 1,000 square metres), also known locally as the Australian Dream or the New Zealand dream.
Queensland has registered plans; New South Wales and Western Australia have deposited plans; while Victoria has certified plans. Land can be identified using the number of this plan of subdivision held with the lands department, rather than with a named unit such as a parish (or both can be used); it has become more common to use only the plan ...
New Zealand's countrywide meshblock framework was first set up in 1976, [1] although the term dates back to at least the 1916 census. [2] The meshblock pattern is updated each year. It comprised 41,376 meshblocks at the 2006 census , [ 3 ] increasing to 46,637 in 2013, [ 4 ] 53,589 in 2018 [ 5 ] and 57,539 in 2023.