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MLC also built a new headquarters in Melbourne as the Sydney building was nearing completion: the structural similarities, though not the detailing, of the two buildings are very striking. [1] Alterations were made to the Sydney building in 1987–1988 under the supervision of Clive Lucas Stapleton. These included the infill of the light well ...
MLC School was founded in 1886 to prepare students for entrance to the University of Sydney, which had only admitted women to degrees four years before. [3] With the view that much more could be expected of girls’ skills and talents during their school education, MLC School was one of the first schools in Australia to offer girls the same level of education as boys.
The MLC Building, built in 1936-8 for MLC as its headquarters on the corner of Martin Place and Castlereagh Street, remains a landmark in the Sydney City Centre. Across from this building, on the south side of Martin Place, is the MLC Centre , one of Harry Seidler 's best known works and Sydney's tallest office building until 1992.
25 Martin Place (formerly and still commonly known as the MLC Centre) is a skyscraper in Sydney, Australia.Originally named the "MLC Centre" after MLC Limited, and still commonly referred to by that name, in 2021 the name was removed by its owner, Dexus, which now refers to the building simply by its street address of 25 Martin Place.
MLC School, Burwood, (Sydney), New South Wales; Schools formed by merging with a Methodist Ladies' College. Scotch Oakburn College, Tasmania (Amalgamation of ...
MLC Building may refer to: MLC Building, North Sydney (1957), by Bates, Smart, McCutcheon; MLC Building, Sydney (1938), on Martin Place by Bates, Smart, McCutcheon; 25 Martin Place (1977), on Martin Place by Harry Seidler named the MLC Centre until 2021; MLC Tower (1998), in Wan Chai, Hong Kong, by Andrew Lee King Fun & Associates
The North Sydney MLC Building design, a 59 metre-high tower complex in the Post-war International style, was the result, with noted inspiration coming from Skidmore, Owings & Merrill's 1952 Lever House in New York and coming at the same time as the firm's design of ICI House in Melbourne.
Methodist Ladies' College (commonly referred to as MLC) is a non-selective, non-denominational private day and boarding school for girls, located in Kew, an eastern suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The school has two additional outdoor education campuses known as "Marshmead" and "Banksia".