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Howard Lane was upgraded by the City of Perth in 2009, and features a series of artworks commissioned by Stormie Mills and Yok. In May 2010, the Council received the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (WA Chapter) Award in Design for the Howard Lane Upgrade. [12] Howard Lane includes two small bars, Andaluz and Helvetica.
The Claremont Hotel is a bar, music venue and fine dining pub located in Claremont, Western Australia, and around 9 km away from Perth CBD.It was also titled Perth’s best venue for 2023 at the AHA (Australian Hotel Association) awards after its renovation worthing $12 million AUD in 2023.
The following is a list of lanes, arcades, and pedestrian malls in the central business district of Perth, Western Australia.. The first plan of Perth, developed in 1829 by the Surveyor-General, John Septimus Roe, was a semi-regular grid pattern bounded by Mount Eliza to the west, wetlands to the north, with three principal streets running parallel to the Swan River and three streets running ...
The business was founded in 1971 by Maud Edmiston, a Swedish immigrant, [5] who opened a small Swedish-style pastry house in City Arcade, Perth [3] to resemble the bakery near her home in Stockholm. [6] In 1973 Edmiston opened the Miss Maud Smörgåsbord Restaurant on the corner of Pier and Murray Streets. [3]
Picabar is a bar and music venue located in Perth, Western Australia, within the Perth Cultural Centre. [1] It is situated adjacent to the Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts (PICA) for which the bar is named. [2]
The William Street Bird, known colloquially as the Bird, is a live music bar [1] located in the Northbridge suburb of Perth, Western Australia. [ 2 ] [ 1 ] It opened in 2010. [ 3 ]
Perth Town Hall – The only convict-built town hall in Australia, built between 1868 and 1870. Perth Water – A much reduced corner of the Swan River with land infill on both north and south shores over the duration of a hundred years; Swan Bells – At the foot of Barrack Street, this very recent construction contains significant historic bells.
The Piccadilly Theatre, was one of a number of theatres and cinemas constructed in Perth and its suburbs during the Inter-war period. Originally constructed in the Inter-war Functionalist style, the Piccadilly represented the desire for enjoyment and entertainment displayed by Western Australians towards the end of the Depression. [1]