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313-315 Mowbray Road, Chatswood, City of Willoughby, New South Wales, Australia Coordinates 33°48′09″S 151°11′02″E / 33.8025°S 151.1839°E / -33.8025; 151
The Standard Hotel located in Maitland was featured in the 2012 film Safe House.It features as one of the "seedy hotels" that the main protagonists seek refuge in. [7] The shrine of a well known Muslim Sufi saint i.e. Hazarat Khawaja Sayed Mehboob Ali Sha (R.A) is situated at the Maitland Cemetery gate 4A is also a source of blessings and unity of many communities.
258-260 Mowbray Road, Chatswood, City of Willoughby, New South Wales, Australia Coordinates 33°48′07″S 151°11′23″E / 33.8020°S 151.1896°E / -33.8020; 151
Mowbray House is a heritage-listed historic building that was an independent, day and boarding school for boys, located in Chatswood, on the North Shore of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. [1] More recently, it was part of an Ausgrid depot site. [ 2 ]
Grossmann House is a heritage-listed former residence and Maitland Girls' High School premises and now house museum at 71 Church Street, Maitland, City of Maitland, New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1860 to 1862 by Isaac Beckett and Samuel Owen.
The property now known as Englefield is believed to have been built by "Gentleman" John Smith c. 1837 at Wallis Creek on his Wallis Plains (now Maitland) farm.The land at Wallis Creek was originally "granted" to him (as 'tenant at will') by Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1818, being one of the eleven early grants in the area permitting settlement to eleven "well-behaved" people.
By 1900, Chatswood was easily accessible by public transport. In 1898, the electric tram line, running along Willoughby Road and Penshurst Street, had reached Victoria Avenue, and in 1908, it was extended to Chatswood railway station. In 1903 the council chambers moved from Mowbray Road to Victoria Avenue.
The house was a single-storey stone-built residence and was originally set in about 40 hectares (100 acres) which the family moved into in 1856. Wendy Thorp in her archaeological report describes the house thus: [1] [2] Morpeth House was designed in a Regency style on a plan said to have been influenced by the experience of Edward Close in Spain.