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DFO Cairns is located at 274 Mulgrave Road, Westcourt. It is the only Direct Factory Outlet centre north of Brisbane. The centre is 3.7km south west of the Cairns CBD and approximately 8.4km south east of the Cairns Airport. It opened in 2008, as a redevelopment of the former Westcourt shopping plaza. [15]
This opened on 30 November 2006, although not all tenancies were occupied, and stage 2 was opened in March 2007. In 2009 the DFO relocated to a new site at South Wharf, the shopping centre being refitted by owner Austexx and rebranded simply as "Spencer Street fashion station". [29] In 2013 the shopping complex was rebranded as "Spencer Outlet ...
South Wharf is a small inner suburb south west from Melbourne's CBD. [2] Its borders are the Yarra River to the north, Wurundjeri Way to the west, the West Gate Freeway and a small private car park bordering Ford Street and Munro Street, which is part of the City of Port Phillip, to the south and the former Port Melbourne railway line and ...
The building design was a joint venture between architect firms: NH Architecture and Woods Bagot. The expansion is part of a larger South Wharf expansion project by Plenary Group that includes a new 347-room Novotel Melbourne South Wharf and a new 1,150-space multi-level car park – all fully connected and integrated with existing buildings.
The former Melbourne Maritime Museum, now, the Polly Woodside tall ship and museum, managed by the National Trust of Australia, is situated in South Wharf on the Yarra River in the city of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is home to the barque Polly Woodside, the now restored cargo vessel launched in 1885.
Rod Laver Arena entrance in 2023. Interior of arena during the 2020 Australian Open. Replacing the ageing Kooyong Stadium, construction on the arena began in 1985. [3] It was undertaken by Civil & Civic [4] and was completed in 1987 at a cost of AU$94 million. [5]
Appleton Dock is an international shipping facility in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.It was opened in about 1956 by the Melbourne Harbor Trust, and is named after MHT commissioner William Thomas Appleton (1859-1930), who was a staunch advocate of harbour improvements in the early 20th century.
Until 2010, Olympic Park Stadium was Melbourne's main venue for soccer, rugby league and rugby union; not purpose-built, it was an athletics stadium with the rectangular grass field set inside the running track, and it could hold 18,500 spectators, but only 11,000 seated.