Monday, December 3, 2012

Where in Melbourne Puzzle - December 2012

Where in Melbourne Puzzle - December 2012.

THIS PUZZLE HAS BEEN SOLVED

 
Clue 1 - This crest adorns the first Melbourne public building not built of stone.
 
 
Clue 2 - One of few Australian buildings in the true Renaissance revival style,
and a virtual copy of the Raphaels Palazzo Vidoni-Caffarelli in Rome


! This puzzle is now solved !

Congratulations Rob
for correctly identifying the location to be the former Royal Mint in Williams Street, Melbourne.

Your Winner's certificate is on the way,

and as you are an Osca Customer, for solving the puzzle using only two clues,
your next 5 shirts are on the house.

Remaining Clues
 
Clue 3
 
Clue 4

Following the establishment of the Sydney Mint as a Branch of the Royal Mint in 1855, the British government back in London required to be convinced of the need for a second Australian branch. When gold was discovered in Victoria, there was a strong enough case for the proposal that a second mint was authorized and the first coins were struck in Melbourne in 1872 during a visit from His Excellency the Governor and Viscountess Canterbury. The Melbourne Mint opened for business on the 12th of June 1872.


In 1873, the first full year of production, 165,000 half sovereigns were struck along with 752,199 sovereigns. Production basically continued to increase, and 1880 saw the yearly total exceed 3,000,000 coins.
 
Until 1916 it minted only gold sovereigns, and all Australian coins between 1927 and 1967.
 
The administrative building is said to be the first public building in Melbourne not built of stone, as it was constructed of brick on a blue stone base.


Constructed in 1872, and designed by JJ Clark, this is considered one of the finest examples of Renaissance Revival in Australia. Freestanding on its site, the building is finely detailed, with corner guardhouses and a perimeter wall. The building once included a Coining Hall, Melting and Assay Departments to the rear, unfortunately demolished in 1968.
 
Long the home of the marriage Registry and the Royal Historical Society of Victoria, it has been leased to the private sector since 2001.

Royal Mint building as seen in Google Earth
 
The next Where in Melbourne Puzzle will be posted on Wednesday, 1st of January 2013.

Monday, October 29, 2012

November 2012 Where in Melbourne Puzzle

Where in Melbourne Puzzle - November 2012.

THIS PUZZLE HAS BEEN REVEALED

The first clue will be revealed November 5th 2012.


Clue 1 - Know locally as "Little Saigon"

 
Clue 2 - This street has been named after a Queen.


Clue 3 - A favourite store with renovators at the end of the street should give this location away.


Solve - Victoria Street, Richmond
taken with a X35 zoom facing east from Hoddle Street.
 

Victoria street was originally named during the reign of Queen Victoria,
who at that time was also the ruler of Australia.
 
Due to a mixture of her popularity and a certain patriotism about their state, many developers and local councillors named streets in their localities Victoria Street. Nearly all of Melbourne's oldest suburbs contain a Victoria Street, most of them dating from this era.
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria's reign of 63 years and seven months, was longer than that of any other British monarch and the longest of any female monarch in history, is known as the Victorian era.
 
It was a period of industrial, cultural, political, scientific, and military change within the United Kingdom, and was marked by a great expansion of the British Empire.

And what of the future ?

Every year thousands of people gather on Victoria Street to celebrate Vietnamese and Chinese culture for Lunar New Year. The Lunar New Year street festival has grown from a small community gathering of local families to become one of Melbourne's most anticipated cultural celebrations.

Victoria Street Gateway Project
Victoria Street Gateway Project proposes a themed gateway on Victoria Street near the intersection with Hoddle Street, one of Melbourne's busiest road crossings.

The gateway's design concept incorporates Vietnamese and Chinese cultural and historical imagery. Preliminary concepts propose a large structure that symbolises Vietnamese boat and bird forms. This structure would be illuminated at night to highlight the entry to Victoria Street's restaurant precinct. Large Vietnamese hats would be suspended above the roadway at the Hoddle Street intersection.

Victoria Street Gateway Project
The colourful hats would provide shadows during the day and creative street lighting in the evening. The rail bridge would also feature a bamboo graphic that would light up at night to provide another lighting element to the gateway.
 
However, designs, timelines and budgets are yet to be developed for further stages of works.   

Victoria Street, Richmond as seen in Google Earth

http://www.yarracity.vic.gov.au/services/Infrastructure/victoria-street-gateway-project/

The next Puzzle will be posted on the 3rd of December 2012. 

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

October 2012 Where in Melbourne Puzzle

Where in Melbourne Puzzle - October 2012.

THIS PUZZLE HAS BEEN REVEALED
 
Clue 1 - This building is related in some way to Australia's first drive-in theatre.


Clue 2 - This structure was opened to the public in 1887.
Much of the exterior form remains substantially the same as it was then.


Clue 3 - Fire destroyed the interiors of this building in the 1920's.


Clue 4 - This building is of particular aesthetic significance because of it's  largely intact  and unpainted ornate exterior.
Still in its original condition, it proudly stands as an example of 19th century classicism  in Victoria.


The Puzzle Solution - Collingwood Town Hall, Hoddle Street, Collingwood.


Collingwood Town Hall
The Collingwood Town Hall is significant for its architectural association with two influential Melbourne architects. It is an important example of the work of George Johnson, possibly the most prolific designer of municipal buildings in late 19th century Victoria, as well as of many theatres and opera houses in Melbourne and other Australian cities and the annexes to the Royal Exhibition Building in Carlton. Renovations to the building conducted in 1938 were the work of A.C. Leith and Associates. Leith was notable for his work throughout Victoria. Amongst other things, he was instrumental in the establishment of the Housing Commission of Victorias Holmesglen House Factory and was the designer for Australias first Drive-In theatre at Burwood.
 
The Collingwood Town Hall is of aesthetic significance because its largely intact and unpainted ornate exterior is a comparatively rare example of 19th century boom style classicism in original condition in Victoria. The exterior form remains substantially as it was when the building was opened in 1887, when it was lauded in the Melbourne press as a grand and attractive building.
 
Johnson, George Raymond (1840–1898)
George Raymond Johnson (1840-1898), architect and surveyor, was born on 7 February 1840 at Southgate, Middlesex, England, one of eight children.
 
At age 13, Johnson began working with George Hall, Midland Railway architect. At 19 he moved to London, presumably to continue his architectural career. On 24 July 1962 he married Emma Louise Wood and, nine days later, the couple embarked on a journey of emigration to Queensland.
 
In 1867, Johnson moved to Melbourne, where he produced most of his major works. In 1898, while at sea on return to Melbourne from Perth, Western Australia, Johnson contracted septicemia, and died.

Johnson is principally remembered for the seven town halls of his design that still stand today in Melbourne and other Victorian towns, but he achieved contemporary renown for his theatres and, particularly, his annexes to the Melbourne Exhibition Building.
 
Wikipedia - Collingwood Town Hall
 

Monday, August 27, 2012

September 2012 Where in Melbourne Puzzle

Where in Melbourne Puzzle - September 2012.

THIS PUZZLE HAS NOT BEEN REVEALED
 
Clue 1 - You don't have to look too far past the solution to the previous puzzle.


Clue 2 - Melbourne has a reputation for its street art.


Clue 3 - There is one in Scotland near Lhanbryde, one in WA near Boyanup and one in Carlton near Swanston. It's name might be a clue, but you need to find its Union to get there.


Clue 4 - Take a walk down Elgin Street and keep your eye on the lanes.


The Solve will be posted on the 28th of September.

The next Where in Melbourne puzzle will be posted on the 1st of October.

Monday, July 30, 2012

August 2012 Where in Melbourne Puzzle

Due to repeated requests, August 2012 marks the return of the Where in Melbourne puzzle.

The Next Where in Melbourne Puzzle will be posted 2nd September 2012


THIS PUZZLE HAS BEEN REVEALED

Clue 1 - Find this location and you might learn something.

Clue 2 - Riding on a tram, you'd want to be looking west.

Clue 3 - This location is north of the City.

Clue 4 - The building was opened in 1998.
 
Solve - Sculpture outside the Potter
 
 
Exterior of the Ian Potter Museum of Art on Swanston Street at the University of Melbourne. The sculpture is called "Cultural Rubble" by Christine O’Loughlin.
 
 
  

The Ian Potter Museum of Art (established in 1998) houses the University of Melbourne Art Collection. The collection has major holdings of Australian art in all media from the early nineteenth century to the present, as well as holdings of European art, International indigenous art and classics and archaeology.
 
Numbering 20,000 works, these rich and diverse holdings form the largest university art collection in Australia.

 
Sir Ian Potter (1902-1994)


Sir Ian Potter was an influential Australian businessman and philanthropist.
 
The Museum of Art at the University of Melbourne, the Ian Potter Centre at Federation Square, and the Ian Potter Children's Garden at the Royal Botanic Gardens are but a few of his legacies in Melbourne today.
 
The Ian Potter Foundation, which he established in 1964, has made large grants to dozens of research institutes, charities, universities and arts organisations.
 
 
This post was last updated on the 27th of August 2012