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Port Melbourne Historical & Preservation Society
Poster, Port Parlour Shorts, Jul 2003
Festival was run by Maree WHITE and Terry MOORE ('Peppermint Projects') and funded by CoPP & the Bay Street Traders. Took place in the Gasworks Theatre, PMH&PS prepared dsiplay on Port's cinemas.Poster for weekend film event "Port Parlour Shorts" held Oct 2003, calling for submission of home movies on Port Melbourne. Red, black and ochre - A3.celebrations fetes and exhibitions, local government - city of port phillip, bay street traders association, arts and entertainment - film/cinema, peppermint projects, bay street, port parlour shorts -
Vision Australia
Photograph - Image, 2002 RVIB 201 High Street staff photos, 2002
Pictures taken at RVIB 201 High Street building of Assist, RVIB Enterprises and Training and Technology staff members for their badge identification.114 digital images of staff at RVIB Burwood, mostly in low resolutionroyal victorian institute for the blind, steve beashel, daryl barnett, phil boyd, geoff crawford, adrian smith, alan berginc, annie cooper, anton rich, chris maskell, david weatley, don hoy, ernie dos santos, frank bauer, gena kacowicz, geoff paterson, geoff ralph, glen petrie, greg slorach, greg washington, jim doherty, jimmy nason, john martin, john nettelbeck, karen hope, keith weller, ken mcdonald, lisa watson, martin stewart, jim pipczak, mary pipczak, michael royals, norm richards, norm shepherdson, peter krnel, ray dunn, ray xhaferi, richard pryztula, robert toseland, roger poulter, terry lord, alan kelly, alan fowler, andrea cook, andrew white, anita sun, barbara cameron, brett shelton, brian gear, bruce loring, chris edwards, christine harvie, dale moore, david horsfall, elisa moralis, faye baxter, glen hobby, glen morrow, jeremy childs, jeremy king, kate stephens, kathryn cooke, katy shuttleworth, ken baker, lloyd smith, margaret kelly, michael williams, michael doherty, natasha brake, neil gillies, neil mathieson, nick allan, ranmali ratnachandra, rhonda patman, rob glenowski, robyn mckenzie, rod stewart, sean tyrell, steve lock, stewart hose, terri cameron, thavee lees, thong nguyen, damien mccormack, elaine brock, vince september -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Marguerite Marshall, Eltham Community and Reception Centre, 2 October 2006
The Eltham Community and Reception Centre was Australia's first public mud-brick building. Commissioned in 1977 by Eltham Shire Council, led by Shire president (and architect) Robert Marshall, architects Whitford and Peck were asked to design a multipurpose facility in mud-brick and timber. The official opening was performed by the Hon. R.J. Hamer; E.D., M.P., Premier of Victorai on Saturday, April 22, 1978. Architects: Whitford & Peck Pty Ltd Quantity Surveyor: D.J. Cant & Associates Structural Civil Engineers: Charlett & Moore Pty Ltd Landscape: Peter Glass, Dennis Edwards Mech Elec: Lobley Treidel & Partners Pty Ltd Acoustics: Riley Barden & Kirkhope Builder: L.U. Simon Pty Ltd Covered under Heritage Overlay, Nillumbik Planning Scheme. Published: Nillumbik Now and Then / Marguerite Marshall 2008; photographs Alan King with Marguerite Marshall.; p177 The Wiggles performed there, so has the ABC’s Play School. New citizens have made their vows, volunteers have been honoured, school children have performed, weddings celebrated and people mourned at funerals. Since 1978 the Eltham Community and Reception Centre at the corner of Pitt Street and Main Road, has provided a beautiful and quintessential Eltham environment for people from all over Melbourne. Recognised as Australia’s first public mud-brick building, the centre was built partly on the site of the parsonage of the former Methodist Church (now the Uniting Church).1 Commissioned by the Eltham Council headed by President Robert Marshall, architects Whitford and Peck were asked to design a multipurpose facility in mud-brick and timber. Following public consultation, it was agreed to build a centre for dances, exhibitions, films, plays or concerts. The results – at a cost of around $620,000 – captured the Eltham rustic style. The building – in soft tones of mud-brick and timber and immense floor-to-ceiling windows – overlooks the Diamond Creek and sporting fields. Eltham’s strong artistic heritage is reflected in the centre. Although the lighting is not ideal for a gallery and labels cannot be placed on walls, the centre hosts the Nillumbik Art Awards and displays around ten to 20% of the Nillumbik Shire Art Collection, usually for around a year at a time.2 On permanent display, close to the entrance, is local artist Clifton Pugh’s White Choughs in the Landscape. Further to the right is the Walter Withers Gallery, named after a local member of the Heidelberg School of artists. As part of the Eltham Gateway opposite the Eltham Hotel, the centre stands on what was once part of the Eltham Town Centre along this section of Main Road, then known as Maria Street. On the same site once stood the house and flour mill owned by Henry Dendy, best known as the founder of Brighton, although he lived longer in Eltham. Beside the drive is a wheel-rim tool with accompanying plaque, illustrating a technology important during the horse-powered age and now almost completely gone, as has the blacksmith’s shop that had housed it nearby. The implement is a platform for fitting iron tyres to the wooden rims of cartwheels. Beneath it is a capsule placed in 1985 to commemorate Victoria’s 150 years, which is to be opened in 2035. Although the plants, forming part of the landscaping by Peter Glass and Denis Edwards, are largely indigenous and other native species, some exotic plants are protected as an important link with the site’s past. Planted at the front around 1920, is a large Peppercorn tree with two joined trunks growing from the base, and close by is a Bhutan Cypress (Cupressus torulosa). Three other Peppercorn trees fringe the drive. The building includes two halls – the larger seating 250 people – and a large foyer overlooking trees and ovals. Both halls have retractable rear walls providing varying spaces as required, and guests can use several external decks. A site for outdoor theatre has been carved out of the natural slope outside the entrance. The Bricklayers Union refused to use the traditional mud-bricks, which weigh more than 22kg. As a result the mud-bricks were redesigned to reduce their weight and were laid back-to-back to produce a wall of normal thickness.3 The centre’s massive timber frame is reminiscent of timber bridge construction, with infill panels of mud-brick.4 In accord with the rustic style are colossal rough-sawn posts, bolts and steel brackets. The combination of mud-brick, exposed feature timber framing and creative design in this centre, characterises Eltham’s innovative buildings and the social movement behind them from the 1940s to the 1970s.This collection of almost 130 photos about places and people within the Shire of Nillumbik, an urban and rural municipality in Melbourne's north, contributes to an understanding of the history of the Shire. Published in 2008 immediately prior to the Black Saturday bushfires of February 7, 2009, it documents sites that were impacted, and in some cases destroyed by the fires. It includes photographs taken especially for the publication, creating a unique time capsule representing the Shire in the early 21st century. It remains the most recent comprehenesive publication devoted to the Shire's history connecting local residents to the past. nillumbik now and then (marshall-king) collection, eltham community and reception centre, mudbrick construction