Queen Street, Melbourne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Queen Street is a street in the Melbourne central business district, forming part of the famous Hoddle Grid. It runs roughly from north to south. The northern end of Queen Street intersects with Victoria Street, while its southern end intersects with Flinders Street. The northern end of Queen Street bisects the Queen Victoria Market into the dry section and wet section.
Queen Street is a mainly commercial and financial section of the central business district. There are many office buildings along the road. These include the world headquarters of ANZ at 100 Queen Street, the 32-storey building at 200 Queen Street, the Republic Tower at 299 Queen Street and the Bank of China building at 270 Queen Street
Victoria University also has a building on Queen Street.
Queen Street is named after Queen Elizabeth I.
[edit] Gallery
Lombard House. Built in 1887 to the design of Reed, Henderson & Smart |
Built in 1936 to the design of James Wardrop. One of the most striking Glazed architectural terra-cotta and glass brick clad Art Deco buildings in Australia |
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[edit] See also
- Queen Street Massacre, December 8, 1987 - Former law student, 22 year old Frank Vitkovic killed 8 people and injured 5 with a sawn off shotgun.
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