BRISBANE ARCADE

Author: Kerri  /  Category: About Brisbane

Brisbane Arcade

Brisbane Arcade

 

The beginnings of the Brisbane Arcade involve murder, scandal, insanity

and a deathbed confession!

 

 It was built in 1923 by Dr James Mayne and his sister on the site of their former family home. Their father, Patrick Mayne, infamously confessed on his death bed to the murder, robbery and dismemberment of an itinerant sawyer. The sawyer had been in possession of a large sum of money when he was murdered.

 

A year later, Patrick Mayne, then a slaughterman, began buying up large tracts of land and became one of the wealthiest landholders in Brisbane.

 

Parts of the body were discovered at various locations along the river. However the entrails were discovered in the well used by the Bush Inn’s cook to cool their butter, milk and cheese. The cook was convicted and hung for the murder.

 

Cathedral of St Stephen’s, Brisbane’s oldest church, has two stained glass windows dedicated to Patrick Mayne and his son, Isaac. Isaac was suspected of the murder of a Japanese man whose body was found close to the Mayne residence.

Isaac was committed to Sydney’s Bayview Mental Asylum by his brother, Dr James Mayne.

None of the children of Patrick Mayne married or had children of their own.

 

 

The story can be read in The Mayne Inheritance (1997).

REGENT THEATRE

Author: Kerri  /  Category: About Brisbane
Regent Theatre Foyer

Regent Theatre Foyer

 

The Regent Theatre complex is a cinema treasure located at 167 Queen Street. Opened in 1929, the theatre is characteristic of a 1920s picture palace, and was one of only four Hoyts Picture Palaces constructed in Australia at the time. Originally it was erected for use as a theatre and cinema. The Regent was designed by Melbourne architect, Charles N. Hollinshed, with assistance from the Brisbane-based Richard Gailey Junior and Aaron Bolot. In the mid 1970s Hoyts planned the demolition of the Regent. A “Save the Regent” campaign was launched and a compromise was reached whereby the foyer and the marble staircase were retained. The new four cinema complex opened on 2 August 1980.

SOUTH BANK PARKLANDS

Author: Kerri  /  Category: About Brisbane

South Bank Parklands is one of Brisbane’s most popular inner city destinations.



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South Bank was originally a meeting place for the traditional landowners, the Turrbal and Yuggera people and, in the early 1840s it became the central focus point of early European settlement. From the 1850s, South Bank Precinct was quickly established as the business centre of Brisbane. However, this was all disrupted in the 1893, when floods forced the central business district (CBD) to shift to the Northern side of the river and attain higher ground. This is where the Brisbane CBD still stands today. This began the decline of South Bank, which was accelerated at the end of World War II.
The 1970s marked the beginnings of a new era, and the Queensland Cultural Centre was built, including the Queensland Art Gallery, the Queensland Museum, the Queensland Performing Arts Centre and State Library of Queensland.

In 1988, Brisbane held a successful World Exposition, following which the Government intended to develop the site for commercial interests. However, a public campaign successfully lobbied for the site to be redeveloped as parkland for the enjoyment of people in Brisbane. In 1989, the South Bank Corporation, a Queensland Government statutory body, was established to oversee the development and management of the new South Bank Parklands.

The Grand Arbour is a major architectural and horticultural attraction at South Bank Parklands. It weaves from one end of the parklands to the other, and is over a kilometre in length. Consisting of 443 curled pylons of steel, nearly all pylons are interconnected with up to nine steel wires on which grows trains of magenta bougainvillea plants. There are also yellow plates of steel which provide additional shade cover at various locations throughout the walkway.

The Nepalese Peace Pagoda complemented the Nepalese Pavilion at the World Exposition 1988 (Expo 88), held at Southbank. Facing north-east towards the Brisbane River, the structure is a faithful replica of a traditional Nepalese temple. The Peace Pagoda is the only international exhibit remaining on the old Expo site. It is also the only example of a Nepalese temple in Australia. It was created by craftsmen of Kathmandu Valley specifically for the exhibition. Over 160 families contributed more than a million hours in creating this masterwork. It was originally sited near the Vulture Street entrance to Expo 88. In 1991 it was moved to its current location, amongst the rainforest near the northern riverbank entrance to the Southbank Parklands.