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Floreat Beach

Beaches of Western AustraliaSurfing locations in Western AustraliaWestern Australia geography stubs

Floreat Beach is in Western Australia, located off West Coast Highway, directly next to City Beach. The beach's southern extremity is a groyne and continues north past a drain pipe until Hale Road dog beach. In front of the beach area near the groyne there is a carpark, boardwalk, grassed area, and cycle path. The groyne has a seasonally occurring sand-bar that forms a left breaking wave that is popular with bodyboarders and surfers.The beach neighbours City Beach, which in season has surf life savers. It is between this beach and City beach that undersea cables are positioned.Floreat Beach is located in the foreshore area.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Floreat Beach (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Floreat Beach
Brakkämpe, Bremen Huchting (Stadtbezirk Bremen-Süd)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -31.9305 ° E 115.75506944444 °
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Address

Grundschule Grolland (Schule Grolland)

Brakkämpe 4
28259 Bremen, Huchting (Stadtbezirk Bremen-Süd)
Bremen, Deutschland
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call+4942136119610

Website
048.schule.bremen.de

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Quarry Amphitheatre
Quarry Amphitheatre

The Quarry Amphitheatre is an outdoor venue located close to the ocean in City Beach, Western Australia. It has a 19 by 13.5 m (62 by 44 ft) sprung wooden stage and changing facilities for around 80 performers. It was officially opened on 9 November 1986 and is owned and operated by the Town of Cambridge.The amphitheatre is located in an old limestone quarry, first quarried in 1834 by Henry Trigg. The limestone from the quarry was used for construction and lime-burning. In 1847 Trigg sold the landholdings to Walter Padbury, who continued the quarrying operations. At the height of the limestone kiln operations, more than 50 men worked at the site. The land was then sold to brothers Henry and Somers Birch in 1869, and then on to Joseph Perry in 1879. Perry kept the quarry and lime kilns working, with the last lime kiln being built in 1897. The quarrying ceased in 1906. In 1917 the land was sold to the Perth City Council. The concept of converting the quarry into an amphitheatre was conceived by Diana Waldron, the director of the Perth City Ballet Company, in the early 1980s. With funding support from the Commonwealth Government, Lotteries Commission and the former City of Perth, the vision finally became a reality and the Quarry Amphitheatre was officially opened on 9 November 1986. It is set in natural bushland and supports a capacity audience of 566. It is a licensed BYO facility. The venue is used extensively between October and May for a range of events from ballet to concerts and large weddings.