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Tewantin

1871 establishments in AustraliaLocalities in QueenslandPopulated places established in 1871Suburbs of Noosa Shire, QueenslandTowns in Queensland
Use Australian English from August 2012
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Tewantin royalmail

Tewantin ( tə-WON-tən) is a town and locality in the Shire of Noosa, Queensland, Australia. Tewantin was the original settlement in the Noosa region and is one of its three major centres today. In the 2021 census, the locality of Tewantin had a population of 11,164 people.

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

Tewantin
Poinciana Avenue, Noosa Shire

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -26.3916 ° E 153.0386 °
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Address

Poinciana Avenue

Poinciana Avenue
4565 Noosa Shire
Queensland, Australia
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Nearby Places

Noosa Civic
Noosa Civic

Noosa Civic is a shopping centre located in Noosa on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia. Major stores include Woolworths and Big W and the centre includes over 8,000 square metres of specialty retail stores. The development commenced construction in 2005 and stage one, consisting of 30,000 square metres of retail and commercial development in four precincts was opened in October 2006. Some controversy occurred to opponents of the development, complaining the development was approved on rare ecological wildlands and that a large-scale shopping centre detracted from what they claimed were Noosa's village-type ideals of local community. In its opening months, the marketing slogan used to promote the centre was "Bigger, Better, More", which some responded to negatively as a symbol of '80s-style greed, thus aggravated things considerably. After conducting market research, the developers changed to an inclusive slogan to "Where Noosa comes to shop... naturally", which they believed was more in keeping with Noosa's Biosphere reserve status and would potentially guide more locals to the centre, representing considerable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions due to less travel by car to more remote shopping locations.In 2012, the centre's initial developer, Stockwell, sold to the Queensland Government owned Queensland Investment Corporation for a reported sale price of $200 million. Some hope Myer, Target and other tenants could support a further stage of development of the centre to serve the local community and tourists. Local politicians and anti-development activists opposed the expansion of the centre. In 2015, Noosa Council rejected a development proposal to double the centre's size. This was upheld by the Planning and Environment Court.