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St John of God Berwick Hospital

1939 establishments in AustraliaBuildings and structures in the City of CaseyHospital buildings completed in 1939Hospitals in MelbourneSt John of God Health Care

'St John of God Berwick Hospitallocated in Melbourne, Victoria. It provides health care to Melbourne's south east and regional eastern Victoria. Originally known as Berwick Hospital, the facility was taken over by St John of God Health Care in 2003. The original hospital was established in 1939 as Berwick Bush Nursing Hospital.St John of God Berwick Hospital is a division of St John of God Health Care, a leading Catholic not-for-profit health care group, serving communities with hospitals, home nursing, and social outreach services throughout Australia and New Zealand.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St John of God Berwick Hospital (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

St John of God Berwick Hospital
Princes Freeway On Ramp, Melbourne Berwick

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N -38.044986 ° E 145.344822 °
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Princes Freeway On Ramp
3806 Melbourne, Berwick
Victoria, Australia
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Nossal High School
Nossal High School

Nossal High School, also referred to as Nossal or NHS, is a government-funded mixed-sex academically selective secondary day school, located in the Melbourne suburb of Berwick, Victoria, Australia. The school (named after Sir Gustav Nossal, a prominent Australian immunologist and 2000 Australian of the Year) was established in 2010 and caters for students in Year 9 to Year 12. The school's curriculum follows American educator Howard Gardener's concept of the Five Minds of the Future which includes, for example, the absence of school bells, as students are expected to know when and where to be. Students have access to many extra-curricular programs, such as inter-school sport, debating, music, clubs/societies and various national and international competitions and creative-based events such as the Model United Nations Assembly and the Australian Computational and Linguistics Olympiad. As Nossal High School is part of the Select-Entry Network of Victorian selective schools (alongside Suzanne Cory High School, Mac.Robertson Girls' High School and Melbourne High School), prospective students must sit a 3-hour-long uniform entrance examination, testing their knowledge and reasoning in literacy and numeracy, with the 2017 exam attracting about 3,300 applicants; accepting only around 208 students into their Year 9 cohort. Nossal High School was ranked third out of all state secondary schools in Victoria based on VCE results in 2018.

Casey Airfield
Casey Airfield

Casey Airfield, later known as Berwick Airfield (ICAO: YBER), was a small airfield for light aircraft located in Berwick, Victoria, Australia. It was built by Rupert Ryan on land he had interited in 1935 and with his sister Ethel ("Maie") had turned it into a successful stud farm "Edrington". Maie had married Richard Casey (later Baron Casey, the 16th Governor-General of Australia) in 1921. In 1937, Richard and Maie Casey took flying lessons, obtained their licences and bought a Percival Vega Gull which Richard flew between Melbourne and Canberra. Ryan built a landing strip on the property in 1938 and built a hangar to house the Gull. When certified as an aerodrome in June of that year it was named Casey Airfield. Use of the airfield was suspended at the outbreak of World War II and the Caseys' Gull was impressed into the Royal Australian Air Force in November 1939. The airfield resumed operation in 1947 when Ryan gave permission for the Victorian Motorless Flight Group to use it for glider operations and sport parachuting. VMFG relocated to Bacchus Marsh Airfield in 1962. Richard Casey purchased a Miles Messenger in 1953 and housed it at the airfield until 1962. In 1968 the airfield was taken over by Groupair Pty Ltd, founded by Keith Hatfield and Ron Kerrison, and renamed Berwick Airfield. Groupair operated a flying school, aerial charter operation and aircraft maintenance facilities. The company had plans for expansion and to turn it into a commercial airport. Some promotional material referred to the location as "Casey Airport". The Royal Victorian Aero Club also conducted flying training from the airfield and planned to move up to 60% of basic flying training away from Moorabbin Airport. Following Kerrison's death in a flying accident in 1969, the company was bought out by millionaire grazier Bryce Killen. The company went into liquidation in 1978 and the assets were bought by Pressfast Industries which planned to turn the site into business park, with a small area retained for helicopter operations. A helicopter hangar was constructed in 1982 but the airfield was out of use by 1989.The airfield formally closed in 1994 and the Victoria State Government acquired the land. In 1996 it became the Berwick Campus of Monash University. The original 1938 hangar and Casey's Miles Messenger are preserved at the Australian National Aviation Museum at Moorabbin Airport. In 2018 the site became Federation University Australia, Berwick campus.