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Spare Parts Puppet Theatre

Australian building and structure stubsBuildings and structures completed in 1921Landmarks in Perth, Western AustraliaPioneer Park, FremantlePuppet theaters
Puppetry in AustraliaState Register of Heritage Places in the City of FremantleTheatre (structure) stubsTheatre companies in AustraliaTheatres in Western AustraliaTourist attractions in Perth, Western AustraliaUse Australian English from March 2017
WTFr Nov 2011 gnangarra 37
WTFr Nov 2011 gnangarra 37

The Spare Parts Puppet Theatre is located at 1–9 Short Street, Fremantle, Western Australia, in Pioneer Park, opposite the Fremantle railway station.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Spare Parts Puppet Theatre (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Spare Parts Puppet Theatre
Phillimore Street,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Spare Parts Puppet TheatreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -32.05315 ° E 115.74514 °
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Address

West End (West End Heritage Area)

Phillimore Street
6160
Western Australia, Australia
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WTFr Nov 2011 gnangarra 37
WTFr Nov 2011 gnangarra 37
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Nearby Places

Union Bank of Australia Building (Fremantle)
Union Bank of Australia Building (Fremantle)

The former Union Bank of Australia Building, also known as the ANZ Bank Building, is a heritage listed building located at 86 High Street in the Fremantle West End Heritage area. It was one of many commercial buildings constructed in Fremantle during the interwar period. The two storey building was constructed in 1930The site was formerly known as 84 High Street and was the address of four shops that occupied the site prior to 1930. The building was designed by Hobbs, Smith and Forbes and built for the Union Bank of Australia by the builder R. V. Ritchie.Constructed in the Inter-War Free Classical style the building was made from rendered brick with an ashlar effect and has a breakfront where the centre of the building is recessed.The building has a basement along with the two storeys above and occupies 48 feet (15 m) of street frontage. the side stairway entrance leads to large offices on the second floor. The cost of the building was estimated at £17,000.The bank put its old premises at the corner of Cliff Street and High Street up for sale in July 1930.In 1951 the Bank of Australasia merged with the Union Bank of Australia to form the Australia and New Zealand Bank Limited The name of the bank remained on the site until between 1952 and 1956 when it was renamed as the Australia and New Zealand Bank. The property was renovated in 1960 and 1969. The bank continued to use part of the building until 1990 when it relocated and put the site up for auction. It was eventually sold in mid-1991 and opened as a market later the same year selling glassware, ceramics and toys. The markets closed down about a year later.

Higham's Buildings
Higham's Buildings

Higham's Buildings is a heritage listed building located at 101 High Street, on the corner of Market Street in the Fremantle West End Heritage area. It is one of many commercial buildings constructed in Fremantle during the gold boom period in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The two storey building was constructed in 1890 in the Federation Free Classical style. The rendered building co-joins retail shops that return along Market Street with a minimal setback from the pavement. A highly decorative stucco pediment in the parapet that faces High Street features the name of the building. The facade has ashlar effect pilasters dividing the building into bays.In the 1850s and 1860s there was a store and residence in the site owned by Mary Higham. These buildings were replaced in the 1890s by the "new" Higham buildings and added to in the 1900s. The building remained in the Higham family until 1974.The building was originally constructed for Edward Higham who was a founding member of the Fremantle Chamber of Commerce and later a member of the Western Australian Legislative Council for the Fremantle district.A fire broke out in the building in 1902; it was quickly extinguished. Tearooms were established in the building in 1904. A pharmacy opened in the building in 1912.The Palladium Theatre used to be in the eastern end of the building complex.The building was classified by the National Trust in 1974 and placed permanently on the Register of the National Estate in 1978.