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Chinatown, Gold Coast

Asian-Australian culture in QueenslandChinatowns in AustraliaSouthport, QueenslandUse Australian English from June 2020
Confucius statue, Chinatown, Southport, Queensland
Confucius statue, Chinatown, Southport, Queensland

Gold Coast Chinatown in Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia is focused on Davenport and Young Streets, and includes the connecting laneways (Regent and Davison Lanes) and parts of Nerang, Garden and Scarborough Streets, Southport. Gold Coast Chinatown is part of the revitalisation of Southport as a central business district for the Gold Coast. 24 May 2019, Gold Coast City Council announced that the monthly Chinatown Street Markets is coming to an end on 1 June 2019. They also announced there will be (unspecified) "new and exciting events in the year ahead"

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

Chinatown, Gold Coast
Young Street, Gold Coast City Southport

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Wikipedia: Chinatown, Gold CoastContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -27.9691 ° E 153.4135 °
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Address

Confucius

Young Street
4215 Gold Coast City, Southport
Queensland, Australia
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Confucius statue, Chinatown, Southport, Queensland
Confucius statue, Chinatown, Southport, Queensland
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1954 Australian Grand Prix

The 1954 Australian Grand Prix was a motor race held at the Southport Road Circuit near Southport in Queensland, Australia on 7 November 1954. The race was held over 27 laps of the 5.7 mile (9.17 kilometre) circuit, a total distance of 153.9 miles (247.6 km). It was the nineteenth Australian Grand Prix and the second to be held in Queensland. With no suitable permanent circuit available, a course was mapped out on roads in sparsely settled coastal land 2.5 km south west of Southport, and just to the north of later circuits, Surfers Paradise Raceway and the Surfers Paradise Street Circuit. The Grand Prix race meeting was organised by the Queensland Motor Sporting Club and the Toowoomba Auto Club in conjunction with the Southport Rotary Club. The race, which was open to Racing and Stripped Sports Cars, had 28 starters. The race was won by Lex Davison, later to become the most successful driver in the history of the Australian Grand Prix. It was Davison's first win in the Grand Prix having finished in the top three as far back as 1947. Davison drove a Formula 2 HWM re-engined with a 3.4 litre Jaguar engine. Davison finished a lap clear of Curley Brydon's MG TC special and two laps ahead of third placed Ken Richardson in a Ford based special. The gaps were caused by attrition amongst the fastest drivers. Jack Brabham was out on the second lap with a broken engine in his Cooper; Rex Taylor was black flagged for receiving outside assistance after spinning his Lago-Talbot; Dick Cobden retired his Ferrari after a spin and Stan Jones crashed heavily while leading after his chassis failed. It would be the last race for the Mk.II Maybach special, Charlie Dean's team rebuilding it as the Maybach III.