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West Side Place

Apartment buildings in MelbourneProposed skyscrapers in AustraliaResidential skyscrapers in AustraliaSkyscraper hotels in AustraliaSkyscrapers in Melbourne
Use Australian English from September 2015Victoria (Australia) building and structure stubs
WSP T1 and T2 UC in July 2019
WSP T1 and T2 UC in July 2019

West Side Place is an approved A$1 billion complex of four buildings, when built, will become some of the tallest buildings in Melbourne. The project is located on 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne.

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

West Side Place
Little Lonsdale Street, Melbourne Melbourne

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: West Side PlaceContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -37.8143 ° E 144.9529 °
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Address

Building E

Little Lonsdale Street
3000 Melbourne, Melbourne
Victoria, Australia
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WSP T1 and T2 UC in July 2019
WSP T1 and T2 UC in July 2019
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Nearby Places

Healeys Lane

Healeys Lane is a cobblestone laneway in the central business district (CBD) of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Located on the CBD's northern edge between King Street and William Street, Healeys Lane runs north–south between Little Lonsdale Street and Lonsdale Street, close to Melbourne's legal precinct. Previously known as Healeys Alley prior to 1915, the lane was named in the 1860s after Martin Healey. With at least 25 Korean businesses situated in the laneway or in its vicinity, Healeys Lane is known as the Koreatown of Melbourne, and is also informally referred to as "Kimchi Lane" and "Kimchi Street", with the lane attracting approximately 5000 patrons a day. Healeys Lane's designation as Melbourne's Koreatown was formalised in September 2024, with Future Melbourne Committee passing a unanimous vote in 3 September 2024 to ratify the Koreatown precinct and to approve the installation of four 3-metre tall jangseung (traditional Korean totem poles) at the entrances of the lane. The Consulate-General of the Republic of Korea in Melbourne will fund the production and installation of the jangseung, while the Melbourne City Council will cover the costs of project management and relevant approvals. In collaboration with the Melbourne Korean Business Association (MKBA), the consulate-general is aiming for an official opening ceremony for the precinct in the first half of 2025. Healeys Lane's designation as Melbourne's Koreatown sees it join Chinatown and the Greek Precinct as one of Melbourne's designated cultural precincts.