place

TC Beirne Department Store

Commercial buildings completed in 1902Fortitude Valley, QueenslandQueensland Heritage RegisterRetail buildings in QueenslandUse Australian English from February 2015
Warehouses in Queensland
TC Beirne Complex and Fortuneland Centre (2000)
TC Beirne Complex and Fortuneland Centre (2000)

The TC Beirne Department Store is a heritage-listed former department store at 28 Duncan Street, Fortitude Valley, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by Robin Dods and built in 1902. Further extensions were made through to 1938 to the designs of Dods and Hennessey & Hennessey. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 12 December 2003.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article TC Beirne Department Store (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

TC Beirne Department Store
Chinatown Mall,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: TC Beirne Department StoreContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -27.4585 ° E 153.034 °
placeShow on map

Address

TC Beirne

Chinatown Mall 28
4006 , Fortitude Valley (Fortitude Valley)
Queensland, Australia
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q19879846)
linkOpenStreetMap (24257533)

TC Beirne Complex and Fortuneland Centre (2000)
TC Beirne Complex and Fortuneland Centre (2000)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Electoral district of McConnel
Electoral district of McConnel

McConnel is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Queensland. It was created in the 2017 redistribution as essentially a reconfigured version of Brisbane Central. It covers the Brisbane CBD, as well as the suburbs of Kelvin Grove, Herston, Bowen Hills, Newstead, Teneriffe, Fortitude Valley, Spring Hill, Petrie Terrace and New Farm.It is named after Mary McConnel, one of Queensland's early European settlers, who came to Queensland in 1849. With her husband David McConnel, they ran the Cressbrook pastoral station. Mary McConnel was a close friend of Diamantina Bowen, the wife of the first Queensland Governor George Bowen, and together with a committee of ladies, they embarked on a program of building hospitals for women and children, such as the Lady Bowen Hospital which provided maternity services. After the Bowens left Queensland, Mary McConnel continued to raise funding to build a children's hospital. The Hospital for Sick Children in Brisbane was opened on 11 March 1878.From results of the last election, McConnel is estimated to be a marginal seat for the Labor Party with a margin of 3.1%. Grace Grace, the last member for Brisbane Central, transferred to McConnel and won with a modest swing. The electorate containing what is now the Brisbane CBD has been known variously as Town of Brisbane (1859–1873), Brisbane City (1873–1878), North Brisbane (1878–1888), Brisbane North (1888–1912), Brisbane (1912–1977) and Brisbane Central (1977–2017).