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Crossway Baptist Church

1954 establishments in AustraliaBaptist churches in MelbourneBaptist multisite churchesBuildings and structures in the City of WhitehorseChurches completed in 1954
Evangelical megachurches in AustraliaModernist architecture in AustraliaUse Australian English from January 2020
Crossway Church service
Crossway Church service

Crossway Baptist Church is a Baptist evangelical multi-site megachurch based in Burwood East, in the eastern suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The church is affiliated with the Australian Baptist Ministries.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Crossway Baptist Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Crossway Baptist Church
Vision Drive, Melbourne Burwood East

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Wikipedia: Crossway Baptist ChurchContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -37.859083 ° E 145.1672922 °
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Address

Crossway Baptist Church

Vision Drive 2
3151 Melbourne, Burwood East
Victoria, Australia
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Phone number

call+61398863700

Website
crossway.org.au

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Crossway Church service
Crossway Church service
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Nearby Places

Wobbies World
Wobbies World

Wobbies World was an amusement park which operated from about 1980 to the late 1990s in the Melbourne suburb of Nunawading, Australia. The park consisted of many custom-built attractions, most slow moving and aimed at very young children. The park had some characteristic modes of transport including a helicopter "Whirliebird" monorail circuit, mower motor driven 6 wheeler ATVs, a real Bell helicopter refurbished as a ground-mounted simulator, a "Splashdown" mini log ride, a mini-golf course, trampolines, a ball pit, several food and drink kiosks, a miniature train circuit, a miniature car circuit, four Melbourne W2 class trams and a large Vickers Viscount propeller plane fitted out as a movie-projector simulator. The plane now resides at the Australian National Aviation Museum, in Moorabbin, while the Bell helicopter is dismantled and currently sits in a paddock on Dandenong–Frankston Road at 38°03′57″S 145°12′02″E. One of the Whirliebird helicopters now resides in the front yard of a private residence [1] Despite memorable television advertisements over the decades, the park slowly deteriorated in the mid to late 1990s and had closed down by the end of the decade. Its demise has been linked to the high entrance fee for the time ($36 for a family of four in 1994) and the charging of separate fees to use some of the attractions.A plant nursery and the Saxon Wood town house estate occupied the Springvale Road site, but the entrance gate (without road), concrete castle, bridges, a train station, the Birthday Room and the miniature golf course from the former amusement park still remained within the nursery. In September 2012, the state government announced that a new Forest Hill police station was to be built on the site. The plant nursery had now closed. The site is now the location of the new Forest Hill Police Station.