Liverpool Street is one of the main streets in the Hobart City Centre, in the state of Tasmania.
Liverpool Street | |
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Liverpool Street from the Argyle Street intersection with the 1831 Webster facade to the left | |
General information | |
Type | Street |
Length | 1 km (0.6 mi) |
Major junctions | |
East end | Brooker Avenue |
West end | West Hobart |
Location(s) | |
Suburb(s) | Hobart CBD, West Hobart |
It runs parallel to Macquarie and Davey Streets from Brooker Avenue's Railway Roundabout in the north, then southward through the central section of the CBD where it crosses Campbell Street, Argyle Street, Elizabeth Street (near Criterion Street and Mathers Lane which connect to Bathurst Street at the Farm Gate Market) and Murray Street, and then on to the south end of the city centre across Watchorn Street, Harrington, Barrack and Molle.
Royal Hobart Hospital is located on its eastern side, near Brooker Avenue. It is connected via a skybridge over Argyle Street to the Wellington Centre, which has an entrance on Liverpool with Woolworths Hobart CBD and the Bank Arcade.
Historically locals referred to the "west end" of Hobart's CBD when frequenting the cinema or theatre along Liverpool Street, which was home to the Odeon Theatre and His Majesty’s Theatre. Village Cinemas capitalised on this in 1976, naming Tasmania's first multiplex on nearby Collins Street the West End Twin.
It was well photographed at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries.[1][2][3][4] It has had in the past hotels, like Harringtons, on the corner of Liverpool and Harrington Street.[5] Many large banks still run along its length, such as NAB at a corner of Elizabeth Street opposite Goldings Corner.
On 22 September 2007 fire destroyed the historic Myer building. In November 2014 construction started on the site. On 26 November 2015 stage 1 of the new Myer store opened as the Icon Complex, with access to the Cat and Fiddle Arcade. During construction of stage 1 at Myer Liverpool Street between Murray Street and Elizabeth Street was changed from two lanes to one lane.
Liverpool Street tram line
editBetween 1893 and 1958, trams operated along the Liverpool Street line. Commencing at the Hobart Railway Station, the line travelled up Liverpool Street through Hobart CBD, before beginning to climb westwards into the foothills of kunanyi / Mount Wellington. It was a double track to Warwick Street, except for two sections where the curve or narrowness of the road required a single contraflow section of track.[6]
This line was exceptionally heavily used, and during peak hour traffic, it was usual for two cars to run each scheduled service. On certain occasions, even three cars were operated in conjunction for the run as far as Warwick Street.[6]
The Liverpool Street line crossed the Elizabeth Street line on the level at the junction which is now the northern end of the Elizabeth Street Mall, but its only connection to the rest of the network was a single line in Park and lower Macquarie Streets in front of the Hobart tram depot.[7]
Notes
edit- ^ Walker, James Backhouse, Photograph of Liverpool Street, Hobart c. 1870, University of Tasmania Library Special and Rare Materials Collection, retrieved 27 February 2019
- ^ Walker, James Backhouse, Photograph of Liverpool Street, Hobart c. 1898?, University of Tasmania Library Special and Rare Materials Collection, retrieved 27 February 2019
- ^ Walker, James Backhouse, Photograph of Liverpool Street, Hobart with Wholesale & Retail Drapery Warehouse in foreground, University of Tasmania Library Special and Rare Materials Collection, retrieved 27 February 2019
- ^ Harvey, J. H. (John Henry) (1880), Liverpool Street, Hobart, retrieved 27 February 2019
- ^ Dennison, C. J; Hobart City Council (2008), Here's Cheers : a pictorial history of hotels, taverns & inns in Hobart, Hobart City Council, ISBN 978-0-9805139-0-5
- ^ a b Stokes, Jim. "Exploring Hobart with Moore's Guide in 1953" (PDF). The Times - August 2005. Australian Timetable Association Previously Australian Association of Timetable Collectors. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
- ^ "Companion to Tasmanian History: Tramways". University of Tasmania. Retrieved 1 January 2010.