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The casino that is employing you will submit a completed Form 9: Application for a casino employee licence to the Office of Liquor and Gaming Regulation (Note: This form will be part of your application package). Your employer will also submit the following documents to OLGR with your application: identification documents. My heavy vehicle licence The term 'heavy vehicle' applies to the trucks, B-doubles and road trains that transport goods across Australia. It also includes buses, trams, agricultural machinery, livestock transporters, tankers, grain and delivery trucks and other long and possibly slow moving vehicles on our roads.

The government of South Australia has passed a law extending SkyCity Entertainment Group's exclusive casino licence, clearing the way for a $A300 million expansion of its riverside complex.

Analysts say the Adelaide development is much more of a game-changer for the casino and hotel company than its politically contentious deal with New Zealand's government to build an Auckland convention centre in exchange for increased gaming concessions.

The amendment to the state's Casino Act allows for a 20-year extension of SkyCity's exclusive casino licence until 2035, the introduction of cashless gaming and ticket in, ticket out (TITO) technology, lower gaming tax rates for VIP gaming, an increase in slot machines by about a third to 1500 and an increase in gaming tables to 200.

The investment in the site on the banks of the River Torrens includes a six-star hotel, restaurants and new gaming facilities. The state government has called the development 'the jewel in the crown' and touted its benefits to tourism and job creation.

High-class entertainment precincts with luxury VIP facilities 'are vital to attracting high-end Asian, particularly Chinese tourists', chief executive Nigel Morrison says in a statement. 'Our development will help South Australia attract a greater share of this lucrative and growing market.'

The company will be allowed to lift higher maximum bets, jackpots and cashless gaming transaction limits in VIP Premium rooms under its agreement with the state, first announced last December.

The agreement also sets new tax rates for gaming with an increase in non-VIP electronic games to a maximum of 41 percent from 34.4 percent and a new VIP electronic game tax of 10.9 percent.

Non-VIP table game tax rates increase to 3.4 percent from 0.9 percent, while VIP table games stay at 0.9 percent.

Forsyth Barr analyst Jeremy Simpson said in a May report that SkyCity's major opportunity in Adelaide is in the electronic gaming machine market, of which its casino has only an 8 percent share of the city's market for slot machines.

With current restrictions, Adelaide Casino's daily win rate per slot machine is about $A180, compared to $A300 in Queensland, $A400 in New South Wales and Victoria and $NZ360 in Auckland, Mr Simpson said in his report.

'The Adelaide Casino under-performs many other casinos in Australia and New Zealand on a number of metrics, and what is proposed in Adelaide will level the playing field in a number of areas.'

Shares of SkyCity last traded at $4.20 and have gained 11 percent this year. It is rated a 'buy' based on the consensus of eight analysts surveyed by Reuters, with a median price target of $4.75.

(BusinessDesk)

Australia Hotel
General information
StatusDemolished
TypeHotel
LocationCastlereagh Street, Sydney, New South Wales
CountryAustralia
Coordinates33°52′05″S151°12′35″E / 33.86806°S 151.20972°ECoordinates: 33°52′05″S151°12′35″E / 33.86806°S 151.20972°E
Groundbreaking1889 by Sir Henry Parkes
Opened1891 by Sarah Bernhardt
Closed30 June 1971
Demolishedc. 1971 – c. 1972

The Australia Hotel was a hotel located in Castlereagh Street, Sydney in New South Wales, Australia. From its opening in 1891 until its closure on 30 June 1971 and subsequent demolition, the hotel was considered 'the best-known hotel in Australia',[1] 'the premier hotel in Sydney'[2] and described itself as 'The Hotel of the Commonwealth'.[3] The hotel was situated in one of Sydney's important thoroughfares in the heart of the city.

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Opening[edit]

The foundation stone was laid by Sir Henry Parkes in 1889, and the opening of the new establishment was performed two years later by Sarah Bernhardt, whose name was first in the new hotel's register, subsequently displayed in a glass showcase in the main foyer. The Sydney Morning Herald reported 'French actress Sarah Bernhardt arrived in Sydney, bringing with her 100 pieces of luggage. As hundreds of fans flooded onto Redfern railway platform as her train approached, she was whisked away from the platform to the Australia Hotel where hundreds more excited fans wanted to catch a glimpse of the glamorous celebrity. Her expensive flower filled 2nd floor suite played host to pets including a large St Bernard, a smaller pug dog, a native bear and several cages containing possums and parrots. Theatergoers, many of whom had paid up to £2 for a seat, were genuinely moved by Mme Bernhardt's performance in Dumas' La Dame aux Camillias at Her Majesty's Theatre. After the show, drama critics called her a 'woman of genius' saying she had held the audience spell bound.' Next to the hotel, across Rowe Street, stood the famous Theatre Royal.

Architecture[edit]

Martin Place in the 1950s. The building on the corner to the left is the Commercial Travellers Club Building and the 'modern' twin-wings of the Australia Hotel next to it were demolished in 1971-2 to make way for the MLC Centre.

The hotel had a large entrance onto Castlereagh Street in polished granite, the stairs grey and white marble, the doric columns red. The squared columns in the entrance foyer were imported Italian marble, and the magnificent neo-classical staircase which led from the main foyer to the first floor was completely in multi-coloured Carrara marble. From that floor to the 10th a massive carved and highly polished mahoganyVictorian grand staircase, with stained glass windows, led to their rooms those guests, who, in the early days of lifts, still preferred to walk.

The first floor contained a pillared corridor with various reception rooms, in addition to the Winter Garden - 'famous for its morning and afternoon teas, light luncheons, and theatre suppers', and the Moorish Lounge, leading to the huge dining room - the Emerald Room, with its highly decorated ceiling some 6.1 metres (20 ft) above the guests, Italian chandeliers, and a dais at the west end containing a white marble operating fountain and other statues, engulfed in palm court style shrubbery.[4]

In the late 1920s an extension was constructed to the north of the main hotel which fronted onto the city's historic Martin Place. A highlight of this block was its circular art deco black glass staircase.

A small branch of department store David Jones Limited was located in the hotel, which provided goods for visitors, hampers for sending to Great Britain and Australiana souvenirs.

The hotel also contained a number of very fine paintings of Australian scenes including eight watercolours by the famous artist, Gladstone Eyre.[4]

Standards[edit]

The hotel boasted international standards of comfort and service. The Australia became 'the place to stay and be seen by the upper echelons of society'.[5] The hotel remained an oasis for those who scorned modernity and sought the more refined atmosphere of the classic European hotels. Apart from the accommodation for guests, rooms were also provided in the Rowe Street wing for their servants, including the children's nurses, who had their own dining room with their charges. Robert Helpmann had a suite permanently reserved; Marlene Dietrich stayed there several times (thereafter her suite, rooms 707–708, was named after her)[4] and one lady lived there for 31 years.

Notable events[edit]

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A patron stands on the marble steps of the doomed Hotel Australia. The closure notice is pasted on a column.

The hotel hosted many famous events.

  • On Monday, 28 January 1901, the hotel saw the literary Bohemian society of Sydney gather for the send-off of Scottish-Australian poet and bush balladeer Will H. Ogilvie (1869–1963). Those present included painter Julian Ashton, writer Barbara Baynton, poet Christopher Brennan, poet Victor Daley, writer Albert Dorrington, playwright Alice Eyton, sculptor Nelson Illingworth, journalist Agnes Storrie, poet Louise Mack (Mrs Creed), singer Eva Mylott, poet Banjo Paterson, poet and member of parliament Patrick Quinn, poet Roderic Quinn, artist Tom Roberts, artist D. H. Souter, and writer and critic A. G. Stephens.[6]
  • The hotel was the venue for the first meeting for the establishment of the Wireless Institute of Australia in March 1910.[7]
  • Later in 1910 Australasian Wireless Limited obtained a licence from the Postmaster-General's Department to run telegraphy tests, from the hotel's 6th floor, with ships at sea, on 27 August. It was subsequently permitted to handle commercial traffic in 1911 – the first in Australia.[8]
  • 5 December 1915 a fire broke out at 11.30 am in the north-east corner of the roof and quickly spread, eventually gutting the upper three floors, but without loss of life.[9]
  • In January 1941 Cabinet Ministers gave a dinner at the Australia for Mr. Robert Menzies who was about to leave for Great Britain.[10]

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  • In April 1949 the hotel had the historic importance of being the venue of the first successful television demonstration in Australia, when the State Governor, Lieutenant-General John Northcott was televised in the hotel's ballroom as he opened the demonstration.[11]

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Closure, demolition, heritage[edit]

In 1968 the Hotel Australia was purchased by the MLC Insurance and Finance group who, amid mounting concerns, announced their intention of refurbishing and maintaining the hotel, one of the city's landmarks. However the following year they announced its impending closure[12] and closed it on 30 June 1971. They demolished it in almost record time, to erect a modern $200 million, 68-storey office block/skyscraper in its place; the MLC Centre. (MLC was later purchased, in 2000, by the National Australia Bank).

The Royal Australian Historical Society who fix their famous Green Plaques to historic buildings and sites, placed their 39th plaque on the MLC Centre in memory of the Australia Hotel.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Fire in Hotel Australia'. Singleton Argus (NSW: 1880 - 1954). National Library of Australia. 18 June 1954. p. 4. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  2. ^Sunday Times, Sydney, NSW, 2 July 1916 p.25.
  3. ^Sydney Harbour Bridge Official Souvenir & Programme, NSW Government Printer, 1932, p.128
  4. ^ abcAuction Catalogue. F. R. Strange Pty. Ltd. July 1971. pp. 24, 28, 50.
  5. ^http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/33522593?q=Australia+Hotel%2C+Sydney&c=picture&versionId=41205345
  6. ^'BOHEMIA UP TO DATE'. Freeman's Journal. LII, (3239). New South Wales, Australia. 2 February 1901. p. 11. Retrieved 13 December 2020 – via National Library of Australia.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  7. ^'A WIRELESS ENTHUSIASTS' INSTITUTE'. The Daily Telegraph (9606). New South Wales, Australia. 12 March 1910. p. 15. Retrieved 13 December 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^History of broadcasting in Australia#Coastal network Tranche 0
  9. ^'BIG FIRE. AT THE HOTEL AUSTRALIA. EXCITING SCENES'. The Sydney Morning Herald (24, 309). New South Wales, Australia. 6 December 1915. p. 10. Retrieved 20 April 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^The Argus, Melbourne, Victoria, Saturday 25 January 1941 p.17.
  11. ^'Television in N.S.W.'The West Australian (Perth, WA: 1879 - 1954). Perth, WA. 11 April 1949. p. 14. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  12. ^Daily Mirror, Sydney, Monday, 31 March 1969, p.22

Further reading[edit]

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  • Sydney Harbour Bridge Official Souvenir & Programme, NSW Government Printer, 1932, p. 128.

External links[edit]

  • Hotel Australia entry at the Dictionary of Sydney
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Australia_Hotel&oldid=993853164'