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    Norwood Town Hall

    Norwood Town Hall

    3.3(3 reviews)
    2.3 kmNorwood

    Norwood Town Hall on the corner of the Parade and George Streets is the home of the combined…read morecouncils of Norwood, Payneham and St Peters. The Town Hall is the main customer service centre for the councils and is open Mon - Fri from 8.30 to 5pm. The building itself was opened in back in 1883 and is similar in style to many other town hall buildings like the Adelaide and Glenelg Town Halls. While the oldest section of the Town Hall fronts onto The Parade, the section behind extends into George Street and is actually a large concert hall and performance venue. Back in the 1880 when it was first opened, a prestigious art school where the likes of Hans Heysen studied was located upstairs in the Town Hall's commercial offices. The Norwood Town Hall has been lovingly cared for over the years and is still a formidable building among the sites of the Parade. While everything has changed around it this elegant building has remained proudly unchanged.

    I've lived in Norwood (on and off) for quite a few years. And only once have I made use of the…read moreNorwood Town Hall's facilities as a council service - more frequently my experience has been retail in nature. I visited the customer service section once, for on street parking permits. And my albeit brief encounter was A-ok: friendly staff, easy process. I had pictured it kind of like "Parks and Recreation" but it wasn't really...but I can't hold that against it. More often though, I've visited the Hall for the regular sample and designer clearance sales. (I think this says more about me than the Norwood Council though). Every so often designers will hold their sales in the huge old concert hall you enter via the side. It's a perfect venue for it, with a huge space for the racks and racks of clothing, makeshift change rooms (warning: you will get partially undressed in front of a bunch of other girls) and registers. The interior is as old school as the iconic exterior suggests: it's a lovely building and addition to the local flavour.

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    Norwood Town Hall
    Norwood Town Hall
    Norwood Town Hall

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    The Don

    The Don

    5.0(2 reviews)
    1.1 kmNorth Adelaide

    Without a doubt, Australia's most celebrated cricketer would have to be Donald Bradman. Known to…read moreall as 'The Don' there is a statue commemorating his sporting achievements just outside Adelaide Oval on Victor Richardson Road and it is simply one of most stunning statues I've seen in Adelaide. This larger than life bronze - it is actually a 2.5 metres - commemorates the sporting feats of a man who was viewed as a cult hero through his entire life and possibly will be forever more. I first noticed the statue one night as I was driving down Sir Edwin Smith Avenue from the opposite side of King William Road. The statue was perfectly lit from beneath and looked incredible in the evening light. I think I had the perfect viewing experience. Having visited the statue again, during the day and from a closer vantage point was a totally different experience. It was still a stunning piece of art but somehow different. Like the legend of the man, everything about the statue is oversized from Bradman's feet to his cricket bat. The artist is Robert Hannaford and depicts Bradman playing a shot. If you're a sports buff or you just appreciate good art, go and take a look but I suggest you go at night when viewing is at its best.

    The Don is one of Robert Hannaford's finest sculptural works. This wonderfully expressive sculpture…read morewhich sits outside the Adelaide Oval is a bronze cast from a clay sculpture by Hannaford. It depicts Sir Bradman performing his trade mark cover drive and quintessentially captures the movement and quality of Bradman's poise. The gaze of the work is strong, piercing almost, and adds to the vitality of the habit so well caught. The direction of Bradman's vision directs us up, so as to imagine the flight path of the ball he has just struck. The handling of the work is textural and loose. A lovely aged patina gives Hannaford's sculpture the air of antiquity adding credence to the eminence of Bradman's legend.

    Bonython Hall - Bonython Hall can be used for other events other than university stuff, like TEDx 2013. Beautiful interior & perfect acoustics.

    Bonython Hall

    4.0(3 reviews)
    0.3 kmAdelaide

    Bonython Hall is a gothic revival style building situated on the North Terrace in the Cty of…read moreAdelaide. The building was constructed in the late 1800's to serve as the "Great Hall" of the University of Adelaide. Both the architecture and function of the hall were modeled on the Tudor Gothic style Great Halls of Oxford and Cambridge. The Hall is these days largely reserved for ceremonial purposes such as graduations and the like, and is of some attraction to newcomers to the city. In reality, however, Bonython Hall is a bit of a farce. Miniature in comparison with "Great Halls" upon which it is modeled, the the purpose of its construction was so as to prevent the running of highway through the centre of the university. Its architectural stylings were chosen out of its time to provide a false historicity to the university and in the opinion of many experts, the concrete monstosity that is the napier building is of greater architectural significace as an example of contemporary 1950's architecture. Not only this, but the entire exterior of the building is a facade in the gothic style, laid upon a structure buit with materials contemporary to the time of its construction, namely brick and concrete. Despite this I still think its a pretty building. We don't have much else like it around town and tickets to Europe are quite expensive. So enjoy what you've got I say.

    Yes, you will have a "you're a wizard, Harry" moment in here. Spectacularly old world in its…read morearchitectural stylings, Bonython Hall is a one-off in Adelaide and a simply lovely place to visit. I worked at the Uni a few years back and as part of this I attended graduations and reunions held in the big ol' Hall on North Terrace. They were pretty magical. The huge pipe organ playing, the deafening sound of hundreds of feet, the proud parents and giddy be-gowned grads. The reunions were especially heart warming, with oldies who had studied at the University of Adelaide 50 years back re-visiting the Hall and re-enacting their graduation ceremony in the very place it was first held. This sense of continuous history is a great thing for a University and its students...and a far cry from the off-campus graduation ceremony I had at the Festival Theatre after finishing my degrees at UniSA (not that I'm bagging out my alma mater). There is a bit of a lean to the floor and it can get quite slippery: my advice to grads, maybe opt for the sensible flats and keep the heels for later! Yep I'm nothing if not practical, peeps.

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    Bonython Hall
    Bonython Hall
    Bonython Hall

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    Venus Statue - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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