Dr Mary Booth Lookout Reserve, Kirribilli - dogexplorer.com.au
Dr Mary Booth Lookout Reserve is a small dog friendly reserve overlooking Sydney harbour with views of the Opera House and Sydney Harbour Bridge
Sydney Walks : Dr Mary Booth Reserve Walkway, Kirribilli North Sydney
Mary Booth (1869-1956), physician and welfare worker; worked hard to protect the foreshore at Kirribilli North Sydney . Developers wanted, at the time, to build home units right down to the shoreline. Dr Booth mounted a campaign and saved the land for a reserve. The walkway has recently been redeveloped. Visitors & locals should come and have a look and spend some time admiring the harbour vista.
Sydney NYE 2015 at Mary Booth Lookout
Fireworks on Sydney Harbour
Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli for the Sydney New Years Eve 2010 Fireworks
Sitting at Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli for the Sydney New Years Eve Fireworks. The Harbour Bridge is to the right and the Opera House is just across the harbour. A fantastic place to view the fireworks later that evening. Get here by 10am for the better spots. The absolute best spots are snagged the night before.
Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli for the Sydney New Years Eve 2010 Fireworks
Sitting at Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli for the Sydney New Years Eve Fireworks. The Harbour Bridge is to the right and the Opera House is just across the harbour. A fantastic place to view the fireworks later that evening. Get here by 10am for the better spots. The absolute best spots are snagged the night before.
Sydney New Years Eve 2010 Fireworks from Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli
Sydney New Years Eve Fireworks as seen from Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli. The Harbour Bridge is to the right and the Opera House is just across the harbour. A fantastic place to view the fireworks. Get here by 10am for the better spots. The absolute best spots are snagged the night before.
Sydney New Year’s Eve 2018 Fireworks (view from Mary Booth Reserve vantage point)
Sydney New Years Eve Fireworks 2018 from Mary Booth Reserve vantage point
Sydney New Years Eve 2010 Fireworks from Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli
Sydney New Years Eve Fireworks as seen from Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli. The Harbour Bridge is to the right and the Opera House is just across the harbour. A fantastic place to view the fireworks. Get here by 10am for the better spots. The absolute best spots are snagged the night before.
Sydney New Years Eve 2010 Fireworks from Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli
Sydney New Years Eve Fireworks as seen from Dr Mary Booth Lookout, Kirribilli. The Harbour Bridge is to the right and the Opera House is just across the harbour. A fantastic place to view the fireworks. Get here by 10am for the better spots. The absolute best spots are snagged the night before.
Dr Mary Booth Lookout - View of Sydney Harbour - 11 January 2011
View of Sydney Harbour from , Dr Mary Booth Lookout
Filmed By Greg Burt
Video Footage Property of; darkhorse853.webs.com
SYDNEY NYE Fireworks 2017 - Mary Booth Reserve
Harbour Bridge view of the NYE fireworks at Mary Booth Reserve. A full view of the opera house can be seen.
For more information, visit:
Happy New Year from Sydney!
SYDNEY HARBOUR WALK - KIRRIBILLI - North Shoreline - Luna Park Ferry
0:00 Walking from Milsons Point Railway Station. At 2:20 Shops, pubs and cafes of Kirribilli. At 8:44 Walk down Jeffrey Street to harbour views. At 12:18 walk along Kirribilli Avenue to Admiralty House(17:28) and Kirribilli House. At 19:00 Lady Gowrie Lookout, harbour views then down the steps to water level... back up the stairs.. At 25:13 down more stairs and walk along Waruda Street. At 27:54 it's down stairs to Dr. Mary Booth Lookout reserve, walk along the shoreline the bridge with views of The Opera House and city skyline . At 34:37 a close-up look at The Sydney Harbor Bridge. Bradfield Park. At 41:00 down stairs to Luna Park, North Sydney Olympic Pool. At 47:56 a ferry ride across the harbor to Circular Quay....THE END..Thanks for watching. Filmed with a DJI Osmo Pocket.1080p 60-fps. External mic -Saramonic SR-XM1. SYDNEY WALKS.
Views of Sydney, The Opera House, Harbour Bridge, skyline, CBD, North Sydney, Blues Point Tower. Greater Western Sydney. Multicultural, cultural diversity. African migration, Islamic culture, Vietnam, Vietnamese, Cambodia, Laos, Indian, Asian Chinese refugee harmony Crime illegal boat people. Food. Buddhist temple.
Netball, Rugby League union Wests Tigers, Balmain, AFL, soccer WSW, Wanderers,Giants GWS Fights police. Kookas, Primary High School. church walking tour walk along walkabout, street view. Melbourne, London. Auburn, Cabramatta, Parramatta, Liverpool City, St Marys, Penrith, Mount Druitt. #SydneyWalks #Walk #Walking #Walks #DJIOsmoPocket #London #ArchivingLondon #WalkingAuistralia #Travel #Sightseeing
Captain Henry Waterhouse Reserve, Kirribilli - dogexplorer.com.au
A dog friendly reserve and foreshore walk accessed at the bottom of Jeffreys Street
Sydney Kirribilli
Kirribilli is a suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. One of the city's most established and affluent neighbourhoods, it is located three kilometres north of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area administered by North Sydney Council. Kirribilli is a harbourside suburb, sitting on the Lower North Shore of Sydney Harbour
The name Kirribilli is derived from an Aboriginal word Kiarabilli, which means 'good fishing spot'. The suburb initially formed in the vicinity of Jeffrey Street and was subsequently part of a grant to James Milson (1785-1872), after whom Milsons Point was named. The area was largely covered in native bush. As the decades passed, the land was cleared bit by bit and sub-divided, first for the construction of large family residences during the 1840s, secondly for the erection of Victorian terrace houses from the 1860s onwards, and finally for 20th-Century flats.
Prominent early landowners in Kirribilli included members of the Campbell, Jeffrey and Gibbes families. Colonel John George Nathaniel Gibbes (1787-1873), the Collector of Customs for New South Wales, built 'Wotonga' - the forerunner of Admiralty House - in 1842-43 on a 5-acre (20,000 m2) site which he leased, and then purchased, from the Campbells. Gibbes' son, William John Gibbes, lived nearby in Beulah House during the 1840s. Beulah was later lived in by the Riley and Lasseter families. Eventually, the house was demolished and its grounds subdivided into numerous residential blocks which were put up for public auction in 1905.[3]
Secret Sydney 19: Badangi Bushland Reserve, Wollstonecraft
Bandangi Bushland Reserve
By Katie Rorison
This video, produced as part of a MDIA2008: Broadcast Journalism at the University of New South Wales, highlights the hidden beauty that can be found within the pocket of bushland known as Badangi Bushland Reserve on the northern foreshores of Sydney. I found this site’s beautiful natural environment, combined with the intriguing Indigenous and non-Indigenous historical use of the land interesting and inspiring, and thought this a great opportunity to shed light on a lesser known, but no less worthy, location in Sydney.
Badangi is the Aboriginal word for Rock Oyster, and its use as the title for this piece of land not only signifies an element of the bushland’s natural surrounds, but also pays respect to the historical association this land has had with the local indigenous communities for many years. With an abundance of native Australian flora and fauna as well as multiple walking tracks, Badangi Bushland Reserve is not only a place of peaceful respite for locals, but also has a fascinating industrial history. After European settlement, the sought after harbour front location of Badangi was used as a site for some of the North Shore’s earliest industries including a sugar refinery, kerosene works and the long running Oyster Cove Gasworks; in operation from 1917-1987.
NYE 2012 at Mary Booth lookout.
NYE 2012 at Mary Booth lookout.
Sydney Harbour Views - Balls Head Reserve Walking Track
Balls Head Reserve and Waverton Peninsula Reserve walking track.
Fantastic views of Sydney Harbour, including Sydney Harbour Bridge and Sydney CBD Skyline
Sydney New Year's Eve Time - Viewing from Watsons Bay
Sydney New Year's Eve Time and Firework showing - Viewing from Watsons Bay
Sydney New Year's Eve 2016 - Crazy 24 Hours
NYE 2016 Fireworks Picnic at Mrs. Macquarie's Chair, Botanical Gardens, Sydney, Australia. Celebrating New Year's with couch surfers. Happy New Year and welcome 2017.
Sydney NYE 2018 @ Blue's Point Reserve -- 9pm 'Family Fireworks'