El Alamein Fountain - Kings Cross, Sydney
The El Alamein Fountain in Sydney's Kings Cross was erected in 1961 to commemorate the deeds of the Australian Armed Forces in World War Two at El Alamein, Egypt. Today it serves 3 purposes: 1. A memorial. 2, An iconic landmark and meeting place. 3. A place for naughty fun
El Alamein Fountain - Sydney, Australia [HD]
El Alamein Fountain in Sydney, Australia
The El Alamein Fountain King Cross, Sydney NSW Australia in 2018
The El Alamein Memorial Fountain in Fitzroy Gardens, King Cross (Sydney NSW Australia) was designed by Robert Woodward. It opened in 1961 as a memorial to the Australian Imperial Forces 9th Division and commemorates the Battle of El Alamein, Egypt, in World War II. It is named for the Australian Infantry Forces (AIF) who fought near the Egyptian town of El Alamein, in two battles which helped turn the course of World War II. It was installed in 1961.
Morshead Memorial Fountain Sydney
Morshead Memorial Fountain at the entrance to the Royal Botanical Garden Sydney designed by architect Robert Woodward who also designed the El Alemein Fountain in Kings Cross.
Lieutenant General Sir Leslie James Morshead, (1889 – 1959) was an Australian soldier, teacher, businessman, and farmer, whose military career spanned both world wars. During the Second World War, he led the Australian and British troops at the Siege of Tobruk (1941) and at the Second Battle of El Alamein, achieving decisive victories over Erwin Rommel's Afrika Korps.
Robert Raymond (Bob) Woodward AM (1923 – 2010) was an Australian architect who gained widespread recognition for his innovative fountain designs
The El Alamein Memorial Fountain
Dedicated in commemoration of the deeds of the Ninth Division of the Australian Imperial Forces during World War 2
El Alamein Fountain Kings Cross
No walk through Sydney's Kings Cross is complete without a moment beside Robert Woodward's Modernist El Alamein Memorial Fountain on Darlinghurst Rd.where it meets Macleay St.
Kings Cross El Alamein Fountain Sunday 21st January 2013
The El Alamein Memorial Fountain is a fountain and war memorial in the city of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is located in the Kings Cross area, at the entrance to the Fitzroy Gardens on the corner of Darlingurst Road and Macleay Street.
The Martin Place Fountain at Martin Place, Sydney Business District, New South Wales, Australia
As seen in the 'Woman in Red Dress' scene in the Matrix, and the Mustang car rescue scene in Superman Returns.
El Alamein Fountain
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The El Alamein Memorial Fountain is a fountain and war memorial in the city of Sydney, Australia.It is located in the Kings Cross area, at the entrance to the Fitzroy Gardens on the corner of Darlingurst Road and Macleay Street.The El Alamein Fountain was commissioned as a memorial to soldiers who died in 1942 during World War II in two battles at El Alamein, Egypt, and was designed by the Australian architect Phill Taranto as employed by architectural firm Woodward and Woodward.
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Sydney's Must See Archibald Fountain
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Australia Square Fountain, Sydney
Australia Square Fountain, Sydney New South Wales, Australia.
Australia Square Tower is an office and retail complex in the central business district of Sydney at 264 George Street, and the Square is bounded by Bond Street, Pitt Street, and Curtin Place.
Designed by Harry Seidler & Associates was in 1964 Today, it remains a landmark building in Sydney and is regarded as iconic to Australian architecture. The outstanding feature of the Square is the Tower Building which from its completion in 1967 until 1976 was the tallest building in Sydney.
Berger Fountain in Loring Park, Minneapolis
The Berger Fountain is named after Ben Berger, the former Minneapolis parks commissioner who donated the fountain, a copy of the El Alamein Memorial Fountain Berger saw on a trip to Sydney, Australia, to the city in 1975.
The fountain flowed again after extensive renovations reopening in Summer 2019 in time for my visit.
Sydney Archibald Memorial Fountain - Hyde Park - Australia HD 02
Archibald Memorial Fountain Hyde Park - Sydney Australia.
The Archibald Fountain, properly called the J. F. Archibald Memorial Fountain.
The Archibald Fountain is the finest public fountain in Australia, is located in Hyde Park, in central Sydney, New South Wales.
Hyde Park, the oldest public parkland in Australia.
Hyde Park was named after the original Hyde Park in London.
Hyde Park, Archibald Fountain, Sydney-Australia
SYDNEY, the magnificent FOUNTAIN of HYDE PARK, AUSTRALIA ????️
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's go for a walk in central Sydney and let's admire the magnificent fountain of beautiful Hyde Park, the largest fountain (so I was told) in Australia. Here are all around views, enjoy!! Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com. Sydney is the state capital of New South Wales and the most populous city in Australia and Oceania. Located on Australia's east coast, the metropolis surrounds the world's largest natural harbour, and sprawls towards the Blue Mountains to the west.
Australia is a country and continent surrounded by the Indian and Pacific oceans. Its major cities – Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth, Adelaide – are coastal. Its capital, Canberra, is inland. The country is known for its Sydney Opera House, the Great Barrier Reef, a vast interior desert wilderness called the Outback, and unique animal species like kangaroos and duck-billed platypuses.
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Darling Harbour Fountain, Sydney
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Episode 7 - Photographing and editing a water fountain - Archibald Fountain
In my seventh video we head to Hyde Park in Sydney to photograph the Archibald Fountain.
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Archibald Fountain in Hyde Park - Sydney
Archibald Fountain, Sydney (DMC-TZ7)
There's something very calming and peaceful about this water fountain that makes one want to sit in the park all day...
Archibald Fountain Hyde Park Sydney
Archibald Fountain Hyde Park Sydney New South Wales Australia, probably Sydney's most famous ornamental water fountain.
The Archibald Fountain, properly called the J. F. Archibald Memorial Fountain. It is named after J. F. Archibald, owner and editor of The Bulletin magazine, who bequeathed funds to have it built. Archibald specified that it must be designed by a French artist, both because of his great love of French culture and to commemorate the association of Australia and France in World War I.[1] He wished Sydney to aspire to Parisian civic design and ornamentation. The artist chosen was François-Léon Sicard, who completed it in Paris in 1926. It was unveiled on 14 March 1932 by the Lord Mayor of Sydney.