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  1. The Darlinghurst Courthouse is a heritage-listed courthouse building located adjacent to Taylor Square on Oxford Street in the inner city Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst in the City of Sydney local government area of New South Wales, Australia.

  2. In response to the overcrowding and chaotic state of King Street Courthouse, the construction of a new criminal courthouse, Darlinghurst Court, was initiated. In 1835 Governor Bourke directed the design of the courthouse to be situated outside Sydney Town, upon the hill opposite the new gaol, for convenient prisoner access and to separate the ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DarlinghurstDarlinghurst - Wikipedia

    Darlinghurst Courthouse is an imposing heritage-listed sandstone building on Taylor Square. It was designed by architect Mortimer Lewis in 1844, and has a Greek Revival style facade. The central block is adapted from an 1823 design in Peter Nicholson 's The New Practical Builder (Apperly, Irving & Reynolds, 1989).

  4. s.170 NSW State agency heritage register. Albury Courthouse is one of the few remaining buildings in New South Wales designed by Alexander Dawson. While small additions have been made to the rear of the building, the front remains relatively unchanged from Dawson's original design and is a rare example of his work.

  5. Darlinghurst courthouse. By 1830 the existing courts in Sydney Town were overcrowded, hearing cases that were sometimes chaotic affairs, and with their public galleries packed with a vocal, restive crowd of spectators who could easily wander in from the surrounding streets. Governor Bourke, who arrived in the colony in 1831, instructed the ...

  6. Sandstone court complex in Darlinghurst Road opened in 1842 and still in legal use. image. Locate-33.880416477985, 151.21782064174. Milestone . Constructed. 1837 - 1844

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  8. Darlinghurst Courthouse is an imposing heritage-listed sandstone building on Taylor Square. It was designed by architect Mortimer Lewis in 1844, and has a Greek Revival style facade. The central block is adapted from an 1823 design in Peter Nicholson 's The New Practical Builder (Apperly, Irving & Reynolds, 1989).

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