Melbourne: Library
Places and attractions in the Library category
Categories
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- Shopping centre
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- Area
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- Art museum
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- Bridge
- History museum
- Concerts and shows
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Skyscraper
- Historical place
- Nightlife
- City hall
- Specialty museum
- Shopping district
- Art gallery
- Garden
- Arenas and stadiums
- Architecture
- Music venue
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Concert hall
- Universities and schools
- City
- Cemetery
- Library
- Memorial
- Performing arts
- Modern art museum
- Lake
- Sacred and religious sites
- Music and shows
- Golf
- Cinema
- Monuments and statues
- Market
- Mosque
- Neighbourhood
- Climbing
- Piers and boardwalks
- Entertainment
- Football
- Synagogue
- Event space
- Bars and clubs
- Modernist architecture
- Tennis
- Playground
- Dancing
- Italianate architecture
- Victorian architecture
- Art Deco architecture
- Neoclassical architecture
State Library of Victoria
Cultural hub in 19th-century buildings The State Library Victoria is the main library of the Australian state of Victoria. Located in Melbourne, it was established in 1854 as the Melbourne Public Library, making it Australia's oldest public library and one of the first free libraries in the world.
Monash University Museum of Art
Monash University, Caulfield campus is a campus of Monash University located in Caulfield, which is a suburb of Melbourne, Australia, in the state of Victoria. The campus comprises 13,400 students of which 52.8% are female and 57.1% of students are enrolled in undergraduate courses.
Camberwell Town Hall
Camberwell Town Hall is located, on Camberwell Road, Camberwell, an inner eastern suburb of Melbourne, Australia. The Town Hall was built in 1891 in the free classical style and features Second Empire influences in the steep pitch of the clock tower's pyramidal mansard roof.
St Kilda Public Library
The history of the St Kilda Library dates back to 1860, when the St Kilda Council received a community request to fund a free public library to be built coinciding with a building for the Mechanics’ Institute.
RMIT University Library
RMIT University Library consists of six academic branch libraries in Australia and Vietnam. Its four Australian branches are located on the RMIT University campuses in Melbourne City, Bundoora and Brunswick; and its two Vietnamese branches are located at the RMIT University Vietnam campuses in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi.
Baillieu Library
The Baillieu Library is the largest of the eleven branches which constitute the University of Melbourne Library. Its impressive collections are central to teaching, learning, and research in the arts, humanities and social sciences.
Ringwood Library: Edmond and Corrigan
The Ringwood Library: Edmond and Corrigan is situated in the Eastern suburbs of Melbourne, Victoria, within the Ringwood Plaza complex. completed in 1995 The building stands alone as an icon in the area of Ringwood and sets itself apart from the surrounding plaza and is...
Women's Art Register
The Women’s Art Register is Australia's living archive of women's art practice, and a national artist-run, not-for-profit community and resource in Melbourne, Australia.
MacFarland Library
The MacFarland Library at Ormond College, the University of Melbourne, completed in 1965, was Frederick Romberg’s second building for Ormond College. The initial scheme for the building in 1962 was a largely classical building that drew on elements from many of Romberg’s buildings from the previous decade.
Mannix Library
Mannix Library is an academic theological library located in East Melbourne, Australia. The library specialises in the areas of theology, philosophy, biblical studies and associated disciplines, and supports teaching and research at Catholic Theological College and the wider University of Divinity.
Williamstown Town Hall
Williamstown Town Hall is a civic building located in Williamstown, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia. The hall was built in two stages, the first being the front municipal offices, designed in the Greek revival style to the design of then young architect Joseph Plottel, dating from 1919.