Publication - Brisbane Airport
Transcription
Publication - Brisbane Airport
FR EE yo m ur ag az ine Issue #5 OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2014 brisbane INSIDER Things to do for FREE Escape Another side of LA Surprise finds in Tasmania what’s on KATY PERRY: How divorce has changed her THE LION KING: Who said it was a bad idea? Style Race day winners Kids on cruise control Michelle Obama First Lady with star power THE WORLD’S MOST LUXURIOUS BRANDS AT TAX & DUTY FREE PRICING JR/Duty Free are proud to land at Brisbane International Airport. New Arrivals & Departures stores now open. SMOKED GARAGE SOVEREIGNTY SMOKED MOTORCYCLES JI. Raya Kerobokan No.5 Bali 531 Kessels Rd Macgregor 4109 Brisbane CONTACT 07 3343 8088 [email protected] BIG BOBBER 2014 Honda 300cc (XT 500 AND SR500CC available) THE BBG CAFE RACER THE LEGEND CB HONDA 100 LONG BLACK TWIN 1976 HONDA CB TWIN THE KNIEVEL HONDA TIGER ABOUT US. Because we love bikes. You gotta love bikes to do this, looking at ‘em, riding ‘em, tearing them apart and having the vision to build them into something new and different, each one an expression of mechanical passion made manifest in steel two-wheeled performance. Because from the first chopped, slammed and tuned-up Honda Karisma in 2004 until the road-eating CBR 900 we have sweated, bled, grinned and flew down Bali roads- in pursuit of the rush that only bikers know- we keep our stoke about each bike we make. OWN DESIGN WELCOME • CONCEPT TO FINISHED PRODUCT 12 WEEKS SOVEREIGNTYSMOKEDBIKES.COM.AU Welcome to a new edition of your free BNE Magazine, brought to you by Brisbane Airport contents Brisbane Airport News 22 What’s new at the airport: G20 activations; eGates trial; hotel and conference centre development; JR/Duty Free moves in 24Travel news 9 Michelle Obama Why the First Lady has a public profile as high as her husband’s 10 Brisbane Insider 6 Free things to do around the city; Global Café a forum for future ideas 12 Open for inspection Brisbane’s most intriguing buildings open their doors to the public 16 Easy co-ordinates for a life of leisure Head strong What to wear to turn heads at Melbourne Cup Tours to raise an appetite 29 Behind the bar The drink that has a press portfolio of its own and the barman who created it what’s on 30 Katy Perry sees the light T he countdown has begun to the G20 Leaders Summit which will be held in Brisbane on 15 and 16 November, a once-in-a-generation event that will attract worldwide attention to the city. But here, not all eyes will be on the leaders. Many will be hoping to catch a glimpse of at least one of the partners – First Lady of the United States (yes, her twitter ID is FLOTUS), Michelle Obama. As First Lady she has been active in promoting a healthy lifestyle and good education and has been open about her own life experience as a working mother which has endeared her to a legion of fans and earned her an approval rating higher than her husband’s, leading some to speculate she may have a future political career of her own ... enjoy reading BNE The dark secret behind her latest tour 32The Lion King’s story of survival need to know It almost didn’t make it to the stage 38Terminal Maps gallery 39 Helpful information for 34 Day in the life visitors to Brisbane Airport You won’t believe what you’ll find on a couple of farms near Hobart New rules for electronic devices; Halloween getaway and more escape 18Trails of the unexpected Away from Hollywood there are some great attractions food & drink 26 Moveable feasts style 14 Kids on cruise control Another side of LA Brisbane Airport’s G20 team behind the scenes last word 36Professor Ian Frazer, 40 42 Destination map Brisbane metro map medical research pioneer What he loves about Brisbane BNE magazine is published bi-monthly by Brisbane Airport Corporation. Brisbane Airport Corporation, Media Manager: Leonie Vandeven Managing Editor: Heather McWhinnie ([email protected]) Designer: Stephen Bryett Sales Director: Chris May ([email protected]) or call 0401 312 312 33 14 18 ©2014 Brisbane Airport Corporation The contents of this publication are not for reproduction, redistribution or reuse by any means whatsoever or in any form whatsoever without express permission of the publisher. Advertising: all advertisements in BNE magazine are the responsibility of advertisers. Advertising is accepted on the understanding that it does not contravene the Trade Practices Act. Responsibility is not accepted by BNE magazine for statements made or the failure of any product or service to give satisfaction. The publication of any material or editorial does not necessarily constitute endorsement of views or opinions expressed. While every effort is made to avoid errors, some information contained in the publication may be superceded. The text pages of this magazine are from sustainably managed forests and controlled sources. BNE October/November 2014 | 05 New hotel and conference centre for Airport Brisbane-based developers Anthony and Scott Flynn will build two new hotels and a conference centre at Brisbane Airport, with construction set to begin by February next year. The $150 million development will include a 5-star Pullman Hotel and a 3.5 star ibis hotel operated by Accor which also operates the Novotel Brisbane Airport hotel at Skygate. Novotel Brisbane Airport is one of the most successful in the Accor portfolio, playing host to more than 350,000 guests and 4500 conferences since its opening in 2009, and demand is likely to continue according to passenger forecasts. International and domestic passengers at Brisbane Airport increased to 21.8 million in the last financial year and numbers are expected to reach 38 million per year in the next 20 years. The new hotels and conference centre will be located within easy access of the Domestic Terminal and connection to the CBD via the Airtrain. The Pullman Brisbane Airport hotel will include 130 rooms, including two Presidential Suites and 10 junior suites, a 20-metre lap pool, an executive club lounge and bar, gym, business centre, lobby lounge and bar, restaurant and private dining room. The ibis Brisbane Airport hotel will have 243 rooms, alfresco dining and bar as well as a rooftop lounge and bar. The Brisbane Airport Conference and Meeting Centre will cater for up to 600 people and will include a large ballroom, eight conference rooms, four executive boardrooms, a business centre and open air terrace. The project is expected to provide 1000 jobs during construction and employ more than 300 people at the hotels when they open in November 2016. Terminal upgrades Travellers flying Jetstar, Skytrans and Tigerair will have noticed that upgrades to the central Common User area of the Domestic Terminal are well underway. New self-service baggage drops and a new information desk have been installed, while state-of the art check-in facilities, new x-ray equipment, increased baggage reclaim facilities and wayfinding signage is also included in the $10 million upgrade to be completed by April next year. Virgin Australia has also been working with Brisbane Airport Corporation to upgrade aerobridges and extend and refurbish its business lounge with work to be completed by mid-2015. 6 | BNE October/November 2014 BRISBANE AIRPORT NEWS New duty free open When the late David Mandie launched his duty free business he chose Brisbane Airport as its first site in 1972 and he became universally recognised as the pioneer of duty free shopping in Australia. Today the James Richardson Group duty free business that Landie founded is back where it all began as the new duty free operator at Brisbane Airport, occupying 1600 square metres in the Departures zone and 800 square metres in the Arrivals zone of the International Terminal. In December it will add a dedicated space for a luxury watch boutique. The new JR/ Duty Free retail space is the cornerstone of Brisbane Airport’s $45 million redevelopment of its International Terminal which is on track to be completed by July next year. eGate departures to expand An automated eGate system that has been trialled at Brisbane Airport’s International Terminal since July will be rolled out to airports around the country by the middle of next year. Only passengers holding a special ePassport will be able to use the eGate kiosk which uses face recognition technology to match a ‘live’ picture taken of the passenger at the kiosk with the picture in their passport. If they match, and the passenger meets other checks, they are cleared to exit. Travellers will be able to apply for ePassports when their old passport expires or if they are applying for a new passport. The system is expected to streamline the border security process and it is anticipated that 90 per cent of international passengers will need to be using the system by 2020 if airports are to be able to cope with the increased number of travellers. A similar SmartGate system is already being used at capital city airports as well as key regional centres such as Cairns and Coolangatta to process international arrivals holding Australian, UK, US, Singapore or Swiss ePassports. An expanded trial of this system will also begin next year to include travellers holding ePassports from Canada, Ireland, Malaysia, Japan, China, India, France. Image: The White House/Pete Souza WHO LOVES A SELFIE, THEN? Join the snaparazzi Security is going to be tighter than Tony Abbott’s budgie smugglers but that doesn’t mean you won’t be able to get a picture with the world leaders when the G20 Summit comes to town. When travelling through Brisbane Airport in November keep your eyes peeled for the familiar faces of Barack Obama and others (in 2D life-sized, security-free, cardboard cutout form) at dedicated ‘Selfie Centres’ in the Domestic and International Terminals. This could be the closest you’ll get to rubbing shoulders with, and capturing a smile from the world’s most influential leaders during G20 in Brisbane. For details of this and other activations at the airport in November, including David Hooper creating art works with chalk on the pavement of the concrete forecourt of the Domestic Terminal, follow BNE on facebook and watch the results unfold on Instagram. BNE October/November 2014 | 7 DISCOVER QT HOTELS AND RESORTS They’re not your ordinary hotels, they’re anything but. Offering an eclectic mix of design and art – it’s style and luxury with a touch of quirk. Put it together with bars to be seen at, restaurants you just have to eat at, you’ll start to get a taste of life QT Style. Sydney • Gold Coast • Port Douglas • Falls Creek • Canberra 28 | BNE August/September 2014 qthotels.com.au COVER STORY First Lady with star power Michelle Obama is active in promoting healthy lifestyle and a good education and it’s earned her an approval rating higher than her husband’s Image: The White House/Chuck Kennedy W hen world leaders arrive in Brisbane for the G20 Leaders Summit as many eyes will be on the partners who accompany them as on the leaders themselves. Michelle Obama, in particular, is likely to attract attention, and not just because of her statuesque 1.8m height and sense of style that has been scrutinised the world over. The First Lady of the United States has a popular following and, as her husband serves his final term in office, speculation is rife she may pursue a senatorial campaign of her own. Forbes listed her at number 8 in its annual list of most powerful women of the world earlier this year, reporting that her approval rating (at 66 per cent) is higher than the President’s (at 44 per cent). It’s true that she gets to do a lot of fun stuff. She was a presenter at the Academy Awards and she’s appeared on popular television shows, dancing with Ellen and playing up with Jimmy Fallon. She’s been photographed doing everything from tai chi to Bollywood dancing, from yoga and skipping to even tug’o’war and potato sack racing. But there is a serious side to all the fun and games. In 2010 when Barack Obama created a task force on childhood obesity his wife Michelle launched a health initiative called Let’s Move with an ambitious goal to reverse the nation’s childhood obesity epidemic. The campaign has received wide support and a high profile with the help of celebrities including Ellen De Generes and Fallon, and Michelle Obama has travelled widely to schools and communities to encourage participation. When she launched the program, Obama told the New York Times that she hopes it will be her legacy. “I want to leave something behind that we can say ‘because of this time this person spent here, this thing has changed’ and my hope is that that’s going to be in the area of childhood obesity,” she said. She also has been a champion for healthy eating, planting the first kitchen garden at the White House which sees a steady stream of children pass through to help with the gardening, alongside Obama. Bee hives have also been installed in the White House gardens and the produce they generate is used for state dinners and official events. In 2012 Obama launched a book about her experiences with the garden and promoting healthy eating. One of her latest initiatives is to encourage students to continue their education beyond high school and, for that, Obama is a perfect role model. In her first official international engagement as First Lady Obama told school students in England that she “liked being smart”. “I never cut class, I liked being on time, I liked getting my work done, I liked getting As,” she said. She told the audience of young women that she was raised with the belief that with a good education and a whole lot of hard work there was nothing she couldn’t do. Neither of her parents had been to university but Obama graduated from Princeton and then Harvard Law School. Obama says she has had good role models of her own. “I am an example of what’s possible when girls from the very beginning of their lives are loved and nurtured by the people around them. I was surrounded by extraordinary women in my life: grandmothers, teachers, aunts, cousins and neighbours who taught me about quiet strength and dignity. My mother, the most important role model in my life, lives with us in the White House and helps to care for our daughters Sasha and Malia and she has an active presence in their lives as well as in mine, instilling them with the same values that she taught me and my brother; things like compassion, integrity, confidence and perseverance.” Obama’s openness about her family life in interviews has won her many fans. When she fronted a Working Families Summit with her husband at the White House earlier this year the couple were candid about their own experiences of balancing work and family. The media has repeated often Michelle’s story about going to a job interview with her newborn daughter when she couldn’t get a babysitter. “I was wearing my nursing shirt. I told my boss ‘this is what I have: two small kids, my husband is away. I will not work part-time, I need flexibility, I need to be able to afford babysitting, and if you can do all that and you are willing to be flexible with me I will get the job done. I can work hard on a flexible schedule’.” She got the job and later became one of its senior management team. In January this year Michelle Obama turned 50 but she was not fazed. “I have never felt more confident in myself, more clear of who I am as a woman. But I am constantly thinking about my own health and making sure that I am eating right, getting exercise and watching aches and pains. I want to be this really fly 80 or 90-yearold,” she told an interviewer. “We were raised with the belief that with a good education and a whole lot of hard work there was nothing we couldn’t do” BNE October/November 2014 | 9 BRISBANE INSIDER Free stuff A walk in the park Where might you see a water dragon, a rainforest, a lake, an amphitheatre and one of the best views of the city skyline all from the city centre? Take a guided walk in Roma Street Parkland to find out. In 1825 the parkland was part of the original Brisbane settlement, now it is 16 hectares of glorious green space that also pays tribute to Queensland Greats on a special wall. Walks depart from The Hub at 10am and 2pm daily. Or book one of their special tours on art, heritage and other topics of interest in advance. For details see www.visitbrisbane.com.au or call 1300 137 468. 10 City secrets revealed Blair Allsopp is a brilliant storyteller and keeps people engaged for hours as a Brisbane Greeter hosting free walking tours around the city, and he’s got stories about sights in the city even a local has never noticed, from church bells and ancient coins to clocks and creepy gargoyles. Blair and the Brisbane Greeters can give the back story to these and familiar sites around the city on walking tours that depart City Hall every day at 10am. Choose a Greeters Tour or Your Choice Tour. See www.visitbrisbane.com.au/brisbane-greeters 9 Listen up Brisbane writer Zenobia Frost (left) will read from her newly published collection of poetry Salt & Bone at Couplet, an event hosted by poet Ghostboy (David Stavanger) which also features World Cup poetry winner David Hallett. Brisbane Square Library, 7 November, 5.30pm-6.30pm. See www.brisbane.qld.gov.au 7 8 Fitness by twilight Anne Noonan feels so much better since she started yoga five years ago that she wants to share her experience with the community. Anne leads a free twilight yoga session in the Botanical Gardens at Mount Coottha, on the first Saturday of each month starting at 4pm. Anne believes yoga in the gardens is even more beneficial in the cool twilight air with the grass between your toes. “It’s energising and better for the spirit,” she says. Tailored to suit all levels. BYO mat and water. Meet at the lawn opposite the Planetarium. Family movies Monsters vs Aliens is screening on Halloween night, 31 October, as part of Manly’s free Movies in the Park program at Little Bayside Park, corner of the Esplanade and Cambridge Parade, Manly. Movie screens from 6.30pm. More films screening on the first Saturday of each month all year round from December. See www.manlyharbourvillage.com global café a forum for future ideas It’s no longer size that matters in a ‘new world city’, according to global research director of international property giant JLL (Jones Lang LaSalle) Rosemary Feenan. Instead, it’s attitude, vision, adaptability and a city’s leadership that defines a new world city today, she says, and Brisbane appears to be going in the right direction. In JLL’s Business of Cities report in 2013 Brisbane was named one of 10 ‘cities to watch’, noting its lifestyle and investment improvements as key to bringing it out of the shadows of its ‘bigger’ interstate rivals as an urban identity in the Asia Pacific region. Brisbane is also ranked number 18 on JLL’s Investment Intensity Index, above cities such as New York and Tokyo, punching way above its weight in attracting real estate investment relative to its size. London-based Feenan will be presenting more of her research 10 | BNE October/November 2014 findings about how different cities are meeting the demands of modern urbanisation and what attributes make them competitive for commercial investment on a global scale at Brisbane Global Café, just ahead of the G20 Leaders Summit in Brisbane. While G20 leaders will focus their discussion on global economic and employment issues, Brisbane Global Café will be a forum for more expansive topics. About 70 national and international speakers will take part to share information on future issues from urbanisation and tourism to digital innovation and improving human life. Hear the talks for free broadcast on-screen in King George Square outside City Hall, during Brisbane Global Café. Brisbane Global Café will be on at City Hall, 12-13 November. Entry to City Hall talks will be by ticket only. For details and to register to attend see www.globalcafe.com.au and follow @BNEGlobalCafe Images: (This page top) Tourism and Events Queensland/Paul Ewart; (above left) Raw Bones Photography Learn something, hear a new band, have a laugh, play a game and more 2 3 Game On Test your game skill at giant chess, scrabble, jenga, dominoes, and more in the open air at Games Night on King George Square, outside City Hall on the last Thursday of each month. Next one on 30 October, 5pm-9pm. Or, prefer to play indoors? Drop in to Games After Five at Brisbane Square Library, 17 October and 21 November. No bookings required. 6 5 Free learning The local library isn’t just about reading. From iPad apps and Facebook privacy to Pinterest basics, or how to use Gumtree and eBay – even how to bring butterflies into your garden – you can learn for free at regular events held at the local library. For the full program see www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/whatson/venue/library-events Weekend of entertainment TGIF – by the end of the working week it’s time for a little relief and Knockoff delivers with comic precision every Friday at Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm. Brisbane’s own ImproMafia troupe makes it up as they go along and spices the act with songs on the last Friday of every month from 6pm ... And start the week on the right note with a double bill of music talent also at the Powerhouse every Sunday afternoon, 3.30pm5.30pm. See who’s playing at www.brisbanepowerhouse.org 4 Tales from the gaol From Churchie Grammar boy to Chopper Read’s bodyguard – Mark ‘Hammer’ Dixon has had an eventful life, to say the least, which he has chronicled in a book called Hammer Bash for Cash. Dixon will be one of the authors giving free talks about their experiences and their books at Boggo Road Gaol in October to mark the anniversary of the gaol’s closure 25 years ago. Hear Dixon on Sunday 12 October from 11am at what used to be the Contact Visits Area of the gaol and is now the new shop. For details see www.boggoroadgaol.com Walk back in time Brisbane City Council has added three new guides to its series of self-guided walking trails that now cover 10 areas from the city to Indooroopilly. Latest guides offer maps and a back story to Millionaire’s row in Ascot and a meander around Albion that traces its heritage from Aboriginal settlement and Chinese market gardens to industrial prosperity. See www.brisbane.qld.gov.au for the guides. Book online and save with Brisbane Airport Parking Why would you do anything else? 125 $ * PARKVALET Week Special Arrive like a star! * Specials only available if booked online at least 1 hour prior to arrival. For Terms & Conditions please refer to www.bne.com.au. BNE October/November 2014 | 11 FEATURE Open for inspection The public will get a rare peak inside some of our most interesting buildings during Brisbane Open House, as Elisabeth Galvin discovers F Toonarbin was originally the home of Irish captain Henry O’Reilly, then it was a convent for 70 years, then the once stately mansion stood empty for 10 years before the current owners bought the property in 2007 and discovered a neglected Georgian beauty behind the red brick façade. The owners enlisted friends and skilled craftsmen from as far afield as Scotland to help remove gyprock and the ‘institutional’ beige paint that covered the walls and ceilings to reveal a glorious trove of red cedar skirting Five years, 30 specialist tradespeople and 50 boards, ornate cornices, ceiling roses, windows skips of rubble and garden waste: it is difficult to with original stained glass and 10 fireplaces. comprehend the extraordinary feat of restoring Upstairs, 100 windows were removed, stripped, one of Brisbane’s oldest residences from an reglazed and painted. uninhabitable shell to a magnificent home The challenge was to restore the property in but that’s exactly what the current owners of the absence of any records of what it originally Toonarbin at Highgate Hill have achieved. looked like inside, while at the same time rom private homes to Parliament House, from innovative workplaces to a Windmill tower, 89 of Brisbane’s most historic, unique, unusual and technologically advanced buildings will be open to the public for special tours on 11 and 12 October. In particular it’s an opportunity to see how some very passionate owners have made an effort to preserve our architectural heritage. Toonarbin, West End 12 | BNE October/November 2014 using craftsmen such as a blacksmith. It took 18 months alone to restore the ceilings using a traditional technique of lath and plaster. Furnishings and fittings have also been sourced to reflect the original period of the house as much as possible. Toonarbin, on Dornoch Terrace, was built by esteemed architect Benjamin Backhouse and is estimated to have been erected in the mid-1860s. The fact that Toonarbin’s birthday remains a secret adds to the charm of the beloved landmark. “People often knock on the door and tell us how they used to have music lessons in the kitchen,” say the owners. “We love sharing it with people. To some extent it’s not just our house. It belongs to the city. Our hope is to have restored it in a manner that means it will be preserved for ever.” Jacobi House, Indooroopilly “We are fortunate to know the original owners who have been invaluable in our restoration,” says Amanda Baxter of her 1957 property in Indooroopilly. “Owners of older homes don’t have that luxury. We are pleased to have gotten to know the Jacobi family and gained their approval. I think they have enjoyed the restoration as much as we have.” Jacobi House (pictured left) is thought to be the only one of its style in Australia, as architect Campbell Scott applied modernist principles to a traditional Queenslander. Painted white, black and pumpkin-orange, the wooden home is compact with three glass sides linking the inside to the outside environment. Its central chimney is the building’s supporting structure and the roof is suspended under spectacular orange beams. Built for practicality, it stands on stilts, with louvers in the chimney for hot air to rise and escape, a sprinkler on the roof for cooling and a wraparound veranda. “It is the polar opposite of most of the homes built in the post-war period, which are fully enclosed,” says Amanda, who, with her partner Ken, have become somewhat experts on 1950s architecture through their ongoing renovation project, which they are doing with help from Amanda’s father. It has taken seven years so far. They have linked up with other lovers of modernist design in Australia and have even travelled to Palm Springs in California, a mecca for homes of the period. They have sourced authentic furniture from as far away as Germany. “Houses of this era are worth preserving because they reflect a change in society,” says Amanda. “After the war, homes became places to entertain; people were prosperous and began to be open to ideas from outside of Australia. Jacobi House is part of Australia’s architectural history.” Open House weekend is on 11 and 12 October with free tours of buildings, talks and guided walks. For the full list of buildings and activities see www.brisbaneopenhouse.com.au Hanworth House, East Brisbane “This house has a goodness that you can feel when you walk through the door,” says Marisa Vecchio, owner of Hanworth House in East Brisbane. In 1913 philanthropist Mary Wienholt set up Hanworth House in memory of her mother as a hospice for “impecunious gentlewomen”. When Vecchio and her husband bought it, the residence needed considerable restoration, which was just weeks away from completion when a fire, lit by an arsonist, destroyed 70 per cent of it in March 2013. It was finally finished in July this year. The house (pictured right) was built in 1864, commissioned by George Poynter Heath, Brisbane’s first portmaster who had nine children. Legend has it that ghosts of the family remain, with haunting signs such as hall bells that ring every now and then, despite not being connected to electricity for more than 20 years. In 1995 the Anglican Church bought the property and it became the Hanworth Home for the Aged until the Vecchios bought it two years ago. Each room is named after a woman connected with the house, such as the laundry room called Joyce – its namesake was an illiterate laundry woman so beloved by her mistress that she was allowed to remain in the house even after her mistress died. “Former residents and people who used to work here have happy memories of the place,” says Vecchio. “I want to pay homage to Hanworth’s sense of community. This time, in the corporate community.” Now the home provides boutique accommodation for rural professional women. “When I came across Hanworth House I had recently lost my mother to ovarian cancer. It was a sad time in my life but I think I was meant to buy it and restore it in memory of her – just as Mary Wienholt did for her mother exactly 100 years before.” The Vecchios’ hard work was recognised when the estate received a gold award from the Queensland Heritage Council and the National Trust’s highest honour, the John Herbert Memorial Award, for most outstanding nomination in the national awards this year. BNE October/November 2014 | 13 STYLE Cruise Control When school’s out the livin’ is easy in cool co-ordinates from the Witchery Kids range, designed for boys and girls aged 4 to 14 14 | BNE October/November 2014 Main picture, from left: (Girl) anorak $79.95, cropped fitted tee $29.95, lurex spot shorts $44.95, double buckle sandals $59.95; (boy) classic stripe tee $34.95, chino shorts $44.95 (available November); (boy) tailored jacket $79.95, marle dip dye tee $34.95, floral shorts $49.95; (girl) cotton lace pintuck blouse $59.95, woven pocket shorts $39.95, laser cut sandals $59.95; (girl) Aztec denim jacket $79.95, tie dye short $34.95 (available December); (girl) Biker denim jacket $89.95, lace peasant dress $69.95, Aztec print pant $54.95, moulded sandals $69.95. Left, from left: Denim jacket $89.95, marle dip dye tee $34.95, chino shorts $44.95, aviator sunglasses $19.95; marle number tee $29.95, marle sweat shorts $39.95. Below: Anorak $79.95, stripe drop waist dress $39.95. Hats are models’ own. All fashion from Witchery See www.witchery.com.au for stores or to buy online BNE October/November 2014 | 15 STYLE HEAD STRONG I t’s easy to see from the creations on this page that Felicity Beovink can spend up to two weeks creating one of her masterpieces of millinery. Boevink is one of Brisbane’s most sought-after milliners in the lead-up to Spring Racing Carnival and Melbourne Cup festivities, designing headpieces that are sculptural works of art. Boevink will make as many as 50 hats, all by hand, using materials sourced locally and from around the world, from specialist vintage suppliers and even friends who have collected unique feathers for her over a few years. Although flowers are traditionally the popular choice for spring, Boevink admits she is exploring a theme of flight with birds and butterflies this season. “Spring Carnival is one time as an adult you get to play dress-ups and explore the fantasy element of dress when you go to a milliner,” she says. “You can be anything you want for a day.” Wittner Teddi honey leather heels $199.95 Samantha Wills Fates Adventure clutch $330 Witchery Cecelia Cats Eye sunglasses $69.95 Stockists: www.felicityboevink.com; www.thehatbox.com.au; www.ascothats.com.au; www.mimco.com.au; www.samanthawills.com; www.adorne.com.au; www.tonybianco.com.au; www.witchery.com.au; www.wittner.com.au 16 | BNE October/November 2014 Mimco Gidget Varsity clutch $229; Samantha Wills Bardot ring $79; Phillip Rhodes hat from The Hat Box $595; Tony Bianco Clementine heels $189.95 Samantha Wills Magic Rush bracelet $180; Mimco Melrose 75 pump (sale) $99; Samantha Wills Night Shift earrings $175; Karen Valentine hat from The Hat Box $450 Patricia Balmer hat from The Hat Box $485; Tony Bianco Flynt heel $159.95; Adorne necklace $59.95; Samantha Wills Awake in the Dark earrings $120 Pamela Cameron hat from Ascot Hats $550; Mimco Big Top Dot heel $249; Adorne Mini Cutout Diamonds chain clutch $49.95 BNE October/November 2014 | 17 ESCAPE Trails of the unexpected Alice Hansen discovers Australia’s oldest golf course has been rejuvenated, and other surprises, within coo’ee of Hobart 18 | BNE October/November 2014 Islington Hotel Where to stay and play Preachers This is your local if you like the sound of Tuesday night bingo in a former Metro Bus and a hand-pumped two metre tall ale from the nearby Derwent Valley. Preachers also has its own brews under the label World’s End. Match it with a hearty burger and head for the beer garden. At 5 Knopwood Street, Salamanca. Jack Greene With 130 bottled beers from around the world and 16 constantly changing beer taps, Jack Greene is the ideal beer and burger destination with European-inspired style. Cosy in by the fire with a gourmet beef burger filled with wagyu goodness from Robbins Island off the windswept coast of north west Tasmania if you can find a seat amongst the locals. At 49 Salamanca Place, Salamanca. See www.jackgreene.com.au Smolt With its Spanish and Italian influence, Smolt is equal parts European and local in feel. Regional produce and handmade offerings such as breads and pasta are the hallmark of this restaurant. Settle in for a paella to share with a group of 20 or opt for tasting plates – Smolt is ideal for sharing while enjoying good friends, food and drink. At 2 Salamanca Square, Salamanca. See www.smolt.com.au Islington A boutique luxe hotel with just 11 meticulously furnished rooms, positioned with stunning views to Mount Wellington from its delightful garden setting in South Hobart. It’s the epitome of privacy and elegance with a stunning conservatory restaurant. At 321 Davey St, Hobart. See www.islingtonhotel.com “W hy not take the lake highway?” The suggestion is simple and from a complete stranger who just happens to be enjoying his coffee next to us in Hobart’s historic Salamanca precinct, but we’re in a mood for adventure and decide to follow his advice to take the highway that, apparently, few veer off to explore. As we’re about to leave, he issues a final word … “if you book ahead, you should stop by Belgrove Distillery in Kempton. It’s Australia’s first and only rye distillery. I think you’ll like it.” Now we’re intrigued and have a mission. Less than an hour later, we arrive at Peter Bignell’s distillery. It’s one of those classic Tassie stories – Peter produced rye as a trusty windbreak and for feeding his stock. Now he’s producing spicy rye whiskey that’s found its way to some of the finest bars on Australia’s east coast where it is being used to create new twists on many classic cocktails. “I had all this rye and didn’t know what to do with it,” Peter explains. “After doing a little work at Nant Distillery just up the road, it suddenly came to me. What else could I possibly do with this excess grain but make whiskey!” Further up the road, we follow more of our coffee mate’s advice and turn left at Bothwell, population about 400 (and at least 50 buildings registered or classified by the National Trust). But what our new-found friend didn’t tell us was that we’d stumble across the perfect place for an impromptu overnight stay – Australia’s oldest golf course, on a patch of land that happens to be one of the earliest inland settlements in the country – Ratho Farm. The farm was first settled by a boatload of pioneering Scottish settlers in 1822 who brought the game of golf with them. It has since played host to colourful characters ranging from Melbourne Cup winners, bushrangers, 100-year-old gardeners, golfing royalty and one of England’s best known artists, and to fierce political debates. Today it’s also a working sheep farm and, we can’t believe our luck, they have recently opened newly restored convict-built accommodation and there’s a comfy bed available for us. In fact, we discover that there is now accommodation for up to 40 guests in the cottages and the homestead. That evening we settle in with a hearty meal prepared by hosts Darren and Sylvia. We have prime highland trout fishing just metres from the veranda of our cottage and one of the world’s best preserved golfing grounds out our side window. BNE October/November 2014 | 19 ESCAPE Belgrove, like Nant and other distilleries, is putting Tasmania on the map for its whiskey production and it’s ‘golf driving’ distance from Ratho Farm, offering a rewarding drop after a round of highland golf This page, top: Peter Bignell, far left, with visitors in his rye field at Belgrove Distillery. Left: Coffee at Maldini’s in the historic Salamanca precinct, Hobart. Opposite page, top: Australian Golf Museum, Bothwell. Centre: Ratho Farm Homestead. Box, clockwise from top: Cascade Brewery, Hobart; Richmond Bridge; the view from the peak of Mount Wellington. Images: Maldini’s (left) by Glenn Gibson, (opposite page) Mount Wellington Lookout by Paul Fleming; Cascade Brewery by Michael Roberts, for Tourism Tasmania; Ratho Farm Homestead by Greg Ramsay 20 | BNE October/November 2014 As with any farm, all work, rest and play revolves around the homestead. It’s changed enormously since the early settlers were ransacked by bushrangers on the veranda in the early 1800s. It has been restored to its former glory by businessman Greg Ramsay, who grew up on the property with his family. We cosy up by the big open fire and later explore the History Room, showcasing how three generations of one of those early Scottish settlers, Alexander Reid, shaped Tasmania’s central highlands. We chat into the night about who is going to win the spontaneous golf battle the following morning. In keeping with the traditions of Old Scotland, Ratho Farm remains a public course and is open to all, every day of the week. Hickory clubs are available to enjoy the course as the earliest golfers once did, so we can’t help ourselves, we must be authentic. The newly re-opened course features a fantastic mix of holes, including the open and windswept old holes, restored original holes in a parkland setting, and four newly designed holes along the Clyde river bank towards neighbouring Nant Distillery. With bars in Melbourne and Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley, Nant, like Belgrove and other distilleries, is putting Tasmania on the map for its whiskey production and it’s within ‘golf driving’ distance of Ratho, offering a rewarding drop after a round of highland golf. Today the golf balls might not be made of kangaroo skin stuffed with merino wool, nor are there bushrangers at the ready to attack, but the history of Ratho Farm is very much alive as the Ramsay family adds a new chapter to Ratho’s well-documented past. As we bid the lovely hosts farewell we realise it’s taken us two days to travel less than 100 kilometres. I think we could get used to Tasmanian time. Fly direct from Brisbane to Hobart with Virgin Australia, Jetstar and Qantas 10 things Hobart is (almost) famous for Ratho Farm at Bothwell is Australia’s oldest golf course, but there are more things that Hobart and surrounds can claim to be famous for … 1. The first parking meters in Australia were installed in Collins Street, Hobart in 1955. 2. The first legal casino in Australia was opened at Wrest Point, Hobart, in 1973. 3. Hobart is home to Australia’s oldest live theatre venue, The Theatre Royal. Sunset at Fannie Bay 4. Australia’s oldest brewery, the Cascade Brewery, is in Hobart. 5. George Adams established the first Tattersalls Lottery in Hobart in 1896. This lottery has now evolved into Australia’s Tattslotto system. 6. Australia’s first and oldest existing synagogue was built in 1845 in Hobart where services are still held every Friday. 7. Australia’s oldest bridge still in use is the convict-built Richmond Bridge 25km north of Hobart. 8. Hobart is the second driest capital city in Australia after Adelaide. 9. Is Snug the cosiest name for a town? The small coastal town 30km south of Hobart on the Channel Highway is thought to have got its name from sailors who thought it provided ‘snug’ anchorage for their boats in the D’Entrecasteaux Channel. Keep driving and the town of Flowerpot is further down the highway. 10.The Point to Pinnacle (or P2P as the locals call it) is the 21.4km half marathon from Wrest Point Casino to the top of Mount Wellington and it’s uphill all the way! From sea level to 1270 metres to be exact. You can breathe easy knowing that standard entries are sold out for this year’s race on 16 November but start training, and book early, for next year. BNE October/November 2014 | 21 ESCAPE Another side to LA M Tim Richards takes a detour downtown in LA and discovers some special attractions not to miss any travellers think they have Los Angeles figured out. It’s Disneyland on one side and the Pacific coast on the other, Hollywood up top, and lots of freeways in between. Right? It’s true that the combined appeal of Mickey Mouse, beaches and the silver screen isn’t going to fade any time soon. However, in the heart of LA where tourists rarely go, there are attractions around the revived Downtown area which provide new insights to the City of Angels. Take a walk along Broadway below Pershing Square and look out for such gems as Loew’s State Theatre, once the home of Metro Pictures; the stylish Tower Theatre which screened the first “talkie” in 1927; the renovated Orpheum Theatre where you can still catch a classic film; and the extraordinary Los Angeles Theatre, modelled on the Palace of Versailles. Better still, at 10am Saturdays there is a Broadway Historic Theatre and Commercial District Walking Tour. See www.laconservancy.org and restaurants with a smart casual vibe. A highlight here is Rush Street (9546 Washington Blvd), a Chicago-style bar with classy burgers and craft cocktails, the latter containing memorable local ingredients such as tequila, jalapeno chilli or agave syrup. Other great local bars include City Tavern (9739 Culver Blvd), with its multitude of beers; wine specialist Bottlerock (3847 Main St); and the smooth Seventy 7 (rear of 3843 Main St), a speakeasy bar in an alley. 1. The French Dipped Sandwich 3. The Grammy Museum 5. América Tropical On the western edge of Downtown, the Grammy Museum (800 W Olympic Blvd) is housed within LA Live. This purpose-built precinct is filled with live performance venues and cool eateries. The museum’s exhibits are cleverly laid out, with lots of interactive elements. You’re sure to learn something about unfamiliar genres as you make your way through each level. There are alcoves devoted to particular musical genres, from jazz to rock, each featuring details of its history and stars. Another great feature is a classic jukebox which has been souped up by the addition of a digital music library and big screens. As each tune plays, text pops up to explain the song’s history. You may have trouble tearing yourself away from playing the nostalgic hits of your childhood. See www.grammymuseum.org Before Los Angeles was a great American city, it was a tiny Spanish village. The heart of that village, El Pueblo (www.elpueblo.lacity. org), survives just north of Downtown and there’s plenty to see on a wander around this compact area. Off a broad plaza, pedestrian Olvera Street leads north past old, low buildings and is dominated by a colourful ‘Mexican marketplace’. A highlight is the Avila Adobe, a home built in 1818 for a wealthy Mexican cattle rancher and the oldest building still standing in the city. A little further along is an even more intriguing museum, opened in late 2012: the América Tropical Interpretive Center (americatropical.org). This institution explains the political turmoil of the Depression era in LA, focusing on the controversial América Tropical mural painted in 1932 above Olvera Street by a Mexican muralist. Climb the stairs to see the newly reexposed art … and reflect on the always lively story of LA. LA’s foodie treasure is the French Dipped Sandwich, as perfected by Philippe the Original (1001 N Alameda St). This old-fashioned diner on the edge of Chinatown has funky retro décor, long timber tables, sawdust on the floor and a counter selling classic candy. What makes the place special is its roast beef sandwich. According to legend it was created by accident in 1908, when a sandwich intended for a hungry policeman was accidentally dropped into the bottom of a roasting pan. The officer loved the result and from that time the French Dipped Sandwich has been on the menu. Nowadays it’s made while customers wait, incorporating a jus which has been rendered from roasting pan drippings and beef stock over two days. It’s served with pickles, chilli, potato salad, a boiled egg, and a big side serve of nostalgia. See www.philippes.com 2. Theatres of Broadway Move over New York – Los Angeles has a Broadway too. A century ago, it was the thriving shopfront of Hollywood, lined with cinemas showing the greatest movies to emerge from the city’s famous studios. Over the decades, LA’s Downtown fell on hard times. Now, however, the area is being regenerated and the marvellous old façades and interiors restored to their former glory. 4. Culver City Never heard of this LA locale, sitting halfway between Downtown and the beachfront of Santa Monica? Laid out in 1917, this suburb has always been a movie-making hub. It still hosts the vast Sony Studios, where The Wizard of Oz was filmed when the lot belonged to MGM. The regular studio tour reveals famous sets and props behind art deco façades, then a walk to the intersection of Washington and Culver Boulevards is the gateway to a neighbourhood of great bars Getting there Fly direct from Brisbane to LA with new daily services by Virgin Australia from 26 October 2014. See www.virginaustralia.com Tim Richards was hosted by the Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board Where to stay Figueroa Hotel (939 S Figueroa St). Casablanca collides with ancient Arabia at this lush inner city oasis originally built in 1925 as a YWCA then converted to a hotel after the Depression. It’s a popular watering hole pre- and post-concerts and shows nearby. A hot spot for people watching. See www.figueroahotel.com 22 | BNE October/November 2014 Culver Hotel (9400 Culver Blvd). Opened in 1924, the hotel was in its heyday in the 1930s and ‘40s providing a temporary home for film stars in The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind as Culver City also became the home of the major movie studios. A major renovation was completed last year. See www.culverhotel.com Millennium Biltmore Hotel (506 S Grand Ave). This European-style palace celebrates 90 years this year and the grande dame has played host to many movies including Iron Man, The Dark Knight Rises and Bridesmaids which have filmed scenes in its plush surrounds. For more information see www.millenniumhotels.com Image: Tim Richards Image: Tim Richards Clockwise from top left: Inside the Figueroa Hotel; Philippe’s is the home of the original French Dipped Sandwich; many movie scenes have been filmed in the Millennium Biltmore Hotel which celebrates 90 years; the Grammy Museum; the Culver Hotel is recently renovated; the Los Angeles Theatre on Broadway; a cart and a street performer in the pedestrian precinct of Olvera Street known as the Mexican Marketplace BNE October/November 2014 | 23 TRAVEL NEWS Image: Tourism and Events Queensland/Darren Jew Turtle season escape As one of nature’s great annual journeys comes to an end and whales disappear from Australia’s east coast another one is just beginning in Queensland’s north. From now until March next year Heron Island’s natural coral cay will be the breeding ground for giant Loggerhead and Green Sea Turtles as they lumber to shore to lay their eggs. Enjoy a Turtle Season Escape priced from $477 per person, twin share, for three nights including accommodation, breakfast, snorkel trip, reef walks and turtle talks. Available for travel from 6 October 2014 to 31 March 2015. Call 1300 233 432 or see www.heronisland.com/turtles for details. Conditions apply. App control SAIL away 23 MAY 2014 | PAGE 2 Guests at Brisbane’s new Next Hotel are given remote access to their hotel room with an app that can be used for check in, check out, room service, even to dim the lights or control the air conditioner before they enter! Samsung Galaxy tablets in every room are also the new ‘city guides’ providing access to maps, places to go, things to see and local updates on events. They also can be used to access cheaper international calls. Next Hotel Brisbane, 72 Queen Street, city, call (07) 3222 3222 or see www.nexthotels.com/brisbane 23 MAY 2014 | PAGE 2 Viking River Cruises has been a winner with tourists (and plenty of Australians among them) who choose to explore Europe in sedate luxury and so the company decided to canvas past guests for feedback before it launched into ocean cruising. Once again it appears to be on a winner with the maiden season of its first cruise ship, the Viking Star, almost sold out before it even hits the water next year. According to Teresia Fors, managing director Viking Cruises Australia and New Zealand, customers wanted destination-focused tour programs with more time in port, less sea days and a small ship experience that is good value. Viking Star is a ‘small ship’ with capacity for less than 1000 passengers, only staterooms with verandas, one pool with a retractable dome roof for all-season swimming and another glass-backed infinity pool cantilevered off the stern, a spa in true Scandinavian style with sauna and snow grotto (yes snowflakes softly descend from the ceiling through chilled air), multiple dining options and entertainment that includes an on-board cooking school. Most importantly, packages are all-inclusive so shore excursions and ship-board meals are accounted for in the fare. Viking Star itineraries in 2015 include Scandinavia and the Baltic, the Mediterranean and the British Isles. Two sister ships are already under construction, the Viking Sky and Viking Sea, which will debut in 2016. For more information see www.vikingcruises.com.au/oceans/ 24 | BNE October/November 2014 New security measures Travellers on flights to, from and via the US and UK, including stopovers through Europe, Africa and the Middle East, should be prepared for new security measures that require all items powered by lithium batteries – such as mobile phones, tablets, laptops – to be carried in hand luggage, not in checked baggage, and all devices must be able to be turned on at security, or passengers risk having the device confiscated or be denied boarding, says Flight Centre chief operating officer Melanie Waters-Ryan. “Keep your chargers and power adaptors on hand to avoid the device going flat. If you can’t prove your device functions as normal, there is a strong chance you will not be allowed to fly, or you may have your item confiscated and/or have to undergo additional screening,” she says. See www.flightcentre.com.au/travel-news/travel-tips/ new-airport-security-rules-electronic-devices/ TRAVEL NEWS Haunting weekend O’Reilly’s Rainforest retreat in the Gold Coast hinterland is hosting a haunting weekend from 31 October for Halloween with candlelit dinners and ghost and glow worm tours into the deep dark forest. Guests also will be able to visit the Stinson plane crash site where two survivors were miraculously discovered after 10 days by local bushman Bernard O’Reilly who led a heroic rescue. Complimentary wine tastings at O’Reilly’s Vineyards in Canungra the next day. One night packages from $259 per person. For details see www.oreillys.com.au/specials-packages/ Festival time on Sunshine Coast Girl Paused by Janna Pameijer The curtain may have come down on Brisbane Festival for another year but out of town the fun is just beginning in the Sunshine Coast hinterland. Spicers Tamarind Retreat at Maleny plays host to 16 sculptors from across South East Queensland for Sculpture on the Edge until 29 October; non-fiction literature provides the entertainment at the Reality Bites Festival from 23 to 26 October at venues in Eumundi and Cooroy (Ian ‘Molly’ Meldrum’s memoir launch will be a hot ticket); the Glasshouse Country Festival will celebrate arts, culture, environment and heritage from Beerburrum to Mooloolah and to the foothills of the Blackall Range over 10 days of activities from 17 to 26 October; and Caloundra Regional Gallery will showcase the finalists and winner of the Sunshine Coast Art Prize until 26 October. For Stay and Play packages see www.visitsunshinecoast.com.au News Flash! Brisbane’s most illuminating private club. The Brisbane Polo Club is regarded as one of the most progressive private Clubs in Queensland. You are invited to discover a boutique Club offering these key membership benefits: • Reciprocal rights at over 100 private Clubs worldwide • Privacy and exclusivity in key entertaining areas • Stunning heritage setting in prime CBD location • Key networking and social opportunities • Professional membership demographic • Contemporary food and beverage • Warm personalised service • Corporate partner benefits • Unique function venues dada-bpc024 • Gender equality • Unique events For information on membership options please call 07 3229 3766 or visit www.brisbanepoloclub.com.au BNE October/November 2014 | 25 wining & dining Moveable FEASTS Discover new foodie haunts, meet the makers and sample delicious treats on these tasty tours Jacqueline Gregory was inspired by the film Julie and Julia to indulge her passion for food and hosts private charter food tours for groups of up to eight people, visiting some of Brisbane’s more familiar foodie spots such as Black Pearl Epicure, Wray Organics (below), Mistress of Spice and the less familiar such as Oz Harvest’s new commercial kitchen which cooks up food for people in need in the community. Gregory tailors her tour to the group and itineraries stretch from 10am to 3pm with transport in a Mercedes minibus. Cost $155 per person with tastings and discounted shopping along the way. For details email [email protected] Sunnybank chef Tony Ching (above) is a popular tour guide in the area he calls home and hosts a three-hour Sunnybank Food Discovery Tour of the area’s most popular restaurants and shops for Asian specialities. Tours run once a month on Saturdays from 10am to 1.30pm with yum cha lunch included, or from 3.30pm to 7pm which includes a progressive dinner between several restaurants. This is a cultural as well as a culinary experience. Limited to 10 people per tour. Cost $68 per person also includes a goodie bag. Call 3345 7500 or see www.sunnybankplaza.com.au If you’re the type who’s eyes skip straight down the menu to dessert then the South Bank Dessert Walking Tour is for you. Here’s the chance to the meet the makers, taste more flavours and discover new places to indulge a craving for sweets and pastries like Obrama Chocolate Lounge (below). The tour starts at Little Stanley Street on Saturdays from 10.30am and lasts up to three hours taking in at least five different venues and stopping for plenty of taste tests on the way. It consistently rates five stars from walkers. Advance bookings essential. Cost $39 per person. Call 1300 39 40 41 or see http://foodi.com.au 26 | BNE October/November 2014 Sally Lynch grew up on a farm and has spent her career in catering so she knows good produce when she sees it and now shares her knowledge and cooking tips with guests on her Taste Trekkers Tours of Brisbane’s best food haunts in Sunnybank, Inala and Fortitude Valley. Every tour is different but ‘trekkers’ will explore her favourite haunts for anything from blackened chicken to fresh noodles and she’ll decode what’s in some of those jars and bottles in Asian supermarkets. There’s plenty of snacking along the way and lunch at the end. Tours mostly on Tuesdays and an occasional Saturday 10am-1pm. Cost $95 per person. Details at http://tastetrekkers.com.au Call for food providores Showcasing the produce of local farmers and suppliers will be a feature of the new dining experience in the redevelopment of Brisbane Airport’s International Terminal. Brisbane Airport Corporation wants locally grown and sourced produce to be at the heart of the new food and beverage outlets, giving a unique sense of paddock-to-plate offerings from South East Queensland. Farmers, producers and suppliers of fresh and deli-style goods can find out more about opportunities to provide their products by contacting Brisbane Airport retailer operations manager Chloe Lockhart by email at [email protected] Plot with a purpose A plot of South Bank Parklands has been turned over to growing a kitchen garden of fresh herbs, fruit and vegetables. Kale is in great demand as a superfood but if you ever wondered how to grow it, you’ll find out in the Epicurious Garden, now a fertile breeding ground for exotic fruits including blue java banana, cranberry hibiscus and Tahitian lime alongside purple mustard, rosella, cha-pli and more kitchen staples. Find it on the path between the River Quay restaurants and the Arbour View cafés. More information at www.visitbrisbane.com.au/south-bank/ things-to-do/epicuriousgarden Café opens in the Gardens The charming character curators cottage that has been in hibernation for five years in the City Botanic Gardens has been restored by the Wise Foundation and is now operating as a sanctuary for refreshment for visitors to the park. Now called The Gardens Club, there’s a café open seven days 7.30am to 4pm with a shady deck and picnic baskets can be pre-ordered from $35. A functions space is catered by Alastair McLeod and all profits are redistributed to community organisations. Call 3102 9606 or see http://thegardensclub.com.au Star chefs out for show Mmmmmm! The Good Food and Wine Show has a delicious list of celebrity chefs sharing their tips this year at free demonstrations – including Maggie (Beer, below), three Matts (Moran, Stone and Golinski), Miguel (Maestre) and a McLeod (Alastair). Advance bookings are essential. And My Kitchen Rules winners (series two) Sammy and Bella will be whipping up quick and easy ideas for mid-week meals. Tastings galore at Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre, South Brisbane, 17-19 October, cost from $25 general admission. See www. goodfoodshow.com.au Sneak PEEK The builders and decorators are still working but we can show what one of the city’s newest eateries will look like when the covers come off – the latest in Jamie Oliver’s Italian franchise (below) will open soon in Rowe’s Arcade off Edward Street Mall. For updates see www.jamieoliver.com/italian/australia/brisbane Not far away in Queen Street Mall Next Hotel will open its Lennons Restaurant and Bar this month under the direction of executive chef Todd Adams (ex-Stokehouse and Urbane, Brisbane). The focus will be on a brasserie-style menu served sizzling from the wood oven, Brazilian barbecue or the sizzling Asian wok. For updates see facebook.com.lennonsrestaurant Buon appetito! Celebrity chefs Dominique Rizzo and Karen Martini will be sharing cooking tips at Fieritalia on 12 October at Eagle Farm Racecourse but the real treat will be the Nonnas who will be showing off their authentic Italian cooking skills and recipes. Italian themed food trucks will also serve up fiery entertainment as cocky cooks compete against each other to win over customers. From 10am to 4pm. Cost $10 adult, find out more and buy tickets online at www.fieritalia.org BNE October/November 2014 | 27 wining & dining StokehouseQ, South Bank Pull up a stool at Stoke Bar with a view of Brisbane River and settle in for Stoked on Sundays, when DJs add to the chilled out vibe and tasting plates provide a casual alternative to the StokehouseQ restaurant menu. Share plates such as truffle and talaggio arancini, or ricotta, peas, broad bean and mint bruschetta raise the bar (food)! Every Sunday from 2pm until late. Sidon Street, South Bank. Call 3020 0600 or see www.stokehousebrisbane.com.au Riverlife, Kangaroo Point Riverlife is best known for hosting adventure sports on the river’s edge but now it is also a chill-out zone on the last Sunday of every month with the launch of Sunday Sesh. DJs and live performers entertain in the open air and $10 buys a drink and pulled beef roll. Rock up from 1pm to 7pm. Located on the riverfront below the Kangaroo Point Cliffs at the heritage-listed Naval Stores. See www.riverlife.com.au Saké, Eagle Street Pier Lazy Sunday afternoons On the city side of the river Saké celebrates spring with champagne and sashimi on the deck every Sunday from 12 noon. A chef’s selection of sashimi is accompanied by a bottle of Australian sparkling wine or a choice of French champagnes, including Veuve Clicquot Rose NV. Prices from $52 to $100 per person. Call 3015 0557 or for information see www.sakerestaurant.com.au Taste a little grape therapy Darren Davis traces his wine DNA back to ancestors in the 1860s so there’s not much he doesn’t know about a good drop and he shares his passion and knowledge at new venture Grape Therapy. Little surprise, too, that there’s scant attention to food (although Ciccio’s Pasta Bar upstairs delivers) and the focus is all on wines available for the tasting, from vintage gems to noteworthy newcomers available by the glass or bottle. DJs move in late Friday afternoons with a jazz and soul-spiced playlist. Open from 7.30am (serving coffee) to 7pm Monday to Wednesday and until late Thursday and Friday. Basement of 471 Adelaide Street (corner Macrossan Street), city. Call 3162 4747 or see www.grapetherapy.com.au Gresham glory lives on The Gresham doesn’t call itself a whiskey bar but it does have a list more impressive than most with more than 150 options to choose from, and that’s not including the ‘Flights’ of taster shots ranging in price from $30 (three samplers). Inside, raise your glasses to the picture of Ed Drury in the front bar for he’s the one responsible for commissioning the building’s construction for the Queensland National Bank. Still magnificent in its Palladian style, stone walls and glossy cedar the bar takes its name from the Gresham Hotel that once stood behind the bank. Today the doors open at 7am until 2pm Monday to Friday to serve quick perks of Toby’s Estate coffee and snacks of toast, muffins and pastries, then from 4pm until 3am its wind-down central. At 308 Queen Street, city. See www.thegresham.com.au 28 | BNE October/November 2014 Shaky Pete’s Ginger Brew has an international press portfolio all its own and Pete Jeary, the bartender who created it, has landed at Brisbane’s newest hole-in-the-wall city bar, Red Hook BEHIND THE BAR SHAKY PETE Bar Manager Red Hook, city What’s different about the drinks at Red Hook? Red Hook is the very antithesis of the trend in other cocktail bars at the moment. There are lots of very cool things going on with new styles and new flavours being created with ingredients you never would have used in a cocktail in the past, but Red Hook is like your first cocktail bar: super easy going, fun, serving up cocktails that are tasty, affordable and made in one or two minutes. We’re also looking at adding a house list on tap. What are the cocktails of the moment? The Spiked Cream Soda (right) with vodka, vanilla syrup, cream soda, vanilla ice cream and a crown of whipped cream with a glacé cherry on top; a Mint Julep with whiskey, soda, sugar and crushed ice, beautifully presented. What’s your signature cocktail? Shaky Pete’s Ginger Brew, a ginger beer shandy made with lemon juice, ginger syrup, beer and gin; it’s been so wildly popular everywhere I go I should bottle it! It’s not on the menu at Red Hook but they’re still serving it in bars from London to Melbourne and, of course, Public where I was before Red Hook. But it’s time to do something different. One of my favourites to drink is a Bloody Mary because you can order it in any bar and you always get a different experience with it. Where do you get your inspiration? It can come from anything, such as a taste in food, or the taste of a spirit, it can come from trends or even to fit names, like a Champagne Charlie which came from the name of a Music Hall performer in the 1920s who was sponsored by Moet & Chandon. What can’t you live without in the bar? In terms of gadgets and ingredients you can always improvise, but you can’t do without the right personality and banter to make the customer feel at home. That’s crucial. What should people try that they don’t? Gin and tequila. Often people don’t like gin because they have only ever tried it with tonic, so it’s really the tonic blend they don’t like; or they don’t drink tequila because they remember drinking it as a teenager and getting blinding hangovers afterwards, but now there are tequilas that are amazing and taste as good as brandy. Trying these in a new way could uncover something fantastic. What’s a bar you’d recommend outside Brisbane? Spitalfields Bar downstairs in the Hawksmoor (Ginger Brew is one of the biggest selling drinks on their menu), Happiness Forgets and Casita, all in London. What would be your last drink? A massive one! Red Hook is a New York-style bar and diner (also serves coffee and takeaway by day) in Gresham Lane, Shop 3/88 Creek Street, city. See www.facebook.com/ redhookbrisbane or call 3220 0462. BNE October/November 2014 | 29 WHAT’S ON “I had to stop pointing the finger and blaming other people for my sadness” Katy Perry sees the light After a painful marriage split Katy Perry has bounced back brighter than ever on her new world tour, writes Jan Janssen Q: Do you feel that you’re where you want to be in life now? KP: I still have a way to go. I’m becoming stronger and I hope wiser. I feel like I’m a work in progress and I’ve had to experience some very sad and depressing times before I was able to fight back and heal myself and get to a much better place. I had to go through a period of self-reflection in order to get back my self-confidence which had sunk very low. Q: Did making Prism help in that process of healing? My work on Prism was part of my way of pulling myself out of the hole I felt I was in. It was tough, but I knew that I could pull the songs and anthemic messages out of me. My music is part of how I escape those darker moods and whenever I get down in the dumps I can turn to writing songs to boost my spirits. 30 | BNE October/November 2014 Q: In ‘Grace of God’ the lyric goes, “Thought I wasn’t enough/ Found I wasn’t so tough/Layin’ on the bathroom floor”. How bad did things get for you? I went through this very sad and difficult spell where I was struggling with very negative thoughts and I should have tried to reach out to my friends instead of burying it all inside me. We shouldn’t be ashamed of those terrible dark moments in our lives and we should share those feelings with friends so we don’t feel so alone with our problems. Q: What pulled you out of that dark space? I did meditation and went on long hikes. I started opening up to my friends but ultimately I think something cosmic was looking over me and bringing me back to a better place. I also think that it took me to realise that I had to stop pointing the finger and blaming other people for my sadness and take responsibility for my own feelings and pain and bring myself to a more positive place. It was hard, but the journey that it took to get me where I am now was one I needed to take. Q: The single ‘Roar’ has been particularly inspirational to many people. Do you get a lot of satisfaction about inspiring people through your music? It’s a joy to make people feel some happiness and feel some release. Our lives can be difficult and tedious and monotonous and sometimes so stressful and then a little three-minute 30-second song will start playing on the radio and make life a little easier. Q: What kind of message should women draw from Prism and what you’ve gone through personally? You should be true to yourself in all situations and know self-love before any other kind of love. And don’t be afraid of love even if it can be very fragile and scary. Young women should build up their own character and live their lives with integrity. Don’t follow any trends. Be your own woman. You will prevail! Text: The Interview People K aty Perry turns 30 on 25 October and she’s having the time of her life. In November she will arrive in Brisbane on her Prismatic Tour, one year after the Prism album debuted at number one upon its release in Australia, and there isn’t a seat left in the house. Perry promises untold new “bells and whistles” as part of her “wildly colourful” new show and that includes a state-of-the-art stage the singer designed herself which will allow her to perform smack in the middle of the audience. Prism has been the product of an intense period of reflection for Perry who says she has picked herself “up off the floor” after the collapse of her marriage to Russell Brand two years ago and evolved into a far more optimistic and self-confident woman. “I’ve learnt a painful lesson that if you put your love and self-worth into another person’s hands, it can easily be taken away from you. I’ve experienced that and it’s not much fun,” Perry admits. “I’ve spent a lot of time working on myself and building up my own self-love before I give my love away. You need to be self-confident and accepting of your own worth so that your identity is not dependent on what others say or think about you.” Here’s what she says about the effect working on her new album had on her following her marriage breakdown. Gillard tells her own story © Peter Brew-Bevan Julia Gillard has said that writing her memoir was exhilarating and cathartic. “Sometimes the words flowed quickly and easily. On other occasions, days of reflection were needed to work through memories of difficult times and the resilience required during them.” Gillard’s new book, My Story (Random House), has been described as refreshingly honest, peppered with wry humour and personal insights about what it was like to be Australia’s first female Prime Minister for a tumultuous three years and three days. Gillard will be in conversation with writer Anna Goldsworthy about her mistakes and her successes, her view of the hate campaigns directed against her and what it takes to be a female leader in contemporary Australian politics. At the Conservatorium Theatre, Griffith University, South Bank on 14 October. Tickets $32 at www.qtix.com.au Garrett lets loose If there’s anything you’ve ever wanted to ask Everybody Loves Raymond star Brad Garrett now’s your chance as he will be answering audience questions as part of his stand-up show Is It Something I Said? at Eatons Hill Hotel on 26 October. Garrett goes where others fear to tread in a no-holds barred, fearless night of comedy. Adult themes, recommended for over 18s. Tickets $65.80-$79 plus fees. See www.eatonshillhotel.com.au Fast-paced Potter Seven books in 70 minutes – that’s all it takes Daniel Clarkson and Jefferson Turner to bring Harry Potter’s life at Hogwarts and his battle with the dark Lord Voldemort to the stage at Brisbane Powerhouse Theatre. There are a few songs, lots of costume changes and a fire-breathing dragon makes a special appearance. This is one for all the family. Potted Potter: The Unauthorised Harry Experience at Brisbane Powerhouse, New Farm Park, 4-16 November. Tickets $59.50-$79.50 plus fees, see www.brisbanepowerhouse.org Molly’s excellent adventure He’s interviewed all the rock stars you’d ever want to know about since 1974 but on 28 October at the Visy Theatre, Brisbane Powerhouse, Ian ‘Molly’ Meldrum will be the one getting the grill from 612 ABC radio’s Richard Fidler. Molly will spill the beans on the incredible cast of musos, superstars and royalty he’s come to know over 35 years and now written about in his new memoir The Never um…Ever Ending Story. Tickets $35 plus fees. See www.brisbanepowerhouse.org Happiness is catching Russell Crowe enjoyed Anh Do’s autobiography The Happiest Refugee so much he bought the film rights and Do is working on a script to bring it to the big screen, but first the comedian will be back in Brisbane to share his personal stories, with photos and film, on stage in The Happiest Refugee Live! at QPAC Concert Hall on 17 October. Tickets $64.90 plus fees. Find out more at see www.qpac.com.au Japanese influence Following the runaway success of fashion exhibitions showcasing the work of Valentino and millinery master Stephen Jones, the Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) will celebrate the work of influential Japanese fashion designers in a new exhibition opening on 1 November. Designs by avant garde pioneers Issey Miyake, Rei Kawakubo (founder of Comme des Garçons), Junya Watanabe and Yohji Yamamoto will be featured alongside new innovators including Taro Horiuchi, Tao Kurihari and Mikio Sakabe in a collection of more than 90 garments and accessories from the Kyoto Costume Institute in Japan. Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion will be supported by a program of talks and tours as well as the popular Up Late sessions with exhibition access, performances and bar open on selected Friday nights until February 2015. Harajuku band Broken Doll is first on the Up Late bill on 21 November. Check the website for details. Exhibition tickets $21.50. See www.qagoma.qld.gov.au Rei Kawakubo for Comme Des Garçons S/S 1997. Photography by Takashi Hatakeyama BNE October/November 2014 | 31 WHAT’S ON Lion King wins against the odds “It was interpreted as many things but no one said it looked like a Broadway show in the making” D GET SPORTY There’s a sizzling season of sport ahead with no shortage of thrilling events to get your pulse racing, whether you’re outdoors cheering on a team or joining in the familyfriendly action 32 | BNE October/November 2014 Extreme action Buyi Zama as Rafiki. Photography by Deen van Meer ©Disney uring its Sydney season The Lion King was described by critics as “breathtaking”, “beyond brilliant”, “ravishing”, “extraordinary”, “an indisputable triumph” and “a masterpiece” so it’s no surprise that its first ever Brisbane season had to be extended due to popular demand even before performances began. The fact that many in the audience have already seen it somewhere else in the world does not appear to have dulled their enthusiasm. Worldwide, the stage production has earned true blockbuster status. Playing for 17 years and seen by more than 70 million people it has earned more than $5 billion (more than the biggest hits in movie history such as Titanic or Avatar or all three of the Lord of the Rings films combined, for example) and global productions are now showing concurrently in 10 countries, including Australia. In the world of musical theatre it is a phenomenon, but it almost didn’t make it to the stage. Thomas Schumacher, president of Disney Theatrical Productions, visited Brisbane to announce the landmark musical event would be coming to the QPAC stage for a season extending until January 2015 but he readily admits that when he was first presented with the idea of adapting The Lion King for the stage he thought it was the worst idea he had ever heard. “The Lion King was interpreted as many things: an allegory for our times, a spiritual journey, a broad comedy, a Hamlet knock-off, another story forwarding the patriarchal structure, a cash cow, a timeless myth, the next in the line of Disney animated classics. Not surprisingly, no one said it looked like a Broadway show in the making,” says Schumacher. Melbourne Cup Short, sharp and full of action, Radical There will be live track action at Doomben Reels is a compilation of eight high adrenalin Racecourse on Melbourne Cup Day and short films so hang on for the ride as climbers, Fashions on the Field will provide a lively BASE jumpers, skiers, snowboarders, distraction until the main event is broadcast paddlers and mountain bike riders fill the on big screens. Punters will like the screen with wild rides, steep jumps, and crazy Patchwork Steakhouse while fashion mavens stunts. At Brisbane Powerhouse Theatre, New will want to be front row in the Grand Pavilion Farm, 18-21 November. Tickets $33. Bookings where the fashion competition takes place. see www.brisbanepowerhouse.org Tuesday 4 November. See www.brc.com.au However his boss kept prodding. “At our next development meeting, he asked how my adaptation of The Lion King was coming along. I told him again it was the worst idea in the world and that it would be impossible to create a stage version of such inherently non-theatrical material. He smiled. “After a few more discussions, he grew weary of smiling and told me in no uncertain terms that I was going to work on an adaptation of The Lion King. I blurted out that it was impossible, and he shot back that it wasn’t impossible, all I needed was a brilliant idea. A brilliant idea, that’s it. All I needed to do was find someone with a brilliant idea. This sleight of hand is known as ‘development’ in many circles of Hollywood,” says Schumacher. Although it would take several years to happen, that great idea came in meeting Julie Taymor who had attracted attention with her own productions. “When we met, I could see Julie had a new vision for the project. She was excited by the music, by the setting and by the opportunities for staging. She was challenged by the task of re-creating something that theatregoers would know by heart, but she wanted them to once again feel in their heart. We urged her not to feel contained by the look of the movie and to create something wholly original from it. The journey of The Lion King has surpassed any of our imaginations,” says Schumacher. As director and costume designer Taymor brings the African savannah to life in a production featuring a multicultural cast hailing from Darwin to Durban and 232 puppets, including giraffes of more than four and five metres high. QPAC Museum is also hosting a free exhibition tracing the journey of The Lion King from animated film to live musical with material on loan from Disney Theatrical Productions, including set models, design drawings, character maquettes and original costumes. The Lion King is on at Lyric Theatre, QPAC until 25 January 2015. Tickets from $50 to $150 plus booking fees. See www.qpac.com.au for bookings. The Art of The Lion King exhibition is on at the Tony Gould Gallery, QPAC Museum Tuesday to Saturday 10am-4pm. Free entry. Love vs revenge Comedian and impersonator Gerry Connolly (left) takes on the female role of narrator Nelly in Shake & Stir Theatre Company’s production of the Emily Brontë classic Wuthering Heights. It’s a story of love, obsession, betrayal, jealousy and revenge re-imagined with haunting effect by director Nick Skubij. At Cremorne Theatre, QPAC until 18 October. Tickets $54 plus fee, call 136 246 or see www.qpac.com.au Family’s cruel lesson Drawing parallels between Greek tragedy, modern warfare and the state of the local political landscape, Or Forever Hold Your Peace is a contemporary retelling of the sacrifice of Iphigenia by her own father, which tackles the power of love and the collective voice in a physically explosive production. At Roundhouse Theatre, 6-8 Musk Avenue, Kelvin Grove, from 12 to 29 November. Tickets $22-28, for details see www.laboite.com.au Hilarious murder mystery Based on the 1935 Hitchcock spy thriller movie and John Buchan novel, the stage production of The 39 Steps is the longest running comedy in London’s West End. Four actors play more than 100 characters in this fast and funny take on the murder mystery. At Twelfth Night Theatre, 4 Cintra Road, Bowen Hills, from 21 to 26 October. Tickets $59.90 plus fees, call 3252 5122 or see www.ticketmaster.com.au Power in the air Ben Elton has rewritten his satirical comedy of the 1990s Gasping for a new era and a new location. Now set in Australia during the resources boom, corporate fat cats are greedy for more and hit on a plan to privatise air – you don’t pay, you don’t breathe! Elton’s sharp wit is biting in Queensland Theatre Company’s production of Gasp! At QPAC Playhouse, 17 November to 7 December. Tickets $49-$80 plus fees. See www.qldtheatreco.com.au City polo Cycle challenge Champions kick off After Spring Racing Carnival it’s back to Doomben Racecourse for Polo in the City where the dress code is a little less fancy but no less important. While the wannabe-seen crowd sips Pol Roger in the VIP marquee (tickets $330 for lunch and drinks), a DJ will entertain in the more casual vibe of the Stella Artois Polo Lounge (tickets $78.90 plus fee). Saturday 22 November. See www.polointhecity.com People of all ages and cycling abilities can join the 100km Santos GLNG Brisbane to the Gold Coast Cycle Challenge on Sunday 19 October. Funds raised support the Heart Foundation. Look out for the 1000km club, riders who have taken part in every challenge since it began 10 years ago! They’re the ones to follow. Registrations close 14 October. See http://b2gc.bq.org.au Defending champions Brisbane Roar will sport a new home kit and crest when they kick off the A-League football season at Suncorp Stadium from 12 October against Adelaide United ... but a game everyone will be watching will be the away clash with Melbourne Victory on 21 November when former Roar star striker Besart Barisha will walk out for the opposition. See www.brisbaneroar.com.au/tickets BNE October/November 2014 | 33 DAY IN THE LIFE G20 BNE Edward de Kruijf TEAM This team leads a staff of more than 50 at Brisbane Airport to ensure smooth operations during G20 34 | BNE August/September October/November2014 2014 G20 Program Manager “I am from Amsterdam Airport Schipol and happy that I can use my exprience from the Nuclear Security Summit in Amsterdam (March 2014) to assist BNE.” Colin Stewart David Hanlon G20 Landside Manager “We are working towards minimising traffic impacts for passengers and others using the Airport precinct during the G20 Leaders Summit.” G20 Handling Manager “We will be looking after aircraft on the ground, including parking, unloading and towing, and facilitation of baggage through the airport.” Elizabeth Hickey Peter Dunlop G20 Implementation Coordinator “I liaise between BAC teams and G20 Taskforce to ensure normal airport operations will continue in conjunction with facilitating the G20 arrivals and departures.” G20 Airside Operations Manager “We’re setting up an ‘airport within an airport’ to manage aircraft movements, streamline Head of State arrivals and ensure safe escort from the runway.” Stephen Goodwin Gary Chadwick General Manager Operations The G20 ‘Airport’ will park an extra 30 aircraft or 25% of our normal daily operation. Planning has taken almost two years for a two-day event.” G20 Security Manager “The lead-up to this event is intense. The sheer size of it is different to anything Australia is used to but we’re well on track to ensure business as usual.” BNE BNEOctober/November August/September 2014 | 35 LAST WORD My Brisbane IAN FRAZER CEO and Director of Research Translational Research Institute The co-inventor of the cervical cancer vaccine is an influential advocate for the quality and success of ground-breaking medical research taking place in Brisbane Where do you live and what do you like most about your neighbourhood? I live in St Lucia, a mature suburb working in harmony with nature, close to the river and dominated by greenery and parks. There’s easy access to the city by CityCat and good dining opportunities. Where do you feel most inspired and what about it inspires you? GOMA [the Gallery of Modern Art, South Bank], because every exhibition there challenges me to think outside the box. What is the best thing that has happened to (or in) Brisbane since you arrived in 1985? Expo 88, which turned us from a country town into a world city. If you could change something about Brisbane what would it be? The traffic along Coronation Drive! We have two thirds of a ring road around the city – let’s complete it with a tunnel under the river that gets traffic from the south to the western suburbs and the University of Queensland. What is your favourite thing to do on the weekend? Travel out of town to the hills (Lamington National Park, Mount Nebo) for some fresh air and exercise. You enjoy hiking; what is a trail you recommend? Binna Burra in the Gold Coast hinterland offers great scenery, wildlife and a friendly place to stay at the end of the day (Binna Burra Lodge). The Ship’s Stern circuit is just one of the walks in this part of Lamington National Park, and it starts just opposite the road entrance to Binna Burra Lodge. What is your favourite short break outside Brisbane? Fraser Island – for the diversity of the forest, the rainbow sands, the beaches and the lakes. One of the research projects at TRI is looking at how to get a vaccine to work to prevent skin cancer. How is that going? We are hoping that we might get to first clinical trials by 2016. The best prevention of skin cancer is sun avoidance but, for those who already have skin damage from the sun that might progress Where do you always take visitors when they come to to skin cancer, the approach we’re developing at TRI Brisbane? Glasgow-born is to harness the body’s defences to get rid of Lone Pine Koala Sanctuary, an outdoor café or Professor Ian Frazer has the damaged skin – it’s exciting and the early restaurant at South Bank parklands, Mount called Brisbane home since 1985. results are encouraging, but there’s quite a Coot-tha (Simpson and Slaughter Falls, Named an Australian of the Year and way to go yet before we have a product. and the summit), and at least one show or a National Living Treasure, and awarded concert at Queensland Performing Arts a Companion of the Order of Australia in You came to Brisbane in 1985 and have Centre, South Brisbane. recognition of his eminent work in medical research, chosen to pursue your research here. Professor Frazer is also one of more than 50 influential Why is Brisbane a good centre for What’s your hot tip for visitors? scientists, researchers, academics and business medical research? You can have a one-day tropical island leaders invited to be part of Brisbane Convention As a doctor and scientist, I am keen to holiday complete with beach and palm and Exhibition Centre’s Advocates Program. The build capacity for medical research to trees, sand tobogganing and snorkelling initiative showcases Brisbane as a leading centre for be translated into practice, as well as for amongst tropical fish, simply by taking a innovation in science, research and technology doing the basic research, and Brisbane has day excursion to Moreton Island. 3. the Queensland which has helped boost given me the opportunity not only to build Favourite place for coffee? economy by almost $60 million as a result a team to pursue my own research goals, but Café Catalyst at Translational Research of conferences secured since the to ensure that the research that other teams Institute, to show off the TRI building and for program began four have undertaken is given the opportunity to be the best coffee, of course! years ago. translated into clinical practice effectively. Favourite place for breakfast? Just ahead of the G20 Summit you will be taking part Mondo Organics in West End. It has great food, great coffee and in Brisbane Global Café, a special event bringing world leaders in friendly staff. different fields together to discuss issues and innovations of the future. What will be your key messages? How do you like to travel around Brisbane and what’s your Talking about the Queensland of the future – focused on contributing favourite journey? to the world through a knowledge-based economy, and on the global Cycling to and from work over the Green Bridge and through the university, or along the Centennial bike path [alongside the river]. It gives challenges that we face in ensuring equitable access to health services and quality education. me a chance to work off my frustrations and keep fit at the same time. 36 | BNE October/November 2014 BNE October/November 2014 | 37 Background images: Translational Research Institute designed by Wilson Architects + Donovan Hill (Architects in Association). Photography by Shantanu Starick QANTAS TERMINAL Domestic Terminal TO CAR PARK VIRGIN TERMINAL Domestic Terminal OTHER AIRLINES Domestic Terminal QANTAS TERMINAL TO CAR PARK 15 Domestic Terminal 11 VIRGIN TERMINAL Domestic Terminal OTHER AIRLINES Domestic Terminal PASSENGER PICK UP Setdown Area 16 1 2 INTERNATIONAL ARRIVALS Baggage Pick-up & Customs 81 entrance retail information duty Free Check in Food & Beverage Gate number Baggage Collection Public toilets disabled toilet Parent’s room Prayer room Atm money exchange net kiosk telephone elevator PASSENGER DROP OFF Stairs 7 10 7 9 8 12 meeting Point travelator Airtrain desk Bus & Coach taxi rank 6 11 Services 1 Brisbane Airport welcome desk & Study Brisbane desk 2 ViP Lounge 6 Flight Centre Ltd 7 oversize Baggage kiosk 8 Protect-A-Bag 9 Qantas Courier Qantas Qantas Airways Sales & Service Sales & desk Service desk 10 Airways 11 Qantas Lounge 12 Air new Zealand Sales & Service desk 15 Virgin Australia Lounge 16 Southern QLd tourism info & transport desk need to know BNE PARKING Convenient, secure and undercover short and long-term parking is available within walking distance to both terminals. See www.bne.com.au for special offers and full product offering including valet, car washing and more. Airport ambassadors important information FLIGHT COLOUR PALETTE Visitor Information Centres For information about accommodation, tours, transfer tickets and general enquiries, Visitor Information Centres are on Level 2 International Terminal and Level 1 Domestic Terminal (Central Area). Currency exchange Travelex currency exchange and transfer facilities are on Levels 2, 3 and 4 International Terminal and Level 2 Domestic Terminal near Gate 23. Baggage lockers Find small, medium and large lockers for short and long-term hire at the terminal entrance to the public car park at the International Terminal, at either end of the Domestic Terminal, or next to Woolworths at Skygate. Tax Refund Scheme (TRS) The TRS enables you to claim a refund, subject to certain conditions, of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and Wine Equalisation Tax (WET) that you pay on goods bought in Australia. See www.customs.gov.au or call 1300 363 263. Lost property International – enquire at the Visitor Information Centre, Level 2, call (07) 3406 3190. Domestic – enquire first to your airline. Qantas call (07) 3867 3264, Virgin Australia (07) 3114 8150, Jetstar (07) 3336 1752 or email Tigerair at [email protected] before contacting the Visitor Information Centre on Level 1 or (07) 3305 9233. Disability access Lifts, travelators, ramps, aerobridges, rest points, accessible parking spaces and toilet facilities are in place for passengers with limited mobility or disabilities. Airlines are responsible for assisting passengers with disabilities within terminals. Passengers should refer to their airline’s policies prior to booking their ticket. There is no porter service or any form of direct assistance provided at Brisbane Airport other than any assistance that may be provided by the passenger’s airline. Use the Brisbane Airport app for accurate flight status reports, notifications direct to your phone for changes, trip planning and more. Free for iPhone and Android. 23 MAY 2014 | PAGE 2 Welcoming volunteers like Di Pitman (pictured below) roam the airport daily, available to answer questions and offer directions to travellers and visitors. Look for the bright blue shirts with the yellow ‘i’ sign on the front if you need assistance. 23 23 MAY MAY 2014 2014 || PAGE PAGE 34 Taxis and Airtrain Taxi ranks located kerbside Level 2 International Terminal and Level 1 Domestic Terminal. Airtrain provides regular rail links between Brisbane Airport, Brisbane city, Gold Coast and TransLink network as well as terminal transfers. Tickets available in the terminal or at the station. Local amenities Skygate is Brisbane Airport’s retail and dining precinct, a short bus ride from the terminals. There are more than 130 stores, including brand-name factory outlets, a supermarket, butcher, hairdresser, gym, restaurants, chemist, medical clinic, hotel, beauty services, tavern and golf leisure centre. Travel between the terminals and Skygate is free on the T-Bus. Internet access Internet kiosks are located at International Terminal on Levels 2, 3 and 4 and at Domestic Terminal Level 1 and 2. Access three hour (50MB limit) free WiFi at International Terminal Levels 3 and 4 retail areas and at Domestic Terminal Level 2 retail (Central Area). Prayer Room A multi-denominational prayer room is located at International Terminal, Level 4. Police For assistance at Brisbane Airport the number to call is 13 12 37. Transport bookings Coach, rail, limousine and corporate car bookings can be made at the Visitor Information Centre, Level 2 International Terminal or Level 1 Domestic Terminal. Public transport TransLink is the local bus, ferry and train public transport network stretching north to Gympie, south to Coolangatta and west to Helidon. See www.translink.com.au or call 13 12 30 for information. Terminal transfers Passengers transferring between the terminals can use the Airtrain or the T-Bus for $5 per person one way. Children under age three travel free and some airlines offer free transfer tickets so please check with your carrier. The T-Bus departs at regular intervals from Level 2 International Terminal and Level 1 Domestic Terminal. Follow Brisbane Airport BNE October/November 2014 | 39 destinations from bne Seoul South Korea Dubai United Arab Emirates Guangzhou China Abu Dhabi United Arab Emirates Taipei Taiwan Hong Kong China Bangkok Thailand Manila Philippines Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Singapore Singapore Denpasar Indonesia Port Moresby Papua New Guinea Honiara Soloman Islands BRISBANE 27 destinationS AROUND THE WORLD 40 destinations around australia Los Angeles USA Honolulu USA Darwin Nauru Nauru Cairns Cloncurry Mount Isa Port Hedland Alice Springs Apia Samoa Emerald Biloela Rockhampton Gladstone Windorah Bundaberg Charleville Fraser Coast (Hervey Bay) Birdsville Quilpie Roma Miles BRISBANE Thargomindah St George Toowoomba Cunnamulla Nadi Fiji Noumea New Caledonia Norfolk Island Australia Whitsunday Coast (Proserpine) Hamilton Island Mackay Moranbah Barcaldine Blackall Espiritu Santo Vanuatu Port Vila Vanuatu Longreach Townsville Perth Port Macquarie Newcastle Lord Howe Island Sydney Adelaide Canberra Auckland New Zealand Melbourne Wellington New Zealand Christchurch New Zealand Dunedin New Zealand Launceston Hobart Queenstown New Zealand s n ra yt sk * Map not to scale. Please note airlines and destinations are current at time of print. BNE AUTUMN 2014 | 41 GETTING TO THE CITY A3 Banyo Chermside W ay Nundah So ut he rn Cr os s Gympie Road Sandgate Road A3 26 Stafford Stafford R oad terial Road t Ar Ea s t -Wes M7 A3 e ra ge og En ross Way rn C Lutwyche th S ou Clayfield Rd Albion M7 26 Windsor Breakfast Creek Hamilton Eagle 77 Enoggera Creek BRIS BANE 25 Bowen Hills 31 Bulimba s ty By pa s Kelvin Grove Inn e r C i Spring Hill Paddington New Farm Morningside 15 West End BRISBANE y wa tor Mo ific Pac Co ro na tio nD riv e 33 Main Street Milton Road nnum Wy 23 Norman Park Nudgee Airp ort Driv e Port Of Brisbane M3 TO SUNSHINE COAST TO CITY Boggy Creek DOMESTIC TERMINAL INTERNATIONAL TERMINAL 24 Lytton Por tO fB risb ane Mo tor way way otor yM ewa Gat Farm M1 Aquarium Passage 30 RI V E R M4 Manly TO GOLD COAST Wynnum West M1 M4 Route Number 25 Exit Number Train Line Main Road 23 Manly R oad AirportlinkM7 & Clem Jones Tunnels Brisbane CBD * Map not to2014 scale. | 43 BNE AUTUMN The Number 1 MBA for experiences The UQ Business School MBA program is ranked Number 1 in Australia by The Economist and AFR BOSS Magazine for many good reasons. One is that our MBA students engage in new business thinking in learning environments that extend far beyond the classroom. Inspiring experiences, like an immersion trip to India to work with a micro-charity in the slums of Delhi, that prove business matters in ways you never imagined. Learn more at business.uq.edu.au/mba or email [email protected] business.uq.edu.au
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