End of the line for Nicholas Building 'gatekeepers'
The beloved gatekeepers to one of Melbourne's iconic art hubs, Swanston Street's Nicholas Building, will soon lose their jobs as the building's property management company, Gross Waddell, moves to convert the antique elevators to automatic
The Nicholas Building in Melbourne.
The beloved gatekeepers to one of Melbourne's iconic art hubs, Swanston Street's Nicholas Building, will soon lose their jobs as the building's property management company, Gross Waddell, moves to convert the antique elevators to automatic.
Dimitri Bradas and Joan McQueen are the jovial lift attendants who accompany visitors and the building's tenants as they go up and down the ten-storey buildings. Their equally cheerful lifts are famous for the colourful decorations which includes photos donated by the tenants, fake plants and the not-so-conventional elevator music coming from a CD player hooked up in one corner of the lift. Mr Bradas is an artist who has worked on lift No.3 for six years and who used to have his own studio in the building.
Meanwhile, Ms Mcqueen has worked there since 1977 and is very much a stalwart of the charming building. Both are dearly loved by visitors and tenants alike, which includes 100 artists, small galleries and quirky small businesses. Both attendants have come to terms with the removal of the rickety yet charming lifts, although they have declined to comment. In fact, the removal of the antique lifts has resulted in a petition called Keep the Lift Attendants in the Nicholas Building.
Advertisement
- Paedophilia charge for Greek Australian
- More Greeks calling Australia home
- Greek Adelaide church in hot water again
- Golden Dawn's Australian aspirations uncovered
- AFP show support for Cyprus
- Sixth place for Alcohol is Free
- Man sues Qatar over drinks car accident
- Marxist reporter won praise for his work
- ND and SYRIZA in Golden Dawn row
- PAS Giannina stuns PAOK at Toumba
- 8 May 2013 | 12 Votes
- 15 May 2013 | 9 Votes
- 3 May 2013 | 8 Votes
- 8 May 2013 | 8 Votes
- 13 May 2013 | 7 Votes
- 24 Apr 2013 | 6 Votes
Advertisement
Advertisement
More from this Section
- Steve Agi found safe
- Boxing Day spree to top $1.8 billion
- Do it like the Greeks says German Consul
- Man sues Qatar over drinks car accident
- AFP show support for Cyprus
- Greek Adelaide church in hot water again
- More Greeks calling Australia home
- Lora Mokbel farewelled
- Migration intake stays the same
- Multicultural facilities allocated restoration funds
-
Known as Heracleion to the ancient Greeks the town lies 9 meters down the Mediterranean ocean
-
AEK Athens said it was preparing to declare bankruptcy and seek relegation to the third division
-
These onion turnovers are a great lunchtime treat and snack when your fasting at Easter
-
Mum's the word for a special comedy event for the Pansamian House
-
In this opinion, Andreas C Chrysiafis looks at the resilience of the Cypriot people facing this new crisis
-
The new series of MasterChef Australia is already in hot water before it's even started
-
The Socceroo has only made six starts for Celtic
-
Research is on history, literature, or archaeology, in the Egyptian, Greek, Roman or post-Roman worlds.
-
Internet based sister classes connect Greek classrooms to Australian ones in a way to collaboratively learn the language
-
Golden Dawn's aspirations to open an Australian chapter will be the feature of this Tuesday's Dateline on SBS
-
The new law overturns what had been a guarantee of a job for life for workers in Greece's notoriously bloated civil service.
-
Nicholas Saramaskos made his name working for a chrysanthemum cultivator and grows some of the best in Australia
-
Former Defense Minsiter Akis Tsochatzopoulos is in court over laundering kickbacks from procurement contracts
-
Costas Iordanidis gives his opinion on Greek PM Antonis Samaras' visit to China, and the bilateral ties he plans on making there
-
This soup is a must for the Easter table
-
The plight of migrants in the fields of Greece
-
PM prepares for China trip as Finance Minister Stournaras says much work still to do despite IMF’s adjustment praise
-
Karithopita was the first cake I made from Mum's new cookbook by Sofia Skoura. It was my mum's new Tselemende and we were all so excited, says chef Kathy Tsaples




















Comments
Post new comment