Its not quite yet the new Berlin, as some have whispered, but a tipping point might have been reached as Australias sixth-largest city is being reimagined to embrace a very different future.Not that Newcastle can ever escape its industrial past. Coal will forever occasionally wash on to its beaches from exposed coastal seams, while Newcomen Street, Bolton Street and Watt Street in the city centre salute 18th century giants of power generation. And though theres no Pitt Street, there is a Pit Street.But in the old w <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.at>stanley cup</a> arehouses, former customs house, railway station and central post office, there are the strong bones of an evolving city.View image in fullscreenNewcastles refurbished Civic theatre is at the heart of the Civic precinct, with parkland, library, art gallery and city administration all nearby. Photograph: City of NewcastleNot long ago, empty shops and offices pocked Newcastles main thoroughfares. Then, in 2008, a homegrown program called Renew Newcastle was a catalyst for change. It was the idea of Marcus Westbury, which has since spread internationally, to revitali <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.at>stanley thermobecher</a> se the city centre through the letting of unused buildings, for peppercorn rents, as spaces for creati <a href=https://www.stanley-mugs.us>stanley mugs</a> ves to make and trade their wares.At the same time the University of Newcastle began to upscale its presence in the CBD with major building projects. A new light rail replaced the existing heavy rail line between Wickham and the CBD in 2019, freeing up an enormous corridor of land and adaptable infrastructu Iwll Is it a crime to study : outcry as Taliban bar girls from secondary schools
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