Introduction In the 1950s Newcastle was known as Sleeping City, and Dan expressed it as "dying" (1). Decades have passed, and during the meantime economic development has hardly happened, and families have been affected. 1959, T. Dance Miss became the leader of Newcastle City Council, established independent planning department for municipalities in 1960, appointed Wilfred Burns as chief executive. They all hope to revitalize Newcastle by breaking through new ways. The plan is to help people solve the traffic jams that bother the city, eliminate the slums, improve the living environment of people by rebuilding new houses, and thereby inject new vigor in the city.
These changes reflect the changes made in Newcastle itself. In the latter half of the 1950s, T. Dan Smith became the leader of the city council, his image began to change the shape of Newcastle is a modern and progressive city, a neoclassical building in the golden age of the tainide Not, it is not the possibility of building modernism. Utopian residential planning and his enthusiasm for the tower eventually lead to the cleaning of many slums of Newcastle's West End and replaced the modern apartment and mansion.
Founded in 1929, Newcastle City Hall is the most renowned Newcastle art gallery boasting an attractive and attractive architectural style, including marble staircase, sandstone pillars and walls, spacious ballroom and bell tower. Originally founded as the administrative building of the council and the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, today it is used for several social gatherings, art exhibitions, civic social gatherings, and community gatherings. There are the best concert halls, upper galleries, stages commonly used by local people to organize various business and community events, art exhibitions, senior officials, community forums.
Located 6 km west of Newcastle's business center, Lambton is a former mining town and now has a quaint residential area with a large park area. The suburban architectural style is dominated by California bungalows and windshield huts, some of them have some of the most spectacular gardens you will see around Newcastle. There are many selectable young people in the suburbs; Elder & Morehead Park has many shades and sitting spaces, with many visitors every week. Tennis courts and sports grounds that share this park offer lots of entertainment to people of all ages at weekends. Why do not drink coffee from one of many coffee shops on the strip while you are there - personal preference is coffee, sourdough, selling freshly baked pastries, Williams craftsmen's bread and espresso .