The Sydney Mint, located on Macquarie Street in Sydney's city centre, is Sydney's oldest public building. The public building was built in 1811-1816 and is now the headquarters of the New South Wales Old Building Trust. A portion of the building is free for public visits, showing the history of the public building and the stone pillars, stone monuments and other relics left by the old Greek architecture. The opening range is small and it takes less than half an hour to see.
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The Sydney Mint, located on Macquarie Street in Sydney's city centre, is Sydney's oldest public building. The public building was built in 1811-1816 and is now the headquarters of the New South Wales Old Building Trust. A portion of the building is free for public visits, showing the history of the public building and the stone pillars, stone monuments and other relics left by the old Greek architecture. The opening range is small and it takes less than half an hour to see.
A visit passage is framed above the mint production workshop, as long as the usual workshop starts, the visitors can overlook the workshop from the passage from the workers from the design, molding, die casting, inspection, barreling of the whole process of production. The Mint also has its own store, which operates the service of coin collectors, selling banknotes, coins and souvenir gifts from various periods by mail order.
We walked from Hyde Park to the Sydney Opera House and accidentally passed the mint. In fact, it is already a museum plus restaurant. The whole building is very low-key, that is, a small building or two floors, which is not comparable to the one under the bridge of Jiangning Road in Shanghai. The mint wall says built in 1816 and is Sydney's oldest public building. You can visit it, but there is a time limit.
It is one of Sydney's oldest and oldest buildings, but it seems that unless you want to dine at its first floor restaurant or work for the quango that runs the history museum, the museum will either be on site or have booked one of the multi-purpose halls, visitors and visitors are not welcome to visit, Except to look at the building and read some history from the insignificant information boards in the back corridor. Come, walk back and forth, or eat.
The small holiday came here with good friends to play, the air here is very good, there are many people to play,. There are men and women, old and young, and some young couples. The temperature is relatively hot these days, but it is still very good to sweat. I have a good time these days. I will come here with my good friends next time. In general, this trip is worth a visit.