April 3, 2024

New, indoors addition to the Nambour market scene

The March Rummagers Market attracted people to Nambour on Sunday. by Janine Hill AN indoor market at Nambour is the latest addition to the Sunshine Coast’s market calendar. The Nambour Indoor Market will be launched on Sunday, April 7, in the Dance Art Etc space at 120 Currie Street. The market will run from 9am to 2pm with a variety of stallholders selling candles, crystals, jewellery, knitwear, baby clothes and macrame art and more, all under cover.  Market coordinator Daniel Gibson said the indoor market would offer stallholders and marketgoers some security in unpredictable weather. “You know the weather we’ve been having recently. I’m sick of waking up in the morning wondering how muddy it’s going to be or if a market will be on,” he said. “You plan for a weather change and it stays dry when you think it’s going to be wet or it’s wet when you’re expecting it to be dry. It’s really hard to prepare.” Daniel hopes the later start and finish will appeal to people who want to take weekends slower than during the working week. “Who wants to get up early on a Sunday morning? Sundays should be more casual,” he said. Daniel, […]

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Knock-on effect: Pinball arcade goes down with cinema

Vaughan Jones’ pinball business was in good shape but its position is untenable without the cinema. by Janine Hill THE pending closure of Nambour’s Majestic Cinemas means the Sunshine Coast’s only pinball arcade will also fall as collateral damage. Sunshine Coast Pinball, which is next to the cinema in the C-Square complex, will trade through Easter with the Majestic before owner Vaughan Jones shuts up shop. Vaughan knew the future was uncertain for his business when it was announced in February that Majestic Cinemas had entered voluntary administration.  For six weeks, he had hoped that the Nambour cinemas would remain open but news of the closure forced his hand. “I’m okay, however, it’s been a bruising and crushing week or two, and it’s not been any easier in the last week, that’s for sure,” he said. “I’ve been in a position of uncertainty where you’re desperate for some news, one way or other, but then reality is hitting you and you realise it’s the thing you expected all along.” Vaughan said times had been tough and would have been made more difficult by a planned refurbishment of the centre even though the business had been in a good position. “It was challenging but my business was trimmed up really well. It was ready to capture the next busy period. I

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Curtains  close:  Majestic Cinemas to cease trading 

Majestic Cinema Nambour in better times.Photo credit: Mike Korsos – Korsos Photography by Janine Hill SIX WEEKS after Majestic Cinemas went into voluntary administration, the company has announced it will close its Nambour venue. The company CEO, Kieran Dell, had been hopeful of re-negotiating rents with landlords to retain as many of the Majestic cinemas as possible but planned work at the C-Square building thwarted his hopes of hanging on to Nambour. “Unfortunately, our current administration process coincides with plans for an impending major refurbishment of the C-Square building, and as a result, it makes sense for us to close our doors at this time,” said a Majestic Cinemas statement. The cinema will remain open for the Easter break and school holidays but will cease trading on 14 April. The closure comes despite a call by community members, such as Sunshine Coast councillor David Law, for people to go to the movies to save the cinema. In the same week that the closure was announced, members of the public posted online that there were only one or two people seated at some screenings. The numbers were poor despite tickets being competitively priced compared to Event Cinemas at Maroochydore, the nearest

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Field of dreams: 10 years later, sports precinct land lies dormant

The precinct, between Nambour Connection Road and the Bruce Highway,  is labelled ‘Nambour Woombye District Sports Park’ on Google Maps. by Janine Hill ABOUT 200ha of land bought by the Sunshine Coast Council for hinterland sports facilities remains unused while clubs look for ovals and courts. Ten years ago, the council announced it had bought 100ha of land in two parcels fronting Diddillibah Road, Woombye, to meet the sporting and recreational needs of the growing population in the Nambour, Woombye and Palmwoods areas. However, former councillors Jenny Mackay and Greg Rogerson, who were both on council at the time of the Woombye purchase, are wondering when that land will be used for its intended purpose. The council did not provide a timeframe for the Bli Bli or Woombye sports faciltiies when the Gazette submitted an enquiry, instead offering the following statement by a spokesperson: “These parcels of land were purchased by Council for $2.28 million for future sport and recreation purposes.  Council is investigating the feasibility and costs of developing the sites.” Fields would relieve pressure Ms Mackay, former president of the Sunshine Coast Show Society, said the Woombye sports grounds were needed to take some of the pressure off

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Growing pains: Show grapples with capacity challenges

President Rowan O’Hara says show patronage is on track to beat numbers not seen for more than 30 years by Janine Hill THE Sunshine Coast Show has become so successful it verges on outgrowing the Nambour showgrounds. Sunshine Coast Show Society president Rowan O’Hara said in the last six years, show attendance had grown 92% to almost 36,000. Mr O’Hara said patronage was on track to beat numbers not seen for more than 30 years when a house-and-land package was given away in a 1990s show promotion. “That was probably the last year they had 40,000 people at the show and we’re probably set to hit that mark this year, all going well,” he said. He put the show’s success down to the good work of a strong committee. “I have a very good committee that are very much driven to put on the best product that we can achieve, and it’s all volunteers apart from a couple of paid positions,” he said. He said the Sunshine Coast Show was now the fourth largest and biggest show in Queensland and brought $4 million into the region, “all in a ground that’s smaller than most country shows”. Mr O’Hara used a

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