Melbourne Laneways
By Marjie Courtis
Melbourne's Laneways have become destinations for locals and visitors, They
are colourful alternatives for music, art, bars, and restaurants. They are
also places to stroll and to party. And their character changes constantly.
In the Central Business District, there are almost two hundred Laneways -
Alleys, Arcades, Places, Lanes, Walks and Ways, and the occasional
Laneway that carries the misnomer of Street. The Laneways are hidden
between the high-rise buildings and tucked away behind the main streets.
Buskers in Melbourne laneways © Marjie Courtis
Melbourne's original laneway sub-culture began in the nineteenth century when
Little Streets were added to the initial city plans of surveyor Robert Hoddle.
He planned for twenty-four main city blocks, bounded by Lonsdale, Flinders,
Spring and Spencer Streets.
But Hoddle had to bow to the wishes of Governor Bourke and his penchant for
the mews of England. And so Little Streets - Flinders Lane, Little Collins
Streets, Little Bourke Street and Little Lonsdale Street - were added to the
Hoddle Grid, to provide service entrances for residences, medical practices,
retail stores and other properties on the thirteen main streets.
The Little Streets attracted their own residential population, very
much poorer than the gentry on the main streets. They lived amongst the rubbish
and by the cesspits of the growing city.
The back street dwellers pushed the boundaries of the Little Streets,
and Laneways proliferated, especially as warehouses and factories started to
compete for space and attract more workers.
The Laneways are over-shadowed by high-rise buildings and can seem gloomy.
But what the converted warehouses and factories lack in glamour on the
outside, is made up for on the inside. They now house trendy niche bars and
restaurants that you can find at street level, upstairs, downstairs or along a
laneway-off-a-laneway.
Street art, Melbourne: Catch it while you can
An award-winning book, Flavours of
Melbourne, emphasises the quirky little bars and eating spots in
both the Little Streets and Laneways. Flavours of Melbourne can't keep
up with the new eateries that keep popping up in the Little Streets and
Laneways. But regardless of that, the book teaches you a new way of looking for
eating spots. Walk the Laneways, and venture along any little nook and cranny
with a colourful sign. The signs are often tiny - less is more in Laneway
café signs. But look out for a small splash of neon colour among the
street art. It's often the sign of an alternative bar or food experience.
There's nothing static about Melbourne's Laneways, whether you're talking
cafés, bars or street art. You can walk down Hosier Lane one night and
see astoundingly beautiful street art. Next time much of it may have reverted
to colourful but un-beautiful graffiti.
Laneway tours abound. Commercial establishment and backpacker hostels offer
them. A unique offering is a Melbourne street art
tour, led by the street artists themselves.
Yet, there is more to laneway art is more than street art. The Laneways are
also home to artist-run spaces and there's an
occasional gallery.
Street Art, Melbourne
My favourite end of town is bounded by Collins, Bourke, Spring and Exhibition
Streets. In Meyers Place, you can find the Waiter's Restaurant, San Telmo
Argentinian restaurant and Lily Blacks bar. Little Collins Street
has the Italian Lupino restaurant, the Portugese Bar Larinha and a Japanese
Sakura, sushi train restaurant. For the lunch hour crowd, there's the
Vietnamese N Lee Bakery, easily attracting patient queues of 15 people
awaiting a freshly-baked lunch roll.
When I'm walking along the little streets and Laneways of Melbourne - or even
the main streets for that matter - one my companions is always my Victorian Heritage iPhone app. I can sit in a
restaurant and check out heritage listed sites that are in my immediate
vicinity.
Just as the Laneways and their buildings are being recycled, there is plenty
more recycling taking place. You may find yourself sitting on a former milk
crate or sake barrel or drinking out of a glass that once was a Vegemite
jar.
Wander the Laneways of Melbourne before they move into their next phase in
the cycle. There is concern that developers will take them over. They could
disappear or simply lose their character.
So if you find yourself walking a main street in Melbourne, take a detour!
Head down a laneways instead. You never know what you'll find - because
Melbourne Laneways are full of largely pleasant surprises.
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Laneways hidden behind the skyscrapers, Melbourne © Marjie Courtis
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