PhysChem 2013
 
 
 
Location
 
When the world’s most trusted travel publisher ranks Hobart in their Top 10 Cities, you know it’s for a very good reason. Lonely Planet have declared that now is the time to visit Hobart before the rest of the world catches on.
 
There are so many things that make Tasmania unique. Nature, history, some of the best beer and wine available in Australia to compliment fine food served in an easy relaxed atmosphere – just some of the attractions that this wonderful state has to offer. When you visit us for this conference you will find it is a city of warm welcomes and friendly smiles.
 
Hobart is a capital city that is an intriguing blend of all of those elements: heritage and lifestyle, scenery and vibrant culture. It is warm sandstone, bright spinnakers on the water, fish punts at the docks, the slap of halyards on masts, coffee under the striped sun umbrellas of Salamanca, an occasional frosting of snow on Mt Wellington, bush tracks and birdsong. Hobart’s history is marked with controversial events that have shaped the cities cultural fabric. It’s a city of bustling markets, fun, festivals and entertainment, and of fine restaurants.

For more information about Hobart please visit www.discovertasmania.com.au

 
     
 
Venue

The 2013 RACI PhysChem Conference will be held at:

The Tasmanian School of Art
Hunter Street
Hobart   TAS   7000

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The Tasmanian School of Art has an enviable reputation as one of Australia’s most innovative tertiary art institutions. Housed within a purpose renovated warehouse on Hobart’s waterfront and located near natural wilderness and world heritage areas, the school offers a wide range of programs which capitalise upon the advantages of its unique location.

The Tasmanian School of Art is housed in the Centre for the Arts at Hunter Street, Hobart. It was here on tiny Hunter Island and the adjacent land of Sullivan’s Cove that the first settlement of Hobart Town was established over two hundred years ago. From the late 19th century the Jones & Co. IXL jam factory occupied the site and in the early 1980s the old factory and warehouses were purpose-designed and redeveloped to house the school’s various studios and workshops.