Boathouse sails again â but some are left high and dry
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He s the hospitality wunderkind behind Sydney s Boathouse empire, which made headlines nearly two years ago when it crashed and burned, owing more than 500 creditors a staggering $21.5 million. But now
Andrew Goldsmith says he s learnt his lesson and intends to prove his doubters wrong. I remember telling our seafood supplier he was not getting paid. I was in tears at the fish markets. It was one of the hardest, most humbling days of my life . but he stuck by us. He told me, You ve just got to make more money , says Goldsmith, 37, who personally bankrupted himself last May.
The Boathouse Rose Bay to open in February in former Pier site
Scott Bolles
Photo: Supplied
The Boathouse Group has an envy-inducing portfolio of waterfront food venues stretching from Palm Beach to Mosman, and now it s adding Rose Bay to the stable.
In its first foray south of the harbour, The Boathouse Rose Bay will make an early February debut in the former site of Pier restaurant. Regatta was the last restaurant to trade at the location. Upstairs will be a restaurant with table service, a cross between what we do at Barrenjoey House and our other places, Boathouse founder Andrew Goldsmith tells Good Food.
Sights set on curbing crime guns miragenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from miragenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Credit: Flinders University
A community or sub-culture encouraging young men s exposure and obsession with guns - as well as ready access to firearms and drugs - can make gun violence all too easy , with Flinders University experts promoting a new direction on managing the global problem.
Flinders criminologists conclude that the need to dematerialise the attraction to gun has never been greater than in a post-COVID-19 world in which guns have gained greater salience in many countries .
The Flinders University study published in the international journal
Criminology & Criminal Justice, argues that guns and drugs need to be more difficult to acquire and importantly less valued in popular culture to make them less attractive for criminals.