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Shopping centre owner Mirvac targets online retailers

Restaurateur Troy Guard Opening Little Dry Creek Brewery at Grange Hall

Denver s latest brewery isn t coming from a brewer. It s coming from a chef. Troy Guard, the restaurateur and businessman behind TAG (which will close mid-month after twelve years in Larimer Square), BuBu, Los Chingones, Guard and Grace, and a host of other familiar Denver concepts, will open Little Dry Creek Brewery inside Grange Hall, the new food hall he s creating in Greenwood Village at 6575 South Greenwood Plaza Boulevard. Featuring a fifteen-barrel brewing system and twelve to eighteen taps, Little Dry Creek will sit alongside ten other vendors offering everything from sushi, pizza and barbecue to coffee, ice cream and fried chicken as one of the anchors of the 12,000-square-foot project, which is expected to open in August. It takes its name from nearby Little Dry Creek, a short tributary of the South Platte River.

Meet the coastal warrior creating couture from Sydney s shore waste

Meet the coastal warrior creating couture from Sydney’s shore waste We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Normal text size Very large text size Artist Marina DeBris starts each day combing the beaches of Sydney’s eastern suburbs for rubbish that she fashions into a kind of couture called “trashion”. It’s not hard for this “trashionista” to find raw materials for her creations. “You wouldn’t believe some of the things I find washed up on the beach,” she says – the most common: cigarette butts; the strangest: a latex sex toy. Model and scientist Laura Wells wears “The ones that got away”, which Marina DeBris made from aluminium cans and plastic bottles. 

Meet the coastal warrior creating couture from Sydney s shore waste

Meet the coastal warrior creating couture from Sydney’s shore waste We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Normal text size Very large text size Artist Marina DeBris starts each day combing the beaches of Sydney’s eastern suburbs for rubbish that she fashions into a kind of couture called “trashion”. It’s not hard for this “trashionista” to find raw materials for her creations. “You wouldn’t believe some of the things I find washed up on the beach,” she says – the most common: cigarette butts; the strangest: a latex sex toy. Model and scientist Laura Wells wears “The ones that got away”, which Marina DeBris made from aluminium cans and plastic bottles. 

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