The Shingle Inn at 254 Edward Street was a listed heritage café. When the building was demolished in 2002 to make way for the QueensPlaza shopping mall, the café's fittings were removed and stored.[25] In 2013, the café was re-established using the original fittings within Brisbane City Hall.[26]
A number of Greek owned and run cafes also featured in Edward Street during the twentieth century.[27] Ellisos Cafe, owned by Con Tsiros ran from 1914–1923. Next door to this cafe Tsiros also opened The Garden of Roses Cafe at 242 Edward Street which ran from 1915–1928 and later The Continental Cafe. They served a clientele who enjoyed the 7am to 11pm opening hours. The Garden of Roses Cafe featured German and French chefs, and offered a European range of delicacies[28][29] The artist Lloyd Rees reflected on the special favour it was to visit The Garden of Roses Cafe in his autobiography.[30] Many of the stores featured Art Deco finishes.
Edward Street is the central avenue in Brisbane's upmarket shopping district. Many national and international fashion, jewellery and homewares stores have boutiques on Edward Street.
Edward Street is home to Brisbane's luxury fashion and jewellery brands, with many shopping centres having high-end precincts that front onto Edward St, as well as stand-alone stores. QueensPlaza's Edward Street frontage has the likes of Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Salvatore Ferragamo, Tiffany & Co., Paspaley and Burberry. MacArthur Central has Ralph Lauren, Oroton, Rhodes & Beckett and Tag Heuer. Other brands have boutiques located further down towards the Botanic Gardens.
In April 2011, it was announced that the former Dymocks store in the heritage listed MacArthur Chambers would be redeveloped into an Apple Store. The proposal was approved by the Brisbane City Council in May 2011, with the store opening in January 2014.[31]
The stretch between Queen Street and Elizabeth Street holds other well known luxury brands, with super-luxury Australian jeweller Canturi having his only Brisbane salon in the Tattersalls Arcade, opposite French leather making Longchamp. Also in this stretch are Gucci and Australian luxury handbag maker Oroton, which re-opened their flagship Brisbane store in late 2012.
The corner of Edward Street and Elizabeth Street is particularly prestigious. Hermes operate a two-storey flagship on the corner of Edward St and Elizabeth St, diagonally opposite Omega, will open a flagship in late 2018 at this intersection. Tag Heuer also operate a store on that corner, while Cartier operate its largest Australian store on the remaining corner spot, taking two levels of a heritage building.
In late July 2012 Mont Blanc opened their new boutique next to Hermes, after closing their Queens Plaza store. In December 2012, Singapore-based luxury timepiece retailer The Hour Glass opened their fourth Australian store on Edward Street, next to Mont Blanc. In April 2013 Ermenegildo Zegna opened a two-storey boutique on the street. Other stores in the vicinity include Italian menswear specialist Canali, Brisbane-based menswear department store Mitchell Ogilvie, and Australian menswear specialist The Cloakroom.
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^"Theo and Maude Andronicos: Trouble in Edward Street". Greek Cafés in Brisbane: at the State Library of Queensland we are unearthing stories of Brisbane’s Greek cafés, milk bars and oyster saloons. Be part of this exciting Queensland Business Leaders Hall of Fame project by sharing your memories, photographs and family stories with Dr Toni Risson. 28 July 2017. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
^Conomos, Denis A. (1993). Early Greek eating places In Fisher, R and Shaw, B. Brisbane: the ethnic presence since the 1850s. Brisbane History Group.
^Fisher, Rod (1987). Brisbane during the festive season: a dialogue with the colonial dead In Whitmore, R. Brisbane: people, places and pageantry. Brisbane History Group.
^Rees, Lloyd (1985). Peaks and valleys: an autobiography. Collins.