'' (1886) by
Tom Roberts, oil on canvas on composition board. Having been laid out as part of the
Hoddle Grid in 1837, Bourke Street was considered "out of town" until the 1840s when the western end saw the opening of St Patrick's Hall, the first synagogue and the first public hospital. During the 1850s it gained a reputation as a busy thoroughfare popular as the centre for Saturday nightlife. As retail presence increased with department store
Buckley & Nunn opening a succession of buildings in 1851 and rival
Myer in 1911, the street was often compared to
London's
Oxford Street. Melbourne's first theatre opened on Bourke Street as the Pavilion (1841), and by the late 1840s the east end was established as Melbourne's main entertainment zone. Theatres and public halls were complemented by
billiard halls, cigar divans, rifle galleries, bowling alleys and sideshows. While the early evening crowd trod Bourke Street's pavements for entertainment or for show, the night-time street was also notorious for public disorder, fights, brothel touts and drinking and drunkenness. became a Melbourne institution, while the Café de Paris was a favourite literary and artistic meeting place. Ellis Bird's Books opened in 1925 at number 21 and
Margaret Bird and her husband built up a haven for the literati for 30 years. Twentieth-century restaurants such as
Florentino's,
Pellegrini's and the Society Café have become Melbourne institutions. The late 20th century onwards has resulted in office block developments, residential skyscrapers, the introduction of several shopping arcades and the Bourke Street Mall. ==Mall==