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Image for Splendour in the Grass 2012 ticketing info

Splendour in the Grass 2012ticketing info

Update:
Splendour in the Grass 2012 is totally SOLD OUT!


Splendour in the Grass tickets go on sale at 9am AEST Friday 27 April – so make sure that you know all the info you need to know before joining the queues and spending the morning with hitting the refresh button.

Splendour in the Grass 2012 tickets:

3-day tickets – $350 + $9 booking fees
Single-day tickets – $135 + $7 booking fees
(Event tickets also have an optional Carbon Offset add-on – $3 per ticket

NORTH BEACH CAMPGROUND TICKETS
Camping Ticket – $99 + $6 booking fees

Moshtix phone bookings add $2 fee per transaction.

Mastercard & Visa only.
All prices include GST.

Tickets on sale 9am AEST Friday 27 April through Moshtix

Tickets have already been snapped up in the sales to locals and Splendour members and punters who attended last year’s festival. During those sales some punters were met with issues that put them unexpectedly outside the “green room” where they were queued waiting for tickets. On their Facebook pages Splendour and Moshtix were quick to address the issues announcing that they were “working as hard as we can behind the scenes to resolve any issues you may be experiencing” – so keep an eye out for announcements about any sales issues throughout the morning.

As we saw during the recent Radiohead and Prince ticket rushes it’s often easier to buy tickets through the ticketing company’s mobile site than through the website so bear that in mind and good-luck!

And while we’re on the topic, check out special feature on ticket scalping featuring interviews with Kimbra, two promoters and a professional scalper.



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Comments

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RustyinBondi

RustyinBondi said on the 1st May, 2012

Pick your streets, pick your culture.

Swan St is full of meat head footy players and air head floozys.

Church street between Swan and down towards Chapel is the classier business's and pub's that backs into the Cremorne side.

Then you have the Greek Quarter of Richmond that is also known around Burnley St which is really ethnic (my landlords are Greek)

The Vic gardens side of Burnley is pretty industrial but has the Goat Brewery within a 3 minute ride from my place and has the huge white man apartment store also known as IKEA

On the other side (near Abbortsford) you have the Vic Road side and this is a Vietnamese and Chinese hotspot where the asian restaurants and supermarkets can get you the best food, dodgy electronics hacks and stuff you wouldn't find in Dick Smith and I'm pretty sure you can get high quality hammer with the likes of the odd balls that hang around there (Not to mention the awesome music shops with guitars, drums and Dj stuff all catered for). This is where the multicultural area comes into it because there are a few housing commission flats just back from vic road and punt that are jam packed full of multi cultural goodness, you name a despot marginalised ethnic group from the past 20 years and they have lived there. Apparently there was a murder there a five ten years ago that still hasn't been solved. Rest assured all of the big crime syndicates would have reps in those flats.

Finally nestled between the Housing commission slums and the bogan meat head and floozy paradise of Swan Road is a little area called Richmond Hill. Bridge road allows you access to this beautiful little area that is exactly as RAMONESelaar said " Richmond is fucking gentrified and too expensive"

Yes it is, but the old money of Richmond love it there and the London Pub is always running a riot pre-game before a match at the MCG.

So Richmond is Multicultural by sheer number of people that live in the Govvy Slums offset by the old money and by general rule of thumb it is pretty euro esque with a bunch of late 20's - late 30's young professionals!