Block Arcade, Melbourne Explained

The Block Arcade
Address:282 Collins Street, Melbourne
Location:Victoria, Australia
Coordinates:-37.8158°N 144.9644°W
Opening Date:1892
Owner:Block Arcade Melbourne Pty Ltd
Manager:Allard Shelton Pty Ltd
Floors:5
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:VICHR
Designation1 Offname:Block Arcade
Designation1 Type:State Registered Place
Designation1 Date:October 9, 1974
Designation1 Number:H0032[1]
Designation1 Free1name:Heritage Overlay number
Designation1 Free1value:HO596

The Block Arcade is a historic shopping arcade in the central business district of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Constructed between 1891 and 1893, it is considered one of the late Victorian era's finest shopping arcades and ranks among Melbourne's most popular tourist attractions.

Designed by architects Twentyman & Askew, the Block is one of Melbourne's most richly decorated interior spaces, replete with mosaic tiled flooring, glass canopy supported in cast and wrought iron, and tall, elaborate timber shop fronts. The arcade is L-shaped with an octagonal rotunda at the corner, connecting Collins Street at the south end to Elizabeth Street on the west. On the north side, the arcade connects to Block Place, a covered pedestrian lane that leads to Little Collins Street, opposite Melbourne's oldest shopping arcade, the Royal Arcade. The Block Arcade's six-storey external façades on both Collins and Elizabeth streets are some of Australia's best surviving examples of Victorian architecture in the Mannerist style.

The arcade takes its name from the practice of "doing the block": dressing fashionably and promenading the section of Collins Street between Elizabeth and Swanston streets. It is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register.[2]

Name: "doing the block"

By the late 1870s, the north side of Collins Street between Swanston and Elizabeth streets had become the favoured promenade of Melbourne's well-to-do, who went there to frequent its prestigious shops and cafes, and to see and be seen as they walked from one end to the other. This practice became known as "doing the block".[3]

Author Fergus Hume described "doing the block" in his novel The Mystery of a Hansom Cab, first published in Melbourne in 1886:

History

The site

On 1 June 1837, the first auctions of blocks in what is now the Melbourne CBD took place. The block now occupied by the Collins Street portion of the arcade was purchased by William Briscoe & Son. The Briscoes Bulk Grain Store occupied the site from 1856 to 1883, building a large new premises in 1877.[4]

In 1883, the building was sold to the George brothers' George & George Federal Emporium, established in 1880 a few doors up, who refurbished the interior for their expanding drapery business[5] (which would eventually become Georges Store). Financier and landboomer Benjamin Fink was a director of the company, and by 1888 had plans to relocate the store and create an L-shaped arcade in the area, and began buying up properties.[6] [7] In 1888 Fink bought the Equitable Co-operative store at 162 Collins Street, and made it a branch of George’s.

Construction

At 6:15 pm on Friday 13 September 1889, a huge fire gutted the Georges Emporium, causing over AU$400,00 worth of damage, and accelerating Finks plans, with George’s consolidated at the new site.

The fire occurred at the height of the land boom of the 1880s, when Melbourne grew enormously and many large and elaborate hotels shops and office blocks rose in the city. The fire allowed the City Property & Co Pty Ltd (principal shareholder Benjamin Fink) to proceed with plans to create a sumptuous arcade on this central site, hiring architects Twentyman & Askew to design it, announced in January 1890,[8] with the name 'The Block' revealed soon after.[9] The Collins Street leg was built first, which was completed by late 1891,[10] to little fanfare, with the grand opening of the whole arcade on 7 October 1893.[11]

The Collins Street leg has an angled kink because the site narrows part way up due to the presence of a narrow laneway on the west side. Originally known as Carpenters Lane, the City Property Co successfully petitioned to roof it, creating a covered access from the Block Arcade to Little Collins Street. This in turn led to the development of shops in the lane, which was soon renamed Block Place.[12] In 1902, Royal Arcade, which has been a dead end, was opened through to Little Collins Street creating a covered walk from Collins right through to Bourke Street.

The design is often said to have been inspired by the 1870s Galleria Vittorio in Milan, which has a similar domed crossing, but on a much vaster scale.[13] [14]

Ownership changes

In the 1986, the arcade was purchased by the Time Corporation for AU$15 million.[15] By 1991, Westpac took over the mortgage and sold the building to the Kearney family in 1993 at public auction.[16] The Kearneys undertook extensive refurbishment, repairing the mosaic floors, repainting the interior in heritage colours, and renovating the office spaces above.

In 2014, the Cohen family purchased the Block Arcade. The Cohen family have had long ties with Melbourne which date back to the 1840s, when Trevor Cohen's great great grandfather struck one of the first leases in Melbourne, for the ground floor of the nearby 'Cashmore's Corner' on the northeast corner of Collins and Elizabeth Streets, and where his great grandmother was born. The Cohens are passionate about the precinct, and continue to maintain the Block Arcade to its former glory with an eye for detail.[17]

Block Court

The building adjacent to the Block Arcade at 288-292 Collins Street was built in 1890 as the Athenaeum Club, and in 1930 the ground floor was converted into an arcade, designed by noted architect Harry Norris, one of the earliest and most elaborate Art Deco interiors in Melbourne.[18] This arcade originally connected through to the Block Arcade with the removal of one of the shopfronts in the Elizabeth Street wing. At some point this building was bought by the owners of the Block Arcade, and they are still in the same ownership. In the 1990s, as part of the restoration of the Block Arcade, the shop was reinstated, and the north end of the Block Court arcade was closed off, and the shopfronts removed to create a large area shop. In 2016, the Block Court Arcade was partially restored, reinstating the shopfronts, but as counters for a branch of the Bendigo Bank, with access through the rear to a laneway and then into the Block Arcade.[19]

Notable shops

The Hopetoun Tea Rooms opened in 1894, established by 'society girl' Miss Chrissie Robertson, 'daintily appointed' and intended for her society friends who did not wish to patronise ordinary tea rooms.[20] [21] Moving to the current rooms in 1907, it was redecorated in 1976 in Victorian style, with emerald and black wallpaper, and velvet ceiling hangings, designed by interior designer Murray Sheldrick.[22] [23] The Hopetoun Tea Rooms are sometimes confused with the tea room located in the rotunda of the Ladies Work Association, a charity for upper class women who had fallen on hard times, which operated from 1891-c1900, and whose patron was Lady Hopetoun.[24] The business went into receivership in 2020, and along with the right to the name was sold to a new owner who opened a new Hopetoun Tea Room in Bourke Street,[25] with the arcade tea rooms reopened by the Cohen family as The Tea Rooms 1892.[26] The Singer Sewing Machine Company moved into the shop on the eastern side of the Collins Street entrance in 1902, where it remained for many years. The shop was popular with female patrons, and sewing classes were run in the basement. Phillip Goatcher, scenic artist, was commissioned to paint an elaborate mural on the ceiling, still in place.[27]

In the shop to the left of the Collins Street entrance, the Block Arcade also housed the first Kodak store in Melbourne, the camera company from Rochester, New York. Kodak allowed the average person to take photographs and promoted the arts of photography to the general public, and the store sold parts, cameras, and equipment to both amateurs and professionals. It retains an elaborate pressed metal ceiling.[28]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Block Arcade . Victorian Heritage Database. Government of Victoria. 4 June 2024.
  2. 0032. 596.
  3. Web site: School of Historical Studies. Department of History. Doing the Block - Entry - eMelbourne - The Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online. 2020-06-23. www.emelbourne.net.au. en-gb.
  4. News: 1877-09-01. THE NEW WAREHOUSES OF MESSRS. BRISCOE AND CO., COLLINS—STREET EAST.. 93. Australasian Sketcher with Pen and Pencil (Melbourne, Vic. : 1873 - 1889). 2020-06-23.
  5. Web site: A NEW ENTERPRISE. - The Age (Melbourne, Vic. : 1854 - 1954) - 11 Sep 1883. 2020-06-23. Trove. en.
  6. News: 1888-04-12. CURRENT NOTES.. 1. Melbourne Punch (Vic. : 1855 - 1900). 2020-06-23.
  7. News: 1892-10-14. A Romance of Finance.. 5. Table Talk (Melbourne, Vic. : 1885 - 1939). 2020-06-23.
  8. http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article197013175 The City Property Company's New Arcade
  9. News: 1891-03-24. A New Arcade. 5. The Age. 2020-06-23.
  10. News: 1891-11-28. A NEW MUSIC WAREHOUSE.. 24. Australasian. 2020-06-23.
  11. News: 1893-10-07. THE TOWN.. 25. Leader (Melbourne, Vic. : 1862 - 1918, 1935). 2020-06-23.
  12. Web site: School of Historical Studies. Department of History. Block Place - Entry - eMelbourne - The Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online. 2020-06-26. www.emelbourne.net.au. en-gb.
  13. News: 1906-08-27. PUBLIC. HOUSE OR CAFE?. 3. Herald (Melbourne, Vic. : 1861 - 1954). 2020-06-23.
  14. In 2003, the City of Melbourne signed a sister city agreement with the City of Milan, perhaps inspired by the connection between the Block Arcade and the Galleria.
  15. Web site: Block Arcade. 2020-06-23. eMelbourne - The Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online. en-gb.
  16. Web site: Melbourne's historic shopping precinct, Block Arcade, up for sale listl. ABC News. 2016-07-25.
  17. Web site: Block Arcade owner unveils surprises under the dome listl. The Age. 2016-07-25.
  18. Web site: Block Court Arcade. 2020-06-23. vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au.
  19. Web site: 2016-02-17. More foot traffic than an AFL final lures Bendigo Bank to Cohen's Block. 2020-06-23. Australian Financial Review. en.
  20. News: 1894-07-12. gossip.. 27. Melbourne Punch (Vic. : 1855 - 1900). 2020-05-28.
  21. Most online sources state that it was bought for £18, opened concurrently with the opening of the Block Arcade in 1892, established by the Victorian Ladies' Work Association charity, and named in honour of Lady Hopetoun, wife of Lord Hopetoun, Victorian Governor (1889–1895). However that was a smaller tea room that was part of the societies rooms and activities, named after them, rather than Lady Hopetoun.
  22. News: August 1976. The Age.
  23. Web site: Block Arcade. Victorian Heritage Database. 2020-05-28.
  24. Web site: School of Historical Studies. Department of History. Hopetoun Tea Rooms - Entry - eMelbourne - The Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online. 2020-06-23. www.emelbourne.net.au. en-gb.
  25. Web site: After 128 Years, Melbourne’s Historic Hopetoun Tea Rooms Is Moving Out of the Block Arcade . 2024-06-01 . Broadsheet . en.
  26. Web site: 2020-11-19 . Block Arcade's owners ready for Melbourne CBD to reawaken . 2024-06-01 . Australian Financial Review . en.
  27. Web site: Block Arcade listl. 2016-07-25. Melbourne Heritage.
  28. Web site: Photograph - Kodak, Building Exterior, Block Arcade, Melbourne, circa 1908 listl. Museum Victoria Collections. 2016-07-25.