Blues Point Tower Explained

Blues Point Tower
Location:Sydney
Address:14–28 Blues Point Road, McMahons Point
Coordinates:-33.8492°N 151.2033°W
Status:Completed
Completion Date:1962
Building Type:Residential
Architectural Style:Modernist
Roof:83m (272feet)
Floor Count:25
Architect:Harry Seidler and Associates

Blues Point Tower is an apartment block in Sydney, Australia. Located in McMahons Point, close to North Sydney, the tower is tall with 144 apartments over 24 levels.[1] The building is regarded by some critics as one of the ugliest buildings in Sydney.[2] [3]

History

Construction was completed in 1962, and it was Australia's tallest residential building until 1970.[2]

The architect was Harry Seidler and Associates, who had planned a high-density redevelopment for the entire suburb.[4] [5] Reacting to a 1957 suggestion that the area be zoned for industrial use, Seidler proposed that McMahons Point could instead house hundreds of apartments, all with harbour views.[2] Although the industrial zoning was rejected, political support for Seidler's plan quickly faded, and Blues Point Tower was the only element of the plan to be built.

Seidler was commissioned by Dick Dusseldorp, through his company Civil & Civic.[1] The company's site office during construction was located in an 1870s Victorian villa named Bellvue, which formerly occupied the site.[4]

In February 2011, a tall maritime radar was added to the building's roof.[6] [7]

Architecture and heritage value

The heritage listing for the Tower describes it as a "Conspicuous, though unpopular, example of Internationalist style. This landmark building was innovative in its day and intended as a forerunner of a whole movement in architecture and high-density housing".[8]

Criticism

Blues Point Tower is considered by many Sydney residents to be inconsistent with its surrounding buildings and cityscape.[9] Over time, many public figures have criticised it, or even called for its demolition.[3] However, in 1993, North Sydney Council added the building to its local heritage register.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Towering ambition . The Sydney Morning Herald . Lacey, Stephen . 28 September 2002 . 14 April 2011.
  2. Web site: Eyeful tower . The Sydney Morning Herald . Dale, David . 17 May 1991 . 14 April 2011.
  3. Web site: Harry's Dream . The Sydney Morning Herald . Susskind, Anne . 30 July 1995 . 14 April 2011 .
  4. Web site: From Track to Tarmac . Masson, Léonie . North Sydney Council . April 2005 . 30 March 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110706121846/http://www.northsydney.nsw.gov.au/resources/documents/38_Track_tarmac_walk1.pdf . 6 July 2011 .
  5. Book: Seidler, Harry . Seidler's scrapbooks . 2 . 1957–1962 . State Library of NSW . 30 March 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110331032429/http://www.sl.nsw.gov.au/discover%5Fcollections/society_art/seidler/scrapbooks/seid3_turner/scrapbook2.html . 31 March 2011 . dead .
  6. News: Heritage woe on the radar . The Mosman Daily . Eriksson, Boel . 23 August 2010 . 30 March 2011 .
  7. Web site: New maritime radar . Whitten, Phil . 25 February 2011 . 30 March 2011 .
  8. Web site: State Heritage Inventory Heritage NSW.
  9. Web site: Walkabout: #1 Blues Point Road . Benedictus, Luke . Time Out Sydney . 18 July 2009 .
  10. Web site: Blues Point Tower . NSW State Heritage Register . 14 April 2011 .