Box Hill Central Explained

Box Hill Central
Location:Box Hill, Victoria, Australia
Coordinates:-37.8194°N 145.1233°W
Opening Date:1975 (North)1987 (South)
Owner:Vicinity Centres (100%)
Manager:Vicinity Centres
Developer:Vicinity Centres
Number Of Stores:157
North: 40South: 117
Number Of Anchors:2
North: 0[1] South: 2[2]
Floor Area:
North: [3] South: [4]
Parking:2,303
North: 858South: 1,445
Floors:3
Publictransit:Train (Box Hill), Tram (109), Bus (Box Hill Bus Station)[5]
Website:www.boxhillcentral.com.au

Box Hill Central is a regional shopping centre complex and public transport hub located in the eastern Melbourne suburb of Box Hill, Australia. It is made up of two separate centres, Box Hill Central South and Box Hill Central North. The centre is approximately 16km (10miles) east of the Melbourne central business district.

With over of leasable area, the centre features the largest concentration of retail space in Box Hill, one of nine designated Metropolitan Activity Centres in Melbourne that are centralised hubs of employment, services and housing.[6] [7] After years of consolidating nearby property holdings, Box Hill Central is currently undergoing a major expansion as part of a 10 year masterplan scheduled to be fully completed by 2030.[8]

History

Background

The rapid expansion of Melbourne's suburbs following the Second World War caused significant population increases in the eastern parts of the metropolitan area. Box Hill, previously a separate town, became more connected to the rest of the city and grew in importance as a regional centre.[9]

Following the opening of the Forest Hill Chase shopping centre in 1964, the Box Hill City Council and existing businessowners in Box Hill became worried about the competition this would bring. A spate of further centralised shopping centres built in nearby Ringwood and Doncaster only heightened their concerns and accelerated plans for Box Hill to develop its own retail hub.[10] An old timber yard in Clisby Street had been identified as a possible site for a large-scale development in 1961 which now became the focal point for a new shopping centre.

Opening - north

Following many years of planning, tenders were called for a new centre in 1973 for a new multi-storey carpark and shopping centre. In November 1974 it opened as Whitehorse Plaza, a three-level regional shopping centre, at a cost of $3.5 million.[11] it housed anchor tenants such as Coles, Kmart, and Venture, larger tenants like Sussans, Williams The Shoeman, Priceline, Lincraft, and Medicare, along with other assorted retailers, eateries, and services. This is the section today known as Box Hill Central North.

Opening - south

Box Hill Central South was originally constructed in the early 1980s, when the old Box Hill railway station and level crossing was removed, and Market and Main Streets were closed to traffic.[12] Box Hill Central opened in 1987, as a single-level regional shopping centre. It housed anchor tenants Target and Woolworths.

First redevelopment - south (1998-2000)

The shopping centre was reconstructed in 1998 and in 2000 and acquired by Centro Properties, who renamed it to Centro Box Hill South, though many still referred to it as Box Hill Central.

First redevelopment - north (2000-2003)

Due to a lack of tenants, Whitehorse Plaza closed in 2000 before undergoing a complete refurbishment. All tenancies within the centre were demolished, the development's layout and car parks were reconfigured, and there was major refurbishment of external and internal facades. Named Whitehorse City before opening, the centre was reopened on 1 July 2003 by Centro Properties as Centro Whitehorse, a two-level regional shopping centre, featuring anchor tenants Coles and Best & Less.

Second redevelopment - north (2007)

In 2007, Centro Whitehorse was rebranded to Centro Box Hill North and partially redeveloped, with Best & Less closing down and being replaced by a Harris Scarfe location.

On 2 February 2020, Harris Scarfe closed its store at Box Hill, as part of its restructure and reduction in store locations. The location was leased to Dimmeys. The Coles supermarket closed in August 2022 and relocated to Box Hill Central South.[13]

Second redevelopment - south (2010)

In 2010, the shopping centre was again refurbished, with Target being replaced by Big W, and Woolworths being renovated and reopened.

Rebranding and consolidation (2013)

In 2013, both centres were again rebranded as Box Hill Central South and Box Hill Central North as a result of an organisation-wide rebranding of all centres owned by Federation Limited.

Third redevelopment and masterplan (2021-onwards)

In 2020 Vicinity Centres released a masterplan planning significant changes to both the north and south sections of the centre. It outlined plans to move retail activity to the south side of the site, construct additional office and residential towers, and provide new open space. Upon completion, it is planned to cover over of residential, office and retail area.[14] [15]

The first stage of the ten year masterplan commenced in July 2021 and was completed in August 2022. This added a new entrance to Box Hill Central South to the south from Carrington Road and rebuilt the south-western corner of the site to a new design and with additional retail space.[16] A new Coles supermarket replaced the former Big W.[17]

Complex

Box Hill Central North

This older and largest section of the complex was formerly known as Whitehorse Plaza. It comprises two floors with some minor office use.

Box Hill Central South

Straddling the underground railway station, this building is bounded by Station Street, Carrington Road, Thurston Street and Main Street. It is significantly larger than its northern counterpart and consists of several newer and older sections.

Office use

Both centres have office facilities located above or adjacent to the retail areas. Box Hill Central South provides of co-working office space while the North houses a small number of medical facilities.

Transport interchange

See main article: article and Box Hill railway station, Melbourne. Box Hill Central South is built above the underground Box Hill railway station with the entrance contained inside the shopping centre. It provides a direct link through the shopping complex to the Box Hill Bus Station on its roof, servicing 18 different bus routes. The centre is also serviced by tram route 109 with its terminus nearby on Whitehorse Road.

Box Hill Central has seven levels of undercover car parking spread across the south and north sections of the complex. Some bicycle parking is also located at most major entrances.

Retail

The two shopping centres have a combined 157 shops and services across a gross leasable area of . The majority of this area is located in Box Hill Central South. Its two anchor tenants, Coles and Woolworths supermarkets, occupy 31% of the total leasable space of the South complex. Coles was formerly located in the Box Hill Central North complex before moving to its present space in 2022.[18]

Other mini major retailers in Box Hill Central include NQR, Priceline Pharmacy, Daiso and Dimmeys.

A large portion of both centres are dedicated to food and beverage outlets. These are concentrated in two central food courts, one in each of the centres, as well as along Main Street between the two buildings.[19]

Previous tenants of Box Hill Central include Big W, Kmart, Kmart Food, Target, Venture, Harris Scarfe, EB Games, Sanity and Best & Less.

The Box Hill region is known for its mainly Hong Kong Chinese population, with smaller groups of mainland Chinese, Taiwanese and Vietnamese. This is reflected in the produce in many of the food and beverage outlets, medicinal herb retailers and clothing shops.[20] [21]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Box Hill Central North Asset Profile . Vicinity Centres . 17 June 2024.
  2. Web site: Box Hill Central South Asset Profile . Vicinity Centres . 17 June 2024.
  3. Web site: Box Hill Central North . Vicinity Centres . 17 June 2024.
  4. Web site: Box Hill Central South . Vicinity Centres . 17 June 2024.
  5. Web site: Box Hill Bus Station/Station St . Public Transport Victoria . 17 June 2024.
  6. Web site: The Vision for Box Hill . www.whitehorse.vic.gov.au . Whitehorse City Council . 17 June 2024 . en.
  7. Web site: Plan Melbourne 2017 - 2050 . The plan . Department of Transport and Planning . 17 June 2024.
  8. Web site: 10-year transformation project to revitalise the heart of Box Hill . Vicinity Centres . 17 June 2024.
  9. Web site: Box Hill and Box Hill City . www.victorianplaces.com.au . 17 June 2024.
  10. Web site: City of Whitehorse Post-1945 Heritage Study . Whitehorse City Council . Built Heritage . 17 June 2024.
  11. Web site: The changing face of Box Hill . . 17 June 2024.
  12. Web site: The changing face of Box Hill . 2023-09-20 . Victoria's Big Build . en-US.
  13. Web site: New Coles store now open!. Box Hill Central. 30 August 2022.
  14. News: McKeown . Renee . Vicinity Centres Reveals Billion-Dollar Box Hill Precinct Plans . 17 June 2024 . www.theurbandeveloper.com . 2 June 2020 . en.
  15. Web site: BOX HILL CENTRAL NORTH REDEVELOPMENT MASTER PLAN Planning Scheme Amendment Planning Report . Department of Transport and Planning . Urbis . 20 June 2024.
  16. News: Box Hill Central Shopping Centre Redevelopment, Victoria, Australia . 17 June 2024 . Retail Insight Network.
  17. Web site: 2021-01-08. 'Really sad': Big W to close down TWO popular stores in just four days. 2021-09-21. Seven News.
  18. Web site: Box Hill Central (North Precinct) Leasing Fact Sheet . Vicinity Centres . 20 June 2024.
  19. Web site: Food Court & Takeaway . www.boxhillcentral.com.au . 20 June 2024 . en-us.
  20. Web site: Box Hill Central is the home of some of Melbourne’s best Chinese snacks - Melbourne Food and Wine Festival . Melbourne Food and Wine . 20 June 2024 . en-AU . 1 June 2023.
  21. News: Leong . Melissa . Attention food-court lovers: this is where to eat the best authentic Asian food in Melbourne . 20 June 2024 . SBS Food . en.