Chemistry Building | |||||||||||||||||||||
Status: | complete | ||||||||||||||||||||
Building Type: | Academic administration | ||||||||||||||||||||
Location: | Masson Road, The University of Melbourne, Campus, Melbourne, Victoria | ||||||||||||||||||||
Location Town: | --> | ||||||||||||||||||||
Location Country: | Australia | ||||||||||||||||||||
Coordinates: | -37.7981°N 144.9619°W | ||||||||||||||||||||
Completion Date: | 1938 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Destruction Date: | --> | ||||||||||||||||||||
Owner: | The University of Melbourne | ||||||||||||||||||||
Material: | Cream brickwork | ||||||||||||||||||||
Floor Count: | 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Architect: | Percy Edgar Everett | ||||||||||||||||||||
Unit Count: | --> | ||||||||||||||||||||
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The Chemistry Building is a university teaching facility used by the University's School of Chemistry, located at Masson Road, The University of Melbourne, Campus, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The building was designed by Percy Edgar Everett, who at the time was employed by the Victorian Public Works Department.[1] It was built in 1938 at a time of major expansion at the University through the 1920s and 1930s.
The building is best described as a modernist, inter-war, gothic architecture, and due to this it has been deemed to be of state historical and architectural significance on the National Trust register.[2]
The Chemistry Building is a distinctive modern interpretation of a Collegiate Gothic style. Its most notable features, which are stylistic of the inter-war period, are the cream brickwork, bold massing and highly detailed tower decoration. In recent years the Chemistry Building had interior redevelopments to bring the outdated technology and amenities up to the standard required for modern chemistry research.[2]
During the 1930s when the building was constructed, Melbourne University placed a lot of importance on the opinions of experts such as chemists. For this reason, Ernst Johannes Hartung, a professor of chemistry at the time, designed most of the interior of the building to suit the specific requirements of chemistry research.[3]
The Masson Theatre in the chemistry school has a heritage listing despite losing its impressive two-storey high rolling blackboards and theatre-wide front rostrum in the late 1980s.[4] It has undergone a recent renovation addressing safety concerns but preserving the remaining character.[5]