Melbourne Hotel Explained

Melbourne Hotel
Alternate Names:Old Melbourne Hotel
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Building Type:Hotel
Architectural Style:Federation Free Classical
Client:John De Baun
Owner:Oaksfield Pty Ltd
Location:Corner Hay Street and Milligan Street
Address:942 Hay Street
Location Town:Perth, Western Australia
Opened Date:April 1897
Renovation Date:1971, 1994–95, 1997, 2015–2018
Floor Count:3
Architecture Firm:Peter John Wilson
Ren Architect:Oldham, Boas, Ednie-Brown (1994–95),Buchan Group (2015–2018)
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Designation1:State Register of Heritage Places
Designation1 Type:State Registered Place
Designation1 Date:21 January 1997

The Melbourne Hotel is a heritage listed landmark hotel in Perth, Western Australia. The hotel is located on the corner of Hay Street and Milligan Street.[1]

History

In the 1890s, in the wake of the Western Australian gold rush, American-born mining investor and hotelier John De Baun (1852–1912) moved to Perth with the intent of investing in real estate.[1] [2] In 1896, he purchased the Eagle Tavern on the corner of Hay Street and Milligan Street from the Swan Brewery Company, and demolished it.[1] [2] De Braun engaged Fremantle-based architect Peter John Wilson (1869–1918) to design a new hotel to replace it.[3] [4] The building is designed in the Federation Free Classical style, and named after Melbourne Street that at the time extended to nearby Murray Street.

The hotel officially opened in April 1897, serving both boarders and visitors to the city during the gold rush.[1] On 20 September 1898, Grace Lannin, the licensee of the hotel, was the first person charged for selling liquor after 11pm without a permit; she was fined 20 shillings.[5]

Although it was still being used as a hotel until the 1970s, it also served as a pub for the most part of the twentieth century.[1] In 1970 John Murdoch and Robert Stowe acquired the property, they then transferred the title to a syndicate of Western Australians (including Len Buckeridge), trading as Melbourne Hotel Pty Ltd. Buckeridge's company, Buckeridge and Associates, drew up the plans for the first major work undertaken on the hotel. These works involved extensive additions to the west side of the hotel and internal renovations. In the 1970s, the ground and first floors were used as a nightclub and cabaret lounge. Later, in the 1980s and 1990s, they were known as Tiffany's Nightclub, The Firm Nightclub, The Pink Galah Cabaret, Middleways Piano Bar, and Meccanos.[1] In 1993 the building was purchased by Decanning Ltd, who renovated it for the use of a private business club, The Old Melbourne Club. The company engaged the architectural firm of Oldham Boas Ednie-Brown to undertake the renovations, which included a western extension of the Hay Street frontage to match the existing structure. The renovations occurred from 1994 to 1995,[1] and included the restoration of the cantilevered balcony, together with the grand timber staircase and decorative ceilings, to their original splendour.[1]

In 2006, Singaporean-company Oakesfield Pty Ltd took ownership of the Melbourne Hotel. The Buchan Group architectural firm undertook renovations of the building from 2015–2018, which included demolition of the 1990s additions to the building and their replacement with a seven-storey structure that wrapped around the building.[6] The $40 million redevelopment included 73 guest rooms, function rooms and five food and drink venues. The front bar was reopened as De Baun & Co in honour of the original building owner John De Baun.[7]

Architectural character

It is a three-storey brick building with a pitched corrugated iron roof concealed behind an elaborate parapet. The facade has a painted stucco finish, round-headed timber windows and door openings arched with false stonework, attached columns, pilasters, triangular pediments and projecting mouldings, all in Federation Free Classical style. It features an elegant first floor balcony, cantilevered out over the pavement on both street frontages, supported on cast iron decorative brackets, cast iron columns and lacework with a bullnosed corrugated iron roof. The interior features include timber floor and roof construction, plastered wall finishes, timber joinery and mouldings, and decorative plaster ceilings, a decorative timber staircase, a metal lift car with leadlight doors and some leaded glass in fanlights to windows in the Hay Street facade.

Heritage value

The Melbourne Hotel was entered onto the Register of the National Estate by the Australian Heritage Commission on 1 November 1988. On 21 January 1997 it was placed on the permanent State Heritage Register.[8] It was included on the City of Perth's Municipal Heritage Inventory on 13 March 2001.[8] Additionally, it was classified by the National Trust of Australia (WA) on 7 December 1987.[8]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.melbournehotel.com.au/attachments/The_Melbourne_Hotel_History.pdf Melbourne Hotel
  2. Web site: Melbourne Hotel. Heritage Perth. City of Perth. 16 May 2014.
    The reference incorrectly refers to Melbourne Road. Melbourne St was renamed in 1923 to become part of Milligan St, but as shown on an 1860 map, Melbourne St itself never adjoined the corner of Hay and Milligan Sts.
  3. News: A New City Hotel. . Perth . 13 April 1896 . 16 May 2014 . 5 . National Library of Australia.
  4. Web site: Peter John Wilson. Australian Institute of Architects. 16 May 2014.
  5. News: ALLEGED BREACH OF THE LICENSING ACT. . . Perth . 20 September 1898 . 19 May 2014 . 7 . National Library of Australia.
  6. News: Old Melbourne closes for upgrade. 2015-01-21. The West Australian. 2018-04-17. en-GB.
  7. News: Old pub opens new bars after three-year drought. 2018-03-28. The West Australian. 2018-04-17. en-GB.
  8. Web site: Register of Heritage Places (Number 02005) Melbourne Hotel (fmr) . Heritage Council of Western Australia . 16 May 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140517121103/http://inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au/Public/Inventory/Details/4d16a70c-f12d-4125-b7da-e56295e3fb54 . 17 May 2014 . dmy-all .