Royal George Hotel, Albany Explained

Royal George Hotel
Map Dot Label:Royal George Hotel
Building Type:Heritage listed building
Location:Albany, Western Australia, Australia
Coordinates:-35.0271°N 117.8865°W
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:State Register of Heritage Places
Designation1 Type:State Registered Place
Designation1 Date:7 December 2007
Designation1 Partof:Stirling Terrace Precinct, Albany

The Royal George Hotel is a heritage listed building that operates as a hotel in Albany in the Great Southern region of Western Australia.

It is located along Stirling Terrace,[1] overlooking Princess Royal Harbour adjacent to the White Star Hotel.

The three storey building is an example of Victorian Free Classical architecture and is part of a group of commercial buildings with an asymmetrical façade and inter-columnisation. The building has a painted rendered brick facade on the second and third storeys with painted brick below. The roof is concealed by a parapet wall with gables and classical decorative motifs. Street level windows are arched and a cantilevered box verandah provides some shade and cover.

The hotel was built in 1885,[2] during the Western Australian goldrush of the 1890s and 1890s when thousands of prospectors arrived in Albany en route to the Kalgoorlie goldfields resulting in a building boom in Albany.[3]

The site on which the hotel is found was where Aberdeen House, constructed prior to 1867 and the home of Alexander and Catherine Moir, once stood. Some of the house was later incorporated into the rear of the hotel. The Moir's leased the building to Frederick Watts in the mid-1880s; he then converted it to a hotel. He named it the Railway Hotel after the Great Southern Railway station[4] that had been built just below the site. By 1892 Moir leased the hotel to Charles Bailye, who changed the name to the Royal George Hotel.

In 1897 the licensee was Edward Reynolds and the building had five sitting rooms and 22 bedrooms.[5]

The Cremorne Gardens were once located behind the hotel. The gardens included an outdoor cinema and a roller skating rink.[6] The gardens have since been demolished.

In 1910 work commenced on extensions to the hotel. The top storey was added along with a front balcony with cast iron lacework. The walls were made of tuck-pointed brickwork with stucco bands and sills. The first floor level had 18 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms and toilets and a sitting room. The second floor had 13 bedrooms with 2 baths and toilets. The bar facilities took up the ground floor.

The balcony has since been removed and replaced with a cantilevered box verandah.

Guests had to be evacuated when a fire broke out in one of the rooms in 2005, causing 35,000 worth of damage.[7] In 2014 a heritage grant was awarded to the Royal George and other heritage buildings for work such as painting and repairs to facades, brickwork and windows as part of Anzac Centenary commemorations.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Terrace takes place on history's map. Toyah Shakespeare. 4 April 2015. 15 April 2014. Albany Advertiser. Yahoo7.
  2. Web site: A brief history of Albany, WA. 3 May 2016. Rainbow Coast Western Australia.
  3. Web site: Albany, Western Australia. 4 April 2016. Aussie Towns.
  4. Web site: City of Albany Municipal Heritage Inventory Review Volume III of IV. 1994. 14 May 2016. City of Albany.
  5. News: Advertising . . X . 1,425 . Western Australia . 17 August 1897 . 8 May 2016 . 2 . National Library of Australia.
  6. Web site: Albany's Old Post Office building. 8 May 2016. 2013. Western Australian Museum.
  7. Web site: Council blaze could have been much worse. 13 December 2015. 8 May 2016. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  8. Web site: Media Releases Heritage shines for Anzac Centenary. 4 July 2014. 8 May 2016. Heritage Council of Western Australia.