St Peters Town Hall | |
Building Type: | Government town hall |
Architectural Style: | Inter-War Free Classical |
Location Town: | Sydenham, New South Wales |
Location Country: | Australia |
Start Date: | 16 April 1927 |
Completion Date: | 3 December 1927 |
Renovation Date: | 2009 |
Client: | St Peters Municipal Council |
Owner: | Inner West Council (current) |
Architecture Firm: | J. Campbell & Son |
Main Contractor: | William M. Martin |
The St Peters Town Hall is a heritage-listed town hall located in Sydenham, New South Wales, Australia. The Town Hall was built in 1927 in the Inter-War Free Classical architectural style by architects J. Campbell & Son, and replaced the 1878 St Peters Town Hall, which was located on the Princes Highway and was resumed by the state government in 1926 for road-widening. The Town Hall was the seat of St Peters Municipal Council from 1927 to 1948 and from 1949 was a branch library and community hall of the Municipality of Marrickville, which absorbed St Peters.
Designed by J. Campbell & Son, the foundation stone of the town hall was laid by Deputy Mayor Edward Burrows on 16 April 1927.[1] Completed to a cost of £7000, the hall was officially opened by the mayor, George Rowswell, on 3 December 1927.[2] [3] [4]
The Town Hall and its interiors was first listed in 2001 under the Marrickville Local Environment Plan (updated 2011) as "one of the last buildings which commemorates the old Municipality of St Peters."[5]