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Other NameSOUTH AUSTRALIAN INSURANCE BUILDING Location483-485 COLLINS STREET MELBOURNE, MELBOURNE CITY
File Number601952 (1)LevelRegistered |
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What is significant?
The New Zealand Chambers which comprises four storeys plus an attic
and basement, including the facade facing Collins Street, to a depth
of approximately twelve metres.
History summary
The New Zealand Chambers was built in 1888 by C Butler to a design by
architects Oakden, Addison and Kemp, and was later known as the South
Australian Insurance Building. The New Zealand Insurance Company
erected the building as their Melbourne office at a cost of
approximately £20,000 during the building boom of the 1880s, which
transformed this part of the city from one of small warehouses in
close proximity to the wharves, to one of commercial and mercantile
activity. The New Zealand Insurance Company was founded in Auckland in
1859 and by 1888 had many branches and agencies around the world. The
Record Chambers was threatened with demolition in the late 1960s, but
as a consequence of heritage legislation, the front part of the
building was retained in the 1984 redevelopment.
Description summary
The New Zealand Chambers comprises four storeys plus an attic and
basement. The facade is designed in the Gothic Revival style, a style
that was introduced in Melbourne the 1870s. The facade of the New
Zealand Chambers draws on colour as well as form for its effect. The
extensive use of red terra cotta tiles gives contrast to buff coloured
terra cotta mouldings and ceramic tiles decorated with fleur de lys.
The ground floor is composed of three large arches formed from
polished Scottish granite, with grouped columns standing on Malmsbury
bluestone plinths. The upper floors, all with polished granite
columns, form a picturesque composition, the top floor being an arcade
of twelve pointed arches beneath a cornice. Three dormer windows
puncture the attic storey, and the peak of each gable is decorated
with chequer board tiles.
How is it significant?
The New Zealand Chambers is of architectural and historical
significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The New Zealand Chambers is historically significant as an expression
of the strength and vitality during the economic boom period of its
first owner, the New Zealand Insurance Company. As an Australasian
company, the New Zealand Insurance Company expressed its pedigree by
the choice of Australasian timbers such as Borneo cedar, kauri and
blackwood for all the fittings, ceilings and dados though these are no
longer evident. [CriterionA] The New Zealand Chambers is also historically significant for its
association with the burgeoning heritage movement of the 1970s, in
particular the campaign to save the Gothic streetscape of Collins
Street by the National Trust. This campaign and the public concern and
development in the city led to the introduction of the Victorian
heritage legislation. [Criterion A] The New Zealand Chambers is architecturally significant as a clear
expression of the Gothic Revival style. The style was used by owners
and architects as a deliberate evocation of the commercial power and
prestige of the mercantile city of Venice. The style sought to
reinforce the aspirations and confidence of businesses during the
so-called boom period of the late 1880s. This secular Gothic revival
style contrasted strongly to the more academic and purist non-secular
Gothic styles employed in churches of all denominations. The New
Zealand Chambers is significant as an early example of the extensive
use of terra cotta mouldings and glazed tiles. Their use, which was
praised in a contemporary building journal, reflected the desire for
achieving both a colourful effect as well as a clean and healthy
image. [Criterion D] The New Zealand Chambers is also architecturally significant for its
contribution to the distinctive Gothic streetscape of the west end of
Collins Street. [Criterion D]
Commercial
Commercial Office/Building