Brisbane City Hall | |
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Brisbane City Hall
(view from King George Square) |
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General information | |
Architectural style | Italian Renaissance |
Location | King George Square, Brisbane |
Address | Adelaide Street, Brisbane City, Queensland |
Coordinates | 27°28′08″S 153°01′25″E / 27.46885°S 153.023602°ECoordinates: 27°28′08″S 153°01′25″E / 27.46885°S 153.023602°E |
Construction started | 29 July 1920 |
Inaugurated | 8 April 1930 |
Renovated | 6 April 2013 |
Cost | A£1,000,000 |
Owner | Brisbane City Council |
Height | 91 m |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 3 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Thomas Ramsay Hall George Gray Prentice |
Architecture firm | Hall & Prentice |
Structural engineer | Russell John McWilliam Freney & Davidson |
Other designers | Bruce Dellit, Peter Kaad, Emil Sodersten, Noel Wilson |
Main contractor | Arthur Midson D.D. Carrick |
Renovating team | |
Architect | Megan Jones, Scott MacArthur |
Website | |
www |
Brisbane City Hall, in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, is the seat of the Brisbane City Council. It is located adjacent to King George Square, where the rectangular City Hall has its main entrance. The City Hall also has frontages and entrances in both Ann Street and Adelaide Street. The building is considered one of Brisbane's finest and is registered on the Register of the National Estate since 1978.
The building has been used for royal receptions, pageants, orchestral concerts, civic greetings, flower shows, school graduations and political meetings.
In 2009, it was discovered that the building suffered from severe structural problems. After a three-year restoration, the building was re-opened on 6 April 2013.
The City Hall was once the tallest building in Brisbane (see external links below for image from 1957). The building was designed by the firm Hall and Prentice, in association with four young New South Wales Architects: Bruce Dellit,Peter Kaad, Emil Sodersten and Noel Wilson.
Although there was a strong desire to construct a new city hall, there were many years of debating the best location for it. Charles Moffatt Jenkinson, the mayor of Brisbane in 1914, is credited with having finalised the decision to construct the city hall at Albert Square (now known as King George Square), by selling the alternative site in Fortitude Valley to the Catholic Church who proposed to construct the Holy Name Cathedral on that site.