Old Perth Technical School | |
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St Georges Terrace facade in 2012, after commercial refurbishment
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General information | |
Architectural style | Federation Free/Medieval |
Location | Perth, Australia |
Address | 137 St Georges Terrace |
Coordinates | 31°57′16″S 115°51′17″E / 31.9544°S 115.8548°ECoordinates: 31°57′16″S 115°51′17″E / 31.9544°S 115.8548°E |
Completed | 1900 |
Renovated | 2008 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 4 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Hillson Beasley |
The 1910 Perth Technical School building is located at 137 St Georges Terrace, Perth, Western Australia, adjacent to the Old Perth Boys School building, which had served as part of the school's former temporary premises since opening of classes there on 16 May 1900.
A restrained and incomplete example of the Federation Free Medieval architectural style, designed by government architect Hillson Beasley, this is one of the few examples of the style surviving in central Perth.
The building is a three-level red-brick structure with limestone footings and Donnybrook stone trimmings. There is a square tower, originally intended to be central, with castellated parapets. The interiors exhibit fine craftsmanship in joinery, with jarrah timber panelling and art nouveau leadlighting and glass. A grand staircase of jarrah connects the three levels of the building.
Jarrah staircase
Art nouveau clear leadlight windows on stairway
Main entrance and hall
Detail of leadlight window at entry door
Leadlight windows at sides of entry porch
Stone-carved name above main entrance
The site of the former Perth Technical School was, in the early years of the Swan River Colony, part of the holding of Henry Willey Reveley. Plans show the manner in which Reveley's mill and spring-fed mill pond were linked by an ingenious mill-race down the steep slope to Bazaar Terrace (now Mounts Bay Road), along the Perth foreshore.