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Registrar-General's building

Registrar-General's building
Sydney Registrar General's Building.jpg
The building, pictured in 2007
Registrar-General's building is located in Sydney
Registrar-General's building
Location in Greater Sydney
Alternative names Land Titles Office
Etymology Registrar-General Department
General information
Status Complete
Type Government administration
Architectural style Federation Gothic
Location 1 Prince Albert Road, Sydney central business district, New South Wales
Country Australia
Coordinates 33°52′12″S 151°12′48″E / 33.8699106915°S 151.2132561990°E / -33.8699106915; 151.2132561990Coordinates: 33°52′12″S 151°12′48″E / 33.8699106915°S 151.2132561990°E / -33.8699106915; 151.2132561990
Current tenants Land and Property Information
Construction started 1909
Completed 1913
Client Registrar-General's Department
Owner Government of New South Wales
Technical details
Material
  • Sandstone-faced
  • Steel-framed construction
  • Reinforced concrete floor
  • Slate covered steel framed roof
Floor count 3
Design and construction
Architect
Architecture firm New South Wales Government Architect
Official name Land Titles Office
Designated 2 April 1999
Reference no. 00962

The Registrar-General's building, also called the Land Titles Office, is an heritage-listed building located in the Sydney central business district, in New South Wales, Australia. The building is currently used by the Land and Property Information division of the Department of Finance, Services and Innovation, part of the Government of New South Wales.

The building is located near the junction of College and Macquarie street and is set in an historical setting on the eastern fringe of the central business district alongside St Mary's Cathedral, Queen's Square, St James' Church, the Sydney Mint, the UNESCO World Heritage Listed Hyde Park Barracks, and Hyde Park.

Designed by Walter Liberty Vernon in 1908, the building was constructed in stages from 1909 to 1913 to house the Registrar-General's Department, replacing the 1860 Registrar General's Office in Elizabeth Street. The building was used as the central recording point of births, deaths and marriages in the state and the storage of title deeds for the vast majority of the twentieth century.

On 2 April 1999 the building was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register with the following statement of significance:


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