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Sandgate Town Hall

Sandgate Town Hall
Sandgate Town Hall (8076224299).jpg
Sandgate Town Hall, 2012
Location 5 Brighton Road, Sandgate, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates 27°19′14″S 153°04′14″E / 27.3206°S 153.0705°E / -27.3206; 153.0705Coordinates: 27°19′14″S 153°04′14″E / 27.3206°S 153.0705°E / -27.3206; 153.0705
Design period 1900 - 1914 (early 20th century)
Built 1911 - 1912
Built for Sandgate Town Council
Architect Thomas Ramsay Hall
Architectural style(s) Classicism
Owner Brisbane City Council
Official name: Sandgate Town Hall
Type state heritage (built)
Designated 13 January 1995
Reference no. 601566
Significant period 1911-1924 (historical)
1911 - ongoing (social)
1910s (fabric)
Significant components library - chamber/room, hall, views from, furniture/fittings, dress circle, office/s, stage/sound shell, tower - clock, views to
Builders John Gemmell
Sandgate Town Hall is located in Queensland
Sandgate Town Hall
Location of Sandgate Town Hall in Queensland
Sandgate Town Hall is located in Australia
Sandgate Town Hall
Location of Sandgate Town Hall in Queensland

Sandgate Town Hall is a heritage-listed town hall at 5 Brighton Road, Sandgate, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by Thomas Ramsay Hall and built from 1911 to 1912 by John Gemmell. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 13 January 1995.

The Sandgate Town Hall was constructed in 1911-1912 when the previous chambers were destroyed by fire. The architect of the hall, which cost £5000, was Thomas Ramsay Hall, and the contractor John Gemmell.

Europeans first settled in Sandgate in the 1850s, and the area prospered into the following century as the principal sea-side resort in south east Queensland, encouraged by the introduction of the railway in May 1882. The Town of Sandgate was established in 1902, previously included as part of the Nundah Division from 1879, then established as a separate Borough of Sandgate in April 1880.

The first Municipal Council meetings from 1880 until 1882 were held in a large room rented in a masonry building, thought to be the oldest building in Sandgate. The first official Sandgate Municipal Chambers and Town Hall was designed by Richard Gailey in 1882, and built in Kate Street near the popular pier and bathing area in what is now Shorncliffe. However, as Sandgate progressed, the centre of development was nearer the Sandgate railway station in Rainbow Street. Therefore, when a fire in 1910 destroyed the chambers a site for the new Town Hall was chosen closer to the Sandgate railway station and the 1887 Sandgate Post Office.

The foundation stone for the Sandgate Town Hall was laid by Sir William MacGregor, Governor of Queensland, on 14 October 1911. The building was constructed by John Gemmell, in eleven months, at a cost of £5000 including £300 for furnishing. Thomas Ramsay Hall, the architect, was then the Town Clerk of Sandgate. Later in his career, Hall went into partnership with George Gray Prentice (1919–1929) and designed such buildings as the Brisbane City Hall and from 1929–1948, he was in partnership with Lionel Blythewood Phillips with whom he designed many buildings, including Ascot Chambers and the McWhirters corner block.


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