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St. George's Cathedral, Perth

St George's Cathedral
Cathedral Church of St George
St George's Cathedral, view form the south west.jpg
St George's Cathedral is located in Perth
St George's Cathedral
St George's Cathedral
Location in Perth
31°57′21″S 115°51′40″E / 31.9557°S 115.8612°E / -31.9557; 115.8612Coordinates: 31°57′21″S 115°51′40″E / 31.9557°S 115.8612°E / -31.9557; 115.8612
Location St Georges Terrace, Perth, Western Australia
Country Australia
Denomination Anglican Church of Australia
Website perthcathedral.org
History
Status Cathedral
Dedicated 1888
Architecture
Functional status Active
Architect(s)
  • Edmund Blacket
  • Edmund & Cyril Blackett
  • J Talbot Hobbs (1902)
  • Charles Oldham, Harold Boas, Ednie Brown
  • George Herbert Parry (1914)
Architectural type Victorian Academic
Years built 1879-1888
Specifications
Materials
Bells Eight
Administration
Diocese Perth
Clergy
Dean Richard Pengelley
Official name St George's Cathedral
Type Built
Criteria 11.1., 11.2., 11.4., 12.1., 12.2., 12.3, 12.4., 12.5.
Designated 26 June 2001
Reference no. 020102

The St George's Cathedral is the principal Anglican church in the city of Perth, Western Australia and the mother-church of the Anglican Diocese of Perth. It is located on St Georges Terrace in the centre of the city.

On 26 June 2001 the cathedral was listed on the Western Australia Heritage Register with the following statement of significance:

The cathedral is a fine example of Victorian Academic Gothic architecture, designed by noted Australian architect Edmund Blacket; occuping a strategic position at the corner of Saint Georges Terrace and Cathedral Avenue, the cathedral is a major element within the Central Government Precinct, and makes a major contribution to the streetscape of central Perth; as the Cathedral of the See of the Anglican Archibishop of Perth, the place is held in high regard by the members of the Anglican Church and the general community; and, the building is closely associated with the establishment and growth of the State through its role as the premier place of worship for the Crown.

Built between 1879 and 1888 the cathedral is situated at the corner of St George's Terrace and Cathedral Avenue at the heart of Perth's heritage precinct, which includes the nearby Treasury Buildings and the Town Hall. It replaced an earlier building immediately to the north-east of the present one. The cathedral is described in the Western Australian State Heritage Register as being a church in the Victorian Academic style, built of locally-made brick, limestone from Rottnest Island and Western Australian jarrah. The pitched roof was originally covered with slates; these were replaced by tiles in the 1950s because the original roof leaked. A central nave, with a timber vaulted roof supported by hammerbeams, has an aisle on each side and a rose window dominating its western end. The rose coloured brick interior of the cathedral is simple but elegant. The State Heritage Register assessment describes the intersecting beams over the crossing as "impressive in their lightness and grace" and providing a "subdued but elegant decoration to the building". The present cathedral was designed by Sydney architect Edmund Blacket, the pre-eminent architect of his age in New South Wales.


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