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Tattersalls Club

Tattersalls Club
Tattersalls Club - Edward Street frontage (2009).jpg
Tattersalls Club, Edward Street frontage, 2009
Location 206 Edward Street, Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia
Coordinates 27°28′08″S 153°01′37″E / 27.4688°S 153.0269°E / -27.4688; 153.0269Coordinates: 27°28′08″S 153°01′37″E / 27.4688°S 153.0269°E / -27.4688; 153.0269
Design period 1919 – 1930s (interwar period)
Built 1925–1949
Built for Tattersalls Club
Architect Hall and Prentice
Owner Tattersalls Club
Official name: Tattersalls Club
Type state heritage (built)
Designated 21 October 1992
Reference no. 600093
Significant period 1925–1926, 1939, 1949 (fabric)
Significant components other – recreation/entertainment: component, library – collection, hall, dining room
Tattersalls Club is located in Queensland
Tattersalls Club
Location of Tattersalls Club in Queensland
Tattersalls Club is located in Australia
Tattersalls Club
Location of Tattersalls Club in Queensland

Tattersalls Club is a heritage-listed club house at 206 Edward Street (with a second frontage on Queen Street), Brisbane City, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by Hall and Prentice and built from 1925 to 1949. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.

These clubrooms were constructed for the Tattersalls Club of Brisbane in 1925–26, with extensions in 1938–39 and 1949.

Tattersalls Club was formed in November 1883, following the model of sporting clubs established in Britain. It was particularly concerned with horse racing, and the club held its first race meeting in 1884. Tattersalls Club met in the Australian Hotel at the corner of Queen and Albert Streets from 1883 until 1888 and then subsequently leased various premises as its clubrooms. Tattersalls made several inner city property investments, the sale of which financed the acquisition of a site in Edward Street for new clubrooms, as well as a 6 by 64 feet (1.8 by 19.5 m) 6 feet by 64 feet right of way to Queen Street.

The new clubrooms were designed by Hall and Prentice, architects for Brisbane's new City Hall, and the contractors were Green and Sons. Erected at a cost of £41,000, with an additional £5,000 spent on fittings and furnishings, Tattersalls Club was opened on 28 July 1926 and provided billiard, card, reading and dining rooms for its members. The main hall was modelled on the repository at Tattersalls auction room in London. Sculptor Daphne Mayo executed the decorative plaster frieze entitled The Horse in Sport along the wall of the Queen Street entrance passageway.

In 1936 an adjoining property in Queen Street was bought for £18,500 to enable the clubrooms to be extended. Constructed by J Hutchinson and Son, to the designs of T R Hall and L B Phillips, these extensions contained a new Art Deco dining room and were opened on 27 June 1939. The Members Dining Room features a 10.7m high ceiling, Queensland maple and silky oak, a mezzanine balcony, and murals created by local artists W Bustard, C H Lancaster, P Stanhope Hobday and Melville Haysom that depict the Australian landscape. The Art Deco features of this stunning room includes several decorative windows, grooved plasterwork in the ceiling and striking marble columns. In 1949 further Queen Street property was acquired and again the club expanded with the provision of a library and new offices.


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