Woodside Plaza | |
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Woodside Plaza
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General information | |
Type | Office tower |
Location | 240 St Georges Tce, Perth, Western Australia |
Coordinates | 31°57′10″S 115°51′7″E / 31.95278°S 115.85194°ECoordinates: 31°57′10″S 115°51′7″E / 31.95278°S 115.85194°E |
Construction started | 27 February 2001 |
Completed | 2004 |
Opening | March 2004 |
Cost | A$250 million |
Management | CB Richard Ellis |
Height | |
Antenna spire | 137 m (449 ft) |
Roof | 127 m (417 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 27 over ground (including plant) 2 basement |
Floor area | 46,000 m2 (500,000 sq ft) (lettable) 77,000 m2 (830,000 sq ft) (total) |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Kann Finch & Partners Pty Ltd |
Developer | Deutsche Asset Management |
Structural engineer | Kellogg Brown and Root |
Main contractor | Baulderstone Hornibrook |
References | |
Woodside Plaza is a 29-storey skyscraper in Perth, Western Australia. The 137-metre (449 ft) tower serves as the headquarters for Woodside Petroleum and incorporates several energy-efficient design features. When completed in 2004, the building was the first premium-grade skyscraper completed in Perth since Central Park in 1992. It is currently the sixth tallest skyscraper in Perth.
Woodside Petroleum experienced strong growth in its business during the 1990s. However, there had been no major expansion in office space in the Perth central business district since the opening of Exchange Plaza and Central Park in 1992. As a result, by 1998 Woodside had its Perth staff spread across six sites, including Central Park and the headquarters at 1 Adelaide Terrace.
Woodside Petroleum called for tenders for a tower to be constructed for the company. Perron Group put forward a proposal to leave Woodside in its existing headquarters on Adelaide Terrace and build a tower beside it to house the other staff. Meanwhile, Consolidated Press Holdings and Multiplex proposed to build a tower on CPH's Westralia Square site.Jones Lang Wootton proposed a new tower on the Bishop's See site.
However, it was announced in April 1999 that the winning tenderer was Hai Sun Hup Group subsidiary Knoxville Group. This proposal was to develop Hai Sun Hup's site at the corner of St Georges Terrace and Milligan Street into an office tower and hotel project. This 9,000-square-metre (97,000 sq ft) site stretches all the way from St Georges Terrace to Hay Street, and had been bought by Alistair McAlpine for $100 million, before later being sold to Hai Sun Hup in 1996 for just $20 million. The mostly vacant site was occupied by small buildings fronting Hay Street and vacant land fronting all three streets. The corner of Milligan Street and St Georges Terrace also featured the eight-storey AWA Computer House. The development also necessitated the demolition of the building on Hay Street which housed the Matsuri Japanese Restaurant, which moved to new premises in QV.1.