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Parliament House, Melbourne

Parliament House is the meeting place of the Parliament of Victoria, one of the parliaments of the Australian states and territories.

Parliament House
Parliament House in 2010
General information
TypeParliament
Architectural styleNeoclassical
LocationVictoria
AddressSpring Street, East Melbourne
CountryAustralia
Current tenantsGovernment of Victoria
Construction started1855
Completed1929
Opened1856
Design and construction
Architect(s)Knight & Kerr & Peter Kerr
EngineerJohn George Knight
DesignationsVictorian Heritage Register
Website
www.parliament.vic.gov.au
1854 design by Knight & Kerr with Captain Pasley
Model of 1855 design by Knight & Kerr
1877 design for west front and dome, by Peter Kerr

Located on Spring Street on the edge of the Hoddle Grid, the grand colonnaded front dominates the vista up Bourke Street. Construction began in 1855, and the first stage was officially opened the following year, with various sections completed over the following decades; it has never been completed, and the planned dome is one of the most well known unbuilt features of Melbourne. Between 1901 and 1927, it served as the meeting place of the Parliament of Australia, during the period when Melbourne was the temporary national capital. The building is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register.[1][2]

Background

Site

The Victorian gold rush and population boom led calls for greater democracy and a home for political debate in Victoria.[3] Prior to the Colony of Victoria acquiring self-government in 1851, Governor Charles La Trobe instructed Surveyor General Robert Hoddle to select a site for the colony's new parliament to meet. Hoddle selected a site on the eastern hill at the top of Bourke Street, which commanded a view over the entire city. It was not until April 1854 that Eastern Hill, the current Spring Street site, was formally agreed to due to ongoing disagreements over the best location.[4]

Design

The exact sequence of events is unclear, with a number of architects and designs chosen and rejected in succession, with the final result possibly based on earlier work. The first design appeared as early as 1851 by then Colonial Architect Henry Ginn; however, the Legislative Council then decided to have a competition in 1853, which Ginn took as a slight and resigned. A design by Smith & Pritchard won first prize, but this was soon set aside as well. The Colony's newly arrived Chief Engineer (from Nov 1855 Commissioner of Public Works) Captain Pasley was asked to prepare a design by April 1854, possibly for a unicameral building, which may have been soon reworked into one for a bi-cameral Parliament, which had just been decided upon. A design was published in c1854 showing a restrained Palladian building much like the then recently started State Library of Victoria; this design was credited to Knight & Kerr "under the general directions of Captain Pasley". John Knight and Peter Kerr had just formed a partnership, and Knight may possibly still have been an architect within the Public Works Department at this time, while also practicing privately. This design was also apparently deemed unsuitable, and Knight & Kerr were employed separately to create a much grander design by 1855, which was perhaps mainly a reworking of the 1854 design.[5] This design is extraordinarily impressive and elaborate for a fledgling colony, albeit one flush with the results of the recent gold rush. It featured a columned screen on at least three sides, with end and central bays set forward, statuary atop the cornice, grand stairs, and a tall multi-stage columned and domed tower. Images of this design were also published, and photographs exist of a model of the scheme. Knight & Kerr are credited with the design of the first stages of Parliament House when construction commenced in 1855.[4]

Construction and completion

Chambers: 1855–1856

It was decided to construct the building in stages, owing to its vast size and cost, so construction began in December 1855 on only the two chambers, one for the Victorian Legislative Assembly and a smaller more ornate chamber for the Victorian Legislative Council. Construction progressed rapidly and on 25 November 1856, the first session of the Victorian Government in the new chambers was opened, to great acclaim.[4]

Library and Eastern Wing: 1858–1860

Construction of the Library and eastern wing began in 1858 and was completed in 1860. There was much debate about an appropriate stone for the exterior, with a desire to use stone from Victoria, though none could be found that were known to be entirely suitable. Bluestone was rejected as too dark and sombre, local granite as too expensive, even Carrara marble was considered, but freestone from Bacchus Marsh was chosen. This proved to decay rapidly and large parts had to be replaced with stone from Tasmania within a few years.[6] With the library complete, the two legislative chambers were joined at the rear, resulting in a `U-shaped' building. The classical architectural detail of the east facade were noted as the first expression of Peter Kerr's vision for the building.[4] No further construction took place for 18 years; however, the first set of electrical bells used to call members to divisions were installed circa 1877.

Queen's Hall, Vestibule and Proposed Dome: 1879–1882

In 1876 a Royal Commission was formed to recommend the next steps. It tabled several changes, including the addition of a large dome, and the appointment of Peter Kerr as leading architect, and a resumption of construction. Kerr produced new plans for the completion of the building in 1877, replacing the tower with a dome, and replacing the complex external architecture with a simpler design dominated by a long colonnade.[5] This is the design that is widely known and referred to as the 'original' design.

Though a radical simplification of the 1855 design, the main facade bears a strong similarity to Leeds Town Hall, designed 1853, and completed 1858, which is somewhat smaller and less elaborate. The dome however is quite different to Leeds’ square columned tower, which is however similar to the 1855 Melbourne tower, designed about the time a tower was added to the Leeds Town Hall design.

The Great Hall (renamed Queen's Hall in 1887) and vestibule were completed in 1879, with the Commission continuing to produce reports on the progress. Their report of 1878 noted the progress on the construction of the Queens Hall and Vestibule (up to the base of the proposed dome), and that there was still no agreement on a suitable stone for the exterior.[7]

Queen's Hall was used for formal receptions and banquets, while the Vestibule offered a formal entry to Parliament House, though the grand front steps were not to be completed for another decade.[4]

West Front and Stairs 1881–1891

 
Parliament House, Melbourne, 1890 - after completion of the west front, and before the installation of the lamps.

Planning for the construction of the grand classical colonnaded front of the building facing Bourke Street as envisaged in the 1877 plan was to follow on immediately after the completion of the previous section, but construction was delayed by the ongoing desire to find a suitable Victorian stone for the exterior. Work in interiors progressed, with the imported Minton tiled floor of the Vestibule laid in 1888,[8] spelling out a quote from Proverbs 11:14 `Where no Counsel is the People Fall; but in the Multitude of Counsellors there is Safety'. Eventually sandstone from Mt Difficult in the Grampians National Park was decided upon, and a quarry was opened up. The colonnade with the grand front entry stairs was completed in 1889,[9] and final interior decoration was completed in 1890. Final elements like the ornate wrought-iron fence around the grounds and the elaborate cast-iron lamps and the bronze lions of the entry stairs were completed over the next year. A contract for the north wing was let in 1890, with the dome to follow, but the boom years of the 1880s were over, and the subsequent economic depression of the 1890s meant no further work was started.[10]

Refreshment Rooms 1927–1929

After the Federal Parliament relocated to Canberra in 1927, the Federal Government paid for the last major addition, the refreshment rooms occupying the northeast corner. The exterior followed the 1877 design, and it was completed in 1929.[4]

Temporary home of Federal Parliament

From 1901 to 1927 Parliament House was the first home of the Commonwealth of Australia's Federal Government, since the new capital city envisaged in the Australian Constitution did not yet exist and there were long delays in finding a site and commencing construction. During these years the Victorian Parliament met in the Royal Exhibition Building in Carlton.[11]

Many of the major events of the early federal period took place in this building, including the formation of the Federal Parliamentary Australian Labor Party, the "fusion" of the Free Trade Party and the Protectionist Party into the first Liberal Party in 1909, the declaration of the Great War in 1914, and the split in the Labor Party over conscription in 1916.

Modern use and developments

The building resumed its original use as the Victorian Parliament chambers in 1928. Parliament House was then listed on the Victorian Heritage Register in 1982[1] and celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2005–6.[2]

Several modern governments have expressed interest in completing Pasley and Kerr's original design by constructing the dome but were deterred by the substantial cost. Notably, the 1992 Kennett government established a committee to examine building the dome. Kennett and the then Opposition Leader John Brumby reached an agreement in 1996 for the building to be completed by the turn of the century. The idea was then abandoned by Kennett when he learned the original site of the sandstone mined for the building, now within Grampians National Park, could not be re-mined.[12]

From 2016 to 2018, a $40 million two-storey office building was constructed in the gardens of Parliament House for MPs' use. The building is embedded into the landscape to specifically reduce its impact on Parliament House and other nearby buildings.[13]

Shooting incident

In 2012, a Protective Services Officer (PSO) with Victoria Police was attacked with a hammer by a man who also stole his gun. Moments later, the assailant shot himself.[14][15]

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b "Parliament House (including grounds, works and fences), Victorian Heritage Register (VHR) Number H1722, Heritage Overlay HO175". Victorian Heritage Database. Heritage Victoria.
  2. ^ a b "Celebrate 150 Years". Parliament of Victoria. 26 October 2006. Archived from the original on 7 May 2008. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Melbourne: built on gold". Victorian Cultural Collaboration. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "History of Parliament House". Parliament of Victoria.
  5. ^ a b Tibbits, George (1971). "Parliament House Melbourne". Historic Public Buildings of Australia. Melbourne: Cassell Australia. pp. 152–163.
  6. ^ "The History of Parliament House". The Age. 2 October 1886.
  7. ^ Second Report of the Royal Commission upon the Parliament Buildings (PDF). H.M. Printer for Victoria. 1878.
  8. ^ "Improvements At Parliament-House". Australasian Sketcher with Pen and Pencil. Vol. XVI, no. 231. Melbourne. 17 May 1888. p. 75. Retrieved 2 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "Parliament-Houses". The Argus. No. 13, 389. Melbourne. 22 May 1889. p. 7. Retrieved 2 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Melbourne Friday". The Age. No. 11, 152. Melbourne. 21 November 1890. p. 4. Retrieved 2 May 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ McGovern, Josephine (1 June 1975). "The Library of The Parliament of Victoria: Some historical notes". The Australian Library Journal. 24 (5): 201.
  12. ^ "Dome sweet dome". Herald Sun Melbourne. 31 July 2008. 26 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Johnson, Sian (19 January 2016). "$40m addition to Vic Parliament House". ArchitectureAU. Retrieved 26 January 2021.
  14. ^ "Man found dead after allegedly stealing PSO's gun". ABC News. 11 December 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  15. ^ "Death comes to Spring Street". The Age. 11 December 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2021.

External links

  • Parliament of Victoria
  • Parliament of Victoria, Virtual Tour (Flash required)

Coordinates: 37°48′40″S 144°58′24″E / 37.811055°S 144.97329°E / -37.811055; 144.97329

parliament, house, melbourne, parliament, house, meeting, place, parliament, victoria, parliaments, australian, states, territories, parliament, housemelbourneparliament, house, 2010general, informationtypeparliamentarchitectural, styleneoclassicallocationvict. Parliament House is the meeting place of the Parliament of Victoria one of the parliaments of the Australian states and territories Parliament HouseMelbourneParliament House in 2010General informationTypeParliamentArchitectural styleNeoclassicalLocationVictoriaAddressSpring Street East MelbourneCountryAustraliaCurrent tenantsGovernment of VictoriaConstruction started1855Completed1929Opened1856Design and constructionArchitect s Knight amp Kerr amp Peter KerrEngineerJohn George KnightDesignationsVictorian Heritage RegisterWebsitewww parliament vic gov au1854 design by Knight amp Kerr with Captain Pasley Model of 1855 design by Knight amp Kerr 1877 design for west front and dome by Peter Kerr Located on Spring Street on the edge of the Hoddle Grid the grand colonnaded front dominates the vista up Bourke Street Construction began in 1855 and the first stage was officially opened the following year with various sections completed over the following decades it has never been completed and the planned dome is one of the most well known unbuilt features of Melbourne Between 1901 and 1927 it served as the meeting place of the Parliament of Australia during the period when Melbourne was the temporary national capital The building is listed on the Victorian Heritage Register 1 2 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Site 1 2 Design 2 Construction and completion 2 1 Chambers 1855 1856 2 2 Library and Eastern Wing 1858 1860 2 3 Queen s Hall Vestibule and Proposed Dome 1879 1882 2 4 West Front and Stairs 1881 1891 2 5 Refreshment Rooms 1927 1929 3 Temporary home of Federal Parliament 4 Modern use and developments 5 Shooting incident 6 Gallery 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditSite Edit The Victorian gold rush and population boom led calls for greater democracy and a home for political debate in Victoria 3 Prior to the Colony of Victoria acquiring self government in 1851 Governor Charles La Trobe instructed Surveyor General Robert Hoddle to select a site for the colony s new parliament to meet Hoddle selected a site on the eastern hill at the top of Bourke Street which commanded a view over the entire city It was not until April 1854 that Eastern Hill the current Spring Street site was formally agreed to due to ongoing disagreements over the best location 4 Design Edit The exact sequence of events is unclear with a number of architects and designs chosen and rejected in succession with the final result possibly based on earlier work The first design appeared as early as 1851 by then Colonial Architect Henry Ginn however the Legislative Council then decided to have a competition in 1853 which Ginn took as a slight and resigned A design by Smith amp Pritchard won first prize but this was soon set aside as well The Colony s newly arrived Chief Engineer from Nov 1855 Commissioner of Public Works Captain Pasley was asked to prepare a design by April 1854 possibly for a unicameral building which may have been soon reworked into one for a bi cameral Parliament which had just been decided upon A design was published in c1854 showing a restrained Palladian building much like the then recently started State Library of Victoria this design was credited to Knight amp Kerr under the general directions of Captain Pasley John Knight and Peter Kerr had just formed a partnership and Knight may possibly still have been an architect within the Public Works Department at this time while also practicing privately This design was also apparently deemed unsuitable and Knight amp Kerr were employed separately to create a much grander design by 1855 which was perhaps mainly a reworking of the 1854 design 5 This design is extraordinarily impressive and elaborate for a fledgling colony albeit one flush with the results of the recent gold rush It featured a columned screen on at least three sides with end and central bays set forward statuary atop the cornice grand stairs and a tall multi stage columned and domed tower Images of this design were also published and photographs exist of a model of the scheme Knight amp Kerr are credited with the design of the first stages of Parliament House when construction commenced in 1855 4 Construction and completion EditChambers 1855 1856 Edit It was decided to construct the building in stages owing to its vast size and cost so construction began in December 1855 on only the two chambers one for the Victorian Legislative Assembly and a smaller more ornate chamber for the Victorian Legislative Council Construction progressed rapidly and on 25 November 1856 the first session of the Victorian Government in the new chambers was opened to great acclaim 4 Library and Eastern Wing 1858 1860 Edit Construction of the Library and eastern wing began in 1858 and was completed in 1860 There was much debate about an appropriate stone for the exterior with a desire to use stone from Victoria though none could be found that were known to be entirely suitable Bluestone was rejected as too dark and sombre local granite as too expensive even Carrara marble was considered but freestone from Bacchus Marsh was chosen This proved to decay rapidly and large parts had to be replaced with stone from Tasmania within a few years 6 With the library complete the two legislative chambers were joined at the rear resulting in a U shaped building The classical architectural detail of the east facade were noted as the first expression of Peter Kerr s vision for the building 4 No further construction took place for 18 years however the first set of electrical bells used to call members to divisions were installed circa 1877 Queen s Hall Vestibule and Proposed Dome 1879 1882 Edit In 1876 a Royal Commission was formed to recommend the next steps It tabled several changes including the addition of a large dome and the appointment of Peter Kerr as leading architect and a resumption of construction Kerr produced new plans for the completion of the building in 1877 replacing the tower with a dome and replacing the complex external architecture with a simpler design dominated by a long colonnade 5 This is the design that is widely known and referred to as the original design Though a radical simplification of the 1855 design the main facade bears a strong similarity to Leeds Town Hall designed 1853 and completed 1858 which is somewhat smaller and less elaborate The dome however is quite different to Leeds square columned tower which is however similar to the 1855 Melbourne tower designed about the time a tower was added to the Leeds Town Hall design The Great Hall renamed Queen s Hall in 1887 and vestibule were completed in 1879 with the Commission continuing to produce reports on the progress Their report of 1878 noted the progress on the construction of the Queens Hall and Vestibule up to the base of the proposed dome and that there was still no agreement on a suitable stone for the exterior 7 Queen s Hall was used for formal receptions and banquets while the Vestibule offered a formal entry to Parliament House though the grand front steps were not to be completed for another decade 4 West Front and Stairs 1881 1891 Edit Parliament House Melbourne 1890 after completion of the west front and before the installation of the lamps Planning for the construction of the grand classical colonnaded front of the building facing Bourke Street as envisaged in the 1877 plan was to follow on immediately after the completion of the previous section but construction was delayed by the ongoing desire to find a suitable Victorian stone for the exterior Work in interiors progressed with the imported Minton tiled floor of the Vestibule laid in 1888 8 spelling out a quote from Proverbs 11 14 Where no Counsel is the People Fall but in the Multitude of Counsellors there is Safety Eventually sandstone from Mt Difficult in the Grampians National Park was decided upon and a quarry was opened up The colonnade with the grand front entry stairs was completed in 1889 9 and final interior decoration was completed in 1890 Final elements like the ornate wrought iron fence around the grounds and the elaborate cast iron lamps and the bronze lions of the entry stairs were completed over the next year A contract for the north wing was let in 1890 with the dome to follow but the boom years of the 1880s were over and the subsequent economic depression of the 1890s meant no further work was started 10 Refreshment Rooms 1927 1929 Edit After the Federal Parliament relocated to Canberra in 1927 the Federal Government paid for the last major addition the refreshment rooms occupying the northeast corner The exterior followed the 1877 design and it was completed in 1929 4 Temporary home of Federal Parliament EditFrom 1901 to 1927 Parliament House was the first home of the Commonwealth of Australia s Federal Government since the new capital city envisaged in the Australian Constitution did not yet exist and there were long delays in finding a site and commencing construction During these years the Victorian Parliament met in the Royal Exhibition Building in Carlton 11 Many of the major events of the early federal period took place in this building including the formation of the Federal Parliamentary Australian Labor Party the fusion of the Free Trade Party and the Protectionist Party into the first Liberal Party in 1909 the declaration of the Great War in 1914 and the split in the Labor Party over conscription in 1916 Modern use and developments EditThe building resumed its original use as the Victorian Parliament chambers in 1928 Parliament House was then listed on the Victorian Heritage Register in 1982 1 and celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2005 6 2 Several modern governments have expressed interest in completing Pasley and Kerr s original design by constructing the dome but were deterred by the substantial cost Notably the 1992 Kennett government established a committee to examine building the dome Kennett and the then Opposition Leader John Brumby reached an agreement in 1996 for the building to be completed by the turn of the century The idea was then abandoned by Kennett when he learned the original site of the sandstone mined for the building now within Grampians National Park could not be re mined 12 From 2016 to 2018 a 40 million two storey office building was constructed in the gardens of Parliament House for MPs use The building is embedded into the landscape to specifically reduce its impact on Parliament House and other nearby buildings 13 Shooting incident EditIn 2012 a Protective Services Officer PSO with Victoria Police was attacked with a hammer by a man who also stole his gun Moments later the assailant shot himself 14 15 Gallery Edit Victorian Parliament and surrounding area Victoria Parliament from Spring Street Colonnade and Portico Victorian flag at half mast on 10th anniversary of the Bali bombings 12 October 2012 Building Entrance Steps and Facade from Spring Street Parliament House Melbourne Vestibule tiled floor Parliament House Melbourne Vestibule Queen s Hall in Parliament House with a statue of Queen Victoria Parliament House Melbourne Library Parliament House Melbourne Library Parliament House Melbourne Library Legislative Council in 1878 Legislative Assembly Chamber in 2022 Legislative Council Chamber in 2022References Edit a b Parliament House including grounds works and fences Victorian Heritage Register VHR Number H1722 Heritage Overlay HO175 Victorian Heritage Database Heritage Victoria a b Celebrate 150 Years Parliament of Victoria 26 October 2006 Archived from the original on 7 May 2008 Retrieved 26 January 2021 Melbourne built on gold Victorian Cultural Collaboration Retrieved 26 January 2021 a b c d e f History of Parliament House Parliament of Victoria a b Tibbits George 1971 Parliament House Melbourne Historic Public Buildings of Australia Melbourne Cassell Australia pp 152 163 The History of Parliament House The Age 2 October 1886 Second Report of the Royal Commission upon the Parliament Buildings PDF H M Printer for Victoria 1878 Improvements At Parliament House Australasian Sketcher with Pen and Pencil Vol XVI no 231 Melbourne 17 May 1888 p 75 Retrieved 2 May 2019 via National Library of Australia Parliament Houses The Argus No 13 389 Melbourne 22 May 1889 p 7 Retrieved 2 May 2019 via National Library of Australia Melbourne Friday The Age No 11 152 Melbourne 21 November 1890 p 4 Retrieved 2 May 2019 via National Library of Australia McGovern Josephine 1 June 1975 The Library of The Parliament of Victoria Some historical notes The Australian Library Journal 24 5 201 Dome sweet dome Herald Sun Melbourne 31 July 2008 Archived 26 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine Johnson Sian 19 January 2016 40m addition to Vic Parliament House ArchitectureAU Retrieved 26 January 2021 Man found dead after allegedly stealing PSO s gun ABC News 11 December 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2021 Death comes to Spring Street The Age 11 December 2012 Retrieved 20 April 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Parliament House Melbourne Parliament of Victoria Parliament of Victoria Virtual Tour Flash required Disability informationCoordinates 37 48 40 S 144 58 24 E 37 811055 S 144 97329 E 37 811055 144 97329 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parliament House Melbourne amp oldid 1135855164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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