Mercury (Hobart)

Forestry dome reprieve

- JIM ALOUAT Urban Affairs Reporter

AN award-winning architectu­ral project set to be partially demolished for the new Tasmania Police headquarte­rs at Melville St has won a last minute reprieve.

Tasmania Police was set to occupy the dome building, the former home of Forestry Tasmania.

But a State Government spokesman said, after some investigat­ion, both Tasmania Police and the owners of the building mutually agreed that it would be best for both parties not to enter into any lease agreement.

“Tasmania Police is looking at other options and will re- main at 47 Liverpool St for the time being,” he said.

In February, the Hobart City Council was forced to reluctantl­y approve an appli- cation to demolish part of the building because there were no grounds under the planning scheme to refuse it.

Internal works, including removal of the internal forest, had already happened.

Architect Robert MorrisNunn won multiple awards for the adaptive architectu­re linking two heritage-listed buildings to form the Forestry Tasmania offices in the 1990s, complete with internal forest.

But the alteration­s were not added to the heritage listing for the site, which at the time left Prof Morris-Nunn devastated that the works would profoundly alter the building.

Prof Morris-Nunn yesterday said the Institute of Architects was working with Heritage Tasmania to have important recycling projects such as this one included in the heritage listings and hoped the internal forest could be restored.

“My position, and that of the institute, is that where important additions and alteration­s occur that give a new life to the building then these alteration­s become part of the fabric of that building and part of the cultural history that gets handed to the next generation,” he said.

The building won the Australasi­an Lightweigh­t Structures Award 1998, a number of Tasmanian awards and was a finalist in the 1998 National Architectu­re Awards.

Hobart Deputy Lord Mayor Helen Burnet, who in February described the developmen­t applicatio­n before the council for the site as a considerab­le shame, said the original joining of those buildings should be recognised as “an important part of Tasmanian architectu­ral history”.

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