Qantas

CHAPTER 2

Can a former prison shake off its shackles? Alex Brooks looks at five historic Australian buildings being given a second life.

-

The silos

Where Launceston’s Tamar and North Esk rivers meet, four stark concrete grain silos have stood tall since the 1960s. At the turn of this century, when the industrial area lost its appeal, the wharves ceased to be a vital hub and the silos fell into graffitied decline.

Local developer Errol Stewart wanted to turn the structures into high-end accommodat­ion to encourage daytripper­s to spend the night in “Lonnie” rather than travel back to Hobart. ARTAS Architects managing director Scott Curran noted at the time that converting the silos will end up being more profitable than building a brand-new hotel on the riverside site.

The towers reopened in 2018 as part of the slick 108-room Peppers Silo Hotel, with a rectilinea­r building at its base. There are 52 rooms inside the barrels of the former silos, now with windows carved into their curved walls, which reveal drips and different-coloured pours of concrete.

The power station

Sydney architect Luigi Rosselli says that industrial buildings from the manufactur­ing age have a magic that new structures lack. “People look with nostalgic eyes to history because it enriches architectu­re – it tells a story. So we look at those old, large spaces like a power station with great affection.”

A new building, he adds, “is like a baby – they all look the same. When a person grows and they get a bit of character, they’re more interestin­g. It’s the same with buildings. Character comes with time.”

Rosselli created some of the first designs to reincarnat­e the heritage-listed White Bay Power Station, which was built in the inner-west Sydney suburb of Rozelle in stages between 1912 and 1958 and electrifie­d trams and trains before shutting in the early 1980s. The vision for the site is to transform it into a technology hub in a multi-billion-dollar redevelopm­ent.

The NSW state government plans to complete the nearby Sydney Metro West rail line before beginning the renewal of the power station, which stands in rusting magnificen­ce on the western side of the Anzac Bridge.

The jail

Pentridge Prison’s castellate­d walls, with their Gothic-style arrow slits and watchtower­s, appear a little gloomy beside the sparkling new buildings of suburban Coburg in Melbourne.

The prison closed in 1997. But now two white cranes stretch over a walled and gated section of the 6.5-hectare site where Ned Kelly’s remains once lay, Ronald Ryan became the last man to be executed in Australia in 1967 and standover man Mark “Chopper” Read spent part of the 1970s.

Pentridge is a mix of commercial and residentia­l properties. A shopping centre, cinema and, in what was the E Division’s hospital, a pub are being fitted out. Soon there’ll be a landscaped piazza, along with a 120-apartment hotel and day spa. Guests will stay in cells converted by Cox Architectu­re, the designers behind the Hepburn Bathhouse & Spa redevelopm­ent.

Henry Sciberras was among the first to buy and restore an old Pentridge building, opening The Boot Factory café in 2014. He says “hipsters, mothers, businesspe­ople and former inmates” come for the coffee, ambience and ghost stories (clairvoyan­ts claim to have seen an apparition near the café’s door). “It was a really friendly ghost, standing and waving,” says Sciberras, who believes the spirit was pleased to have worked in the prison’s boot factory and not the rock-breaking yards.

The glass and rubber factory

Last year, commercial property investor Chris Lock sold what was once the Barnett Glass Rubber factory in Footscray, Melbourne, for $33.1 million. Built in 1875, bought by Bradford Cotton Mills in 1939 and later housing travel guide publishers Lonely Planet, the red-brick industrial building, with its dramatic chimney and boiler, has been transforme­d into The Dream Factory. It includes the “makerspace” Fab9, with prototypin­g tools, workshops and 3D printers that members pay a monthly fee to access. Lock, whose company IP Generation owns old buildings in Adelaide, Sydney, North Geelong and Torquay, says millennial­s in particular want to work in sustainabl­e buildings with unique character. “I’d rather repurpose buildings and make an impact from an environmen­tal perspectiv­e,” he says.

Lock’s firm also owns The Brewery, part of Sydney’s Central Park precinct. Originally the Kent Brewery built in 1835 for Tooth & Co, the site was reimagined in 2015 by architect Alec Tzannes and his co-director, Ben Green, as a light-filled, energy-efficient office and retail space. Their Brewery design added cooling towers clad in zinc mesh, connected to an undergroun­d plant, which could reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by an estimated 190,000 tonnes over 25 years.

“Much of The Brewery’s power plant is underneath the courtyard, except for the rooftop cooling towers,” says Tzannes of the building, which includes five floors of commercial offices above a ground floor of retail space. The plant’s exhaust is housed inside the original brewery’s chimney, which is now lined with stainless-steel tubing.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? A Pentridge Prison exercise yard in 1966 (above)
A Pentridge Prison exercise yard in 1966 (above)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia