City Courts: cnr Russell & LaTrobe Streets,   Mouseover for full size picture
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| Building ProfileName : City Courts
LocationAddress: cnr Russell & LaTrobe Streets City:
Postcode:
City Courts is a landmark
Construction DetailsBuilt: 1911 Original use: 7 Current use:
Built in the Edwardian period in the 15 style
Notable featuresCencentric arches rusticated stonework, and fanciful copper roofline. HistoryThe former Magistrates Court was built by Swanson Brothers between 1911 and 1913 to the design of Public Works Department architect George B H Austin. The two storey court sits on a massive plinth of rock-faced Batesford limestone. Dressed limestone faces the brick, Gippsland marble and iron construction with interior joinery of blackwood. Roof materials are variously slate, corrugated iron or steel. Built on the site of the earlier Supreme Court, the building retains fittings from the earlier court including the Gothic canopy that judge Sir Redmond Barry sat under during the trial of Ned Kelly in 1880. The architectural style is Norman, otherwise known as the French Romanesque. The facade is a composition of gables, towers, turrets and arches. The main entrance sits on the prominent corner site of Russell Street and Latrobe Street and is an intricate symmetrical essay in the Norman style rising as a tower. It consists of copper clad turrets and grouped semi-circular headed windows over an entrance of five nested jamb shafts on squat Romanesque columns. The spreading staircase is of a basalt stone. The main entry vestibule rises to a drum over the marble staircases. The three principal court rooms have hammer beam roofs and consistent Norman detailing to the wall panels, the docks and benches. Within the internal fabric is a late version of the patented Tobin tube ventilation system.
Architect: G.B.H.Austin, Public Works Department
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