inHerit Logo

Perth General Post Office

Author

Heritage Council

Place Number

01979
There no heritage location found in the Google fusion table.

Location

3 Forrest Pl Perth

Location Details

Other Name(s)

Perth GPO

Local Government

Perth

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1914 to 1923

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents More information
Heritage List Adopted 20 Dec 1985 City of Perth
Commonwealth List Adopted 22 Jun 2004
Heritage Agreement YES 18 Dec 1992 Text of the Heritage Agreement
State Register Registered 16 Oct 1992 Register Entry

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
(no listings)

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management More information
Category Description
Municipal Inventory Adopted 13 Mar 2001 Category 1

Category 1

Exceptional significance - Essential to the heritage of the locality. Rare or outstanding example.

City of Perth
Perth Draft Inventory 99-01 YES 31 Dec 1999

Classified by the National Trust Classified 21 Aug 1978

Survey of 20th Ctry Architecture Completed 01 Mar 1988

Register of the National Estate Permanent 26 Sep 1982

Restrictive Covenant YES

Parent Place or Precinct

04280 Forrest Place Area

Condition

A building in the Beaux-Arts style, with seven main storeys plus basement and roof level rooms. It has a concrete encased steel frame faced with brick and stone. The ground floor of the east elevation is faced with granite from Mahogany Creek with Donnybrook sandstone above. Paired ionic columns rise through three upper storeys. Red brick walls trimmed with stone are set back above the cornice, between stone towers and form the side and back walls. The interiors have large spans creating open spaces on each floor, which was a radical departure from traditional construction. The central two-storey postal hall has large rooflights which emphasise the sense of space. The design was conceived in 1912 by Commonwealth architect, John Smith Murdoch, in association with Hillson Beasley (Western Australian Public Works Department) with the initial contract signed in 1914 and another (after delays due to a steel embargo and a strike) in 1921 for an additional two storeys. By then W B Hardwick had succeeded Beasley. Construction was completed in 1923.

Associations

Name Type Year From Year To
John Smith Murdoch Architect - -
Hillson Beasley Architect - -

State Heritage Office library entries

Library Id Title Medium Year Of Publication
11358 Cast iron pillar boxes of Western Australia: An early history of the J & E Ledger foundry Book 2015
9506 Photographic archival record for Perth GPO shopfront works. Archival Record 0
292 GPO Trade Centre Report 1990
1372 Perth General Post Office: Conservation Analysis and Conservation Management Pla Heritage Study {Cons'n Plan} 1991
8540 GPO Perth : interpretation plan. Heritage Study {Other} 2007
290 Australian Postal Corporation GPO Perth refurbishment. Report 1991
6959 Perth and all this! : a story about a city. Book 1962
8469 General Post Office, Perth. Conservation management plan. Heritage Study {Cons'n Plan} 2006

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Present Use Transport\Communications Comms: Post or Telegraph Office
Original Use Transport\Communications Comms: Post or Telegraph Office

Architectural Styles

Style
Inter-War Beaux-Arts

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Wall BRICK Face Brick
Other CONCRETE Reinforced Concrete
Wall STONE Donnybrook Sandstone
Wall STONE Granite
Wall ASBESTOS Fibrous Cement, corrugated
Roof GLASS Glass

Historic Themes

General Specific
TRANSPORT & COMMUNICATIONS Mail services

Creation Date

30 May 1989

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

31 Dec 2016

Disclaimer

This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.