Centenary Hall
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| Centenary Hall | |
|---|---|
Exhibition St frontage of Centenary Hall | |
![]() Interactive map of the Centenary Hall area | |
| General information | |
| Location | 104-110 Exhibition Street, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia |
| Coordinates | 37°48′47″S 144°58′17″E / 37.813105°S 144.971367°E |
| Completed | 1935 |
| Owner | Rolex Australia |
| Technical details | |
| Floor count | 7 floors (including basement level) |
| Lifts/elevators | 1 |
| Design and construction | |
| Architects | Hugh Philp and H. Geoffrey Bottoms |
Centenary Hall is a building within the Melbourne CBD in Victoria, Australia, on the corner of Exhibition and Little Collins Streets.
Centenary Hall was designed by Hugh Philp and H. Geoffrey Bottoms, selected via a 1933 design competition conducted by the Victorian Protestant Hall Co. Ltd. Completed in 1935, the building's name references the 1934 centenary of the founding of Melbourne. Centenary Hall replaced an 1881 Protestant hall which in turn replaced the first hall on the site, built in 1847 on land purchased specifically for a Protestant hall in 1846 by the Loyal Orange Institution of Victoria.[1]
The six-storey building uses a steel frame and rises to 120 feet above street level, short of the 132 ft limit then allowed by Council building regulations. The exterior is Moderne in style, featuring vertical ribbing and corner tower-like elements. A projecting balconette at first floor level is adorned with intricate pressed cement detail depicting the thistle and scrolls. There is bronze joinery around the Exhibition Street windows, originally for a car showroom, now subdivided into shops. A spacious lobby featuring the Loyal Orange Order star in the terrazzo floor leads to a wide marble stair to the first floor hall.[1]
Centenary Hall was designed for multiple uses, with a basement supper room kitchen and pantry, ground floor showrooms, a large hall on the first floor capable of seating 450 persons, administrative offices on the second floor, and various clubrooms, rehearsal rooms on the third floor, with the top two for rent, and a caretaker's residence on the roof.[2][3][4][5]
There is a different Centenary Hall, built at a similar time, at the Melbourne Showgrounds.

