inHerit Logo

North Perth Town Hall - Lesser Hall

Author

City of Vincent

Place Number

18079
There no heritage location found in the Google fusion table.

Location

20-26 View St North Perth

Location Details

Local Government

Vincent

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1902

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents More information
Heritage List Adopted

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 Nov 1995 Category A

Category A

Conservation Essential

Statement of Significance

North Perth Town Hall (original building) is a singular and sophisticated example of a civic building, by H J Prockter, in a Federation Anglo Dutch style, with a remarkable presence and identity. It is the centrepiece of the North Perth civic group, which is located at the heart of the North Perth urban village. The place has associations with the local municipality, civic and social events that engendered a sense of community.

Physical Description

Comprises a single storey hall and an administration section. The facade is highly decorated with stucco which includes a circular vent, balustrading, corner pinnacles, and arched bands over the doors and windows. The fanlights above the central window and entrance are multi-paned. The façade is articulated by the use of paired and twinned gables with groups of arched windows at ground level, balustraded parapet with faceted gables and finial rising from an oculus all set between corner tourelles. Hard surface setback from the street Extensions

History

The North Perth Road Board District was gazetted in March 1899 and North Perth was declared a municipality in 1901. The following year, a Town Hall and Council Chambers were built on View Street. The building was designed by Henry James Prockter as one part of a larger Town Hall complex. His plan envisaged two smaller and one large central hall, interconnected to form one large structure. The hall that was built at this time was one of the smaller, or lesser, halls. It was built by Robert A. Gamble, who was elected Mayor of North Perth in 1909 and who lived in North Perth from 1896 to 1946. He was just 31 years of age at the time of the construction. Other mayors for North Perth were Robert Septimus Haynes, a well-known barrister and MLC (1902-03), Herbert Parker (1904-05), John Milner (1906-09), William Randell, a minster in John Forrest's cabinet (1911-12) and Ernest Waugh (1913-14). The Town Hall was used as the municipal chambers and offices and one of the staff, who worked there from at least 1904 to 1914, was Town Clerk Thomas Hayes Blake after whom Blake Street was named. In 1910, a larger hall, known as the Main Hall, was built on the adjoining site in response to the suburb's continued expansion. It was erected in approximately the position envisaged by Prockter for the central, and largest, of the three halls in his design. This hall was not built in the same design as the first and, in fact, Prockter's 'grand' design did not eventuate. In 1933, the Main Hall was enlarged with an addition to the front to bring the building line to the same level as the Lesser Hall, a new façade, lobby and side vestibules. A verandah was added in 1978. In 1914, the Municipality of North Perth amalgamated with the City of Perth to form the Greater Perth Council and North Perth no longer had its own mayor and town council. The halls were then used as district halls, providing overflow classrooms for the North Perth School, and a venue for a number of lodges and friendly societies, as well as for an infant health centre until a separate building for the centre was added on the eastern side of the Lesser Hall. The new health centre was the first of its kind in the area now under the jurisdiction of the Town of Vincent, which was formed following the subdivision of the City of Perth in 1994. Infant Health Centres were established under the Commonwealth Health Act (1911) and the Infant Health Association of WA was '˜formed in response to the need for better maternal and infant welfare services in the State' (Dr Judy Edwards, Media Statement 1.8.2001). Considerable expansion took place under Dr Eleanor Stang's tenure as the medical supervisor for the State's Infant Health Centres from 1929 to 1954 and since the 1950s such facilities have been provided through a joint arrangement between each local government authority and the Department of Health. The different descriptions given by Wise's Post Office Directories give some indication of the uses the hall was put to during the years 1926 to 1949 (the last year of the Directories). In 1926 it was listed as 'Infant Health Assn, Baby Clinic' and in 1937 as 'Edward Green, North Perth Town Hall' as well as the Infant Health Assn and baby clinic. The listing for 1949 was far more comprehensive: 'Robert B. Blackie, Children's Play Ground, North Perth Town Hall, Stonehenge Lodge UAOD, Ancient Order of Foresters' Lodge, GUO Free Gardeners, IO Oddfellows, Nth Perth Friendly Society, Infant Health Centre, health clinic'. The hall holds a maximum of 200 people and since 1995 the Town of Vincent has used it for community functions such as pioneer afternoon teas, etc. and in 1999 a re-enactment of the opening in 1902 was held. A number of notable North Perth families were represented among the 50 people who attended and celebrations included a half-hour guided heritage walk. It is one of seven venues in the town available for hire for meetings, dances, dinners, wedding receptions or other occasions. The exterior was renovated in 2001 at a cost of $100,000 with the aim of preventing it from deteriorating any further and gutters and downpipes were replaced at the same time. The interior was renovated the following year (2002) and at some point a multi-cultural garden was laid out on the western side of the building. Lot 4 No. 20 View Street contains Multicultural House, which houses the North Perth Migrant Resource Centre (established 1982) and later known as the Multicultural Services Centre of Western Australia, and the Ethnic Communities Council of WA. This building was constructed in 1998 in a style to blend with the existing streetscape by Project Corporation of Hamilton Hill. This new structure was designed by Labirynth Design & Development of Mount Lawley and in 2001 it won the Town of Vincent's Building Design & Conservation Award for their design of a new office, meeting and community facilities.

Integrity/Authenticity

High

Associations

Name Type Year From Year To
H.J. Prockter Architect - -

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Original Use GOVERNMENTAL Town, Shire or District Hall
Present Use GOVERNMENTAL Town, Shire or District Hall

Architectural Styles

Style
Federation Anglo-Dutch

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Roof METAL Corrugated Iron
Wall BRICK Face Brick

Historic Themes

General Specific
SOCIAL & CIVIC ACTIVITIES Community services & utilities

Creation Date

22 Aug 2007

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

03 Jan 2018

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.