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Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Heritage Assessment July 2011 bryce raworth pty ltd conservation • urban design 19 victoria street, st kilda, vic 3182 telephone 9525 4299 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Heritage Assessment July 2011 1.0 Introduction This report was commissioned by Banyule City Council. It has been prepared in relation to Council’s intention to develop a master plan for the future development of the Ivanhoe Civic Precinct (comprising the former Heidelberg Town Hall, municipal offices and Ivanhoe Library). In particular, this office has been asked to comment on the significance of the Ivanhoe Library, so as to help inform further work being done by Council for the Ivanhoe Civic Precinct. In addition, and associated with separate work being done by Council for the broader municipal wide review of the Banyule Heritage Places Study (Allom Lovell and Associates, 1999), a nomination request was received for the Ivanhoe Library to be considered for separate heritage assessment. The report comments on the significance of the site, with particular reference to the Ivanhoe Library, and provides an assessment of the potential heritage impacts resulting from changes to the complex anticipated by current master planning concepts. 2.0 Sources of Information The analysis below draws on site visits and external and internal inspections of the building. The authors have reviewed the Victorian Heritage Register and relevant heritage studies, including the Banyule Heritage Places Study (Allom Lovell and Associates, 1999) and the Heidelberg Conservation Study (Graeme Butler, 1985). They have also been mindful of the heritage overlay provisions at clause 43.01 of the Banyule Planning Scheme and the cultural heritage policy, as set out under Clause 21.03. Bryce Raworth Pty Ltd has also been provided with background information prepared by Context Pty Ltd on behalf of Council, for a Banyule Heritage Review (2011), which is providing a review of the Banyule Heritage Places Study (Allom Lovell and Associates, 1999). bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 1 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct 3.0 Listings and Controls Heritage Victoria The former Heidelberg Town Hall is included on the Victorian Heritage Register (VHR Number H2077). The current registration includes the Town Hall and all of the land at 275 Upper Heidelberg Road, but excludes the Ivanhoe Library. Figure 1 Extent of Heritage Victoria Registration, as mapped by Heritage Victoria. B1 is the former Heidelberg Town Hall. City of Banyule The former Heidelberg Town is individually identified in the City of Banyule Schedule to the Heritage Overlay (HO77). The extent of HO77 corresponds to Heritage Victoria’s registration. The Ivanhoe Library does not have any specific protection aside from being included in the extent of HO77. The library was not identified as a significant building in either the Banyule Heritage Places Study (Allom Lovell and Associates, 1999) or the earlier Heidelberg Conservation Study (Graeme Butler, 1985). There are citations for the town hall in both studies, but neither makes any reference to the library. National Trust of Australia (Victoria) The former Heidelberg Town is classified by the National Trust of Australia (Victoria) as a place of state significance (File Number B4919). No reference is made to the Ivanhoe Library in this classification. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 2 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Australian Heritage Council The former Heidelberg Town is included on the Register of the National Estate as administered by the Australian Heritage Council (Place ID 15279). No reference is made to the Ivanhoe Library in this registration. 4.0 History Town Hall Heritage Victoria’s statement of significance provides the following overview of the history and development of the former Heidelberg Town Hall: Heidelberg Town Hall was officially opened in April 1937. The former Shire of Heidelberg experienced rapid suburbanisation during the 1930s and the City of Heidelberg was proclaimed in 1934. The increased population and expanded range of municipal services and responsibilities determined the need for a large civic centre that could provide extensive office space for Council staff, as well as Council chambers and a public hall. Two architectural firms, Peck & Kemter and AC Leith & Bartlett were appointed in association to design the new civic centre. Bartlett had recently returned from overseas where he was greatly influenced by recent architecture in Europe. The City of Heidelberg was desirous of a progressive modern image. Externally the design owes much to the seminal Hilversum Town Hall in the Netherlands designed by Willem Dudok and constructed between 1924 and 1931. The interior shows the influence of Art Deco design. …Heidelberg Town Hall stands at the highest point of Ivanhoe as an imposingly monumental building. The different functions of offices and auditorium are clearly expressed in the simple block-like masses which are arranged asymmetrically, separated by the 28 metres clock tower. The building is faced with textured buff brickwork with a minimum of applied decorative detail. Vertical accents are provided to the principal elevation not only by the clocktower but also by the massive three-quarter height triplet of door and window openings to the hall. Figure 2 1934 Sketch of the Heidelberg Town Hall. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 3 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Library The first library in Heidelberg operated from an old courthouse in 1900.1 In 1937, fundraising efforts began for a new children’s library. It opened on 17 September 1938, under the municipal offices. Larger rooms were opened in 1942. In 1951 Heidelberg City Council took over the provision of free library services and introduced an adult section in 1952. In 1957 the library was transferred to a hall in Ivanhoe Parade. Conditions at the hall were poor, and following a fire in 1960, the library returned to the town hall. Council moved haltingly to provide a new library building and eventually selected a site south of the Town Hall for this purpose. Despite opposition from the local Chamber of Commerce on the site, and concerns about costs, plans by Leith & Bartlett architects were accepted in 1963 and tenders called. The foundation stone was laid on 7 August 1964 by the then Mayor, Cr W.L. Kelly, and the Town Clerk, Frank Phillips. The new library was officially opened on 8 October 1965 by Vernon Wilcox, MLA, Minister for Immigration in the State Parliament. As originally designed, the library had a ground floor reading area with a mezzanine level above (refer figure 4 below).2 A children’s library, audio visual room and work room were located on the third floor. There was also covered bookmobile loading dock at the rear of the library. Figure 3 Ivanhoe Library, 1974. Reproduced from the Former Heidelberg Town Hall and Municipal Offices Conservation Management Plan. 1 Unless otherwise noted, the library history is taken from: www.wikinorthia.net.au/index.php/ The_History_of_library_services_in_the_City_of_Heidelberg_and_Banyule_and_how_we've_grown 2 Public Building File. No. 13743 Public Record Office Victoria. VPRS 7882/P1 Unit 1627. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 4 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Figure 4 5.0 A 1968 plan of the Ivanhoe. Library. Source: Public Records Office Victoria. Description Site The Ivanhoe Civic Precinct includes a large irregular site bound by Upper Heidelberg Road to the east, St Elmo Road to the north, Ivanhoe Parade to the west. Buildings on the site include the 1937 town hall and municipal offices and the 1965 Ivanhoe library. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 5 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct The town hall and municipal offices address Upper Heidleberg Road, with post war and late-twentieth century additions generally confined to the rear (west). Most of the land around the town hall is an asphalt paved carpark. The Ivanhoe Library is a freestanding building on the south side of the town hall/municipal offices. It has a brick paved forecourt on the Upper Heidelberg Road side, with raised planter beds and several eucalypts trees. Town Hall/Municipal Offices Library Figure 5 Aerial view of the civic precinct. Library The Ivanhoe Library is a rectilinear, flat roofed three-storey building with a projecting single-storey entry wing on the east side facing Upper Heidelberg Road. The south elevation is divided into five equal bays with full-height aluminium-framed windows set between tile faced concrete piers. These windows face the library’s carpark and service/rear areas behind shops with frontage onto Ivanhoe Parade. The entry wing is clad partly in copper sheet and has a loading dock at its northern end. The plainer west and south elevations are constructed of tan coloured bricks. The interior is a fairly unremarkable and plainly finished space with standard late-twentieth century fixtures and fittings. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 6 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct The library’s exterior is largely intact to its 1965 state. The original bookmobile loading dock survives on the north side of the building although its upper storey appears to be a later addition. There is also a small flat-roofed addition on the north elevation, as well as additional rooftop plant and ducts. Relatively few alterations have been made to the library interior, aside from changes to some room uses and refurbishment of the foyer. Figure 6 The library view from the south-east. Figure 7 The south elevation of the library. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 7 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct 6.0 Figure 8 The rear (north) elevation of the library with 1970s additions to the town hall to the left. Figure 9 The library interior viewed from the level 1 mezzanine. Comparative Analysis Late Twentieth Century Modernism The Ivanhoe Library can broadly be described as an example of the late-twentieth century International style. The style is characterised by sleek, glossy prismatic forms using concrete, glass and steel construction.3 Plain, smooth wall surfaces were used, sometimes with contrasting textures. Open planning and selective expression of structural systems were also favoured. Key attributes were precision, sharpness and transparency.4 3 Apperly, et al., A Pictorial Guide to Identifying Australian Architecture: Styles and Terms from 1788 4 Apperly, Irving Reynolds (ed) A Pictorial Guide to Identifying Australian Architecture Styles and Terms from 1788 to the Present, p. 217. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 8 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct By the mid 1950s the International modernist style had been enthusiastically embraced by big corporations and governments. The style’s emphasis on simplicity and rationality was especially appealing to clients seeking efficient and cost effective building solutions. The International style also had a monumental formality considered appropriate throughout the 1960s and 1970s for educational, college and civic buildings, including libraries. One of the largest modernist libraries in Australia is the Baillieu Library at the University of Melbourne (195759). Designed by architect John E D Scarborough, it has a vast curtain wall facade with green and red-glass spandrels. Side walls are cream brick with exposed aggregate concrete panels. The interior was designed to have no load bearing walls so that he whole of the floor area could support book shelves in any location. The interior also features a gracious spiral staircase and double-height marble clad entrance lobby. On a somewhat smaller scale, the 1959 Sandringham Library (now demolished) by Bates Smart McCutcheon has been described as the first modern purpose-built branch library in Victoria.5 Another acclaimed modernist library was built on Toorak Road, South Yarra to a design by Yuncken Freeman Architects. Completed in 1973, the South Yarra Library is regarded as one of the finest examples of the formal minimalism inspired by architect Mies Van der Rohe. Figure 10 (left) Baillieu Library, University of Melbourne. Figure 11 (right) Sandringham Library, 1959. Source: State Library of Victoria. Figure 12 South Yarra Library. Source: National Archives of Australia. 5 Heritage Alliance, City of Bayside Inter-war & Post-War Heritage Study, Volume 2, p.8. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 9 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Leith and Bartlett Arthur Cedric Leith was the son of architect George Brown Leith, and brother of George Burridge Leith, Chief Architect for the State Savings Bank. Around 1930, Leith began practicing as A C Leith and Associates. Architect Harold E Bartlett joined A C. Leith and Associates in November 1934 after having worked overseas, and holding the position of Associate Head of Architectural School at Gordon Institute of Technology, Geelong.6 In 1936, the firm changed its name to A.C. Leith and Bartlett Architects and Engineers. The firm was involved with a range of civic projects in the metropolitan area and in country Victoria in the 1930s, the most notable being Heidelberg Town Hall, completed and opened in 1937. Other municipal projects by Leith and Bartlett include the Swan Hill Town Hall (1934), civic offices in Glenelg Shire (1935), renovations to the Collingwood Town Hall (1935), Morwell Shire Hall and Offices (1935-36), Wycheproof Town Hall (1938) and Euroa Town Hall (1938).7 Aside from the neo-Grecian Swan Hill Town Hall, Leith and Bartlett’s municipal buildings of the 1930s are mostly conventional, hipped roofed Moderne designs. In this context, the more overtly modernist aspects of the Heidelberg Town Hall represent something of an anomaly. Figure 13 (left) Swan Hill Town Hall. Figure 14 (right) Morwell Shire Hall. Source: State Library of Victoria. Figure 15 (left) 1938 illustration of the Euroa Town Hall. Source: Argus. Figure 16 (right) Wycheproof Town Hall. 6 Miles Lewis Architectural Index, www.mileslewis.net/australian-architectural.html 7 Miles Lewis Architectural Index, www.mileslewis.net/australian-architectural.html bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 10 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct In the post war years, Leith and Bartlett continued to be well known for their civic work, but also undertook large scale commercial projects including the Victorian Racing Club, St Kilda Road (1953) and the Allied Insurance Building, Collins Street (designed 1952, completed 1957) – reputedly the first curtain wall design in central Melbourne (but not the first to be built).8 The firm also designed a number of buildings for the Olympic village in Heidelberg and major grandstands for the Royal Agricultural Showgrounds and Flemington Racecourse and Moonee Valley racecourses. Figure 17 (left) Victorian Racing Club, St Kilda Road, 1953. Source: National Library of Australia. Figure 18 (right) Moonee Valley Racecourse grandstand, 1959. Source: National Library of Australia. Figure 19 (left) Kew Civic Centre, 1960. Source: National Library of Australia. Figure 20 (left) Lilydale Town Hall, 1961. Source: State Library of Australia. Conclusion The Ivanhoe Library is a relatively modest and conventional example of 1960s civic architecture, representative of the character of many similar structures in Victoria from that time. The library's architects, Leith and Bartlett, were prolific and competent designers, but they are generally not as highly regarded as other key practitioners in modernist idioms, such as Bates, Smart McCutcheon and Yuncken Freeman. Leith and Barlett’s work, before and after the Second World War, was for the most part not groundbreaking or architecturally innovative 8 www.walkingmelbourne.com/building542_allied-insurance-office-building.html bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 11 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct notwithstanding the Heidelberg Town Hall and their later involvement with one of the earliest curtain wall designs in Melbourne. The practice’s output could instead be categorised as orthodox modernism, reflecting the aspirations of mainstream corporate and local government clients. 7.0 Significance As noted above, the Heidelberg Town Hall is included on the Victorian Heritage Register, and is recognised as being of state significance. The statement of significance for the site, as endorsed by Heritage Victoria, provides a detailed appreciation of the significance of the place, and this is reproduced in full below: What is significant? Heidelberg Town Hall was officially opened in April 1937. The former Shire of Heidelberg experienced rapid suburbanisation during the 1930s and the City of Heidelberg was proclaimed in 1934. The increased population and expanded range of municipal services and responsibilities determined the need for a large civic centre that could provide extensive office space for Council staff, as well as Council chambers and a public hall. Two architectural firms, Peck & Kemter and AC Leith & Bartlett were appointed in association to design the new civic centre. Bartlett had recently returned from overseas where he was greatly influenced by recent architecture in Europe. The City of Heidelberg was desirous of a progressive modern image. Externally the design owes much to the seminal Hilversum Town Hall in the Netherlands designed by Willem Dudok and constructed between 1924 and 1931. The interior shows the influence of Art Deco design. Built by local contractor G S Gay, Heidelberg Town Hall stands at the highest point of Ivanhoe as an imposingly monumental building. The different functions of offices and auditorium are clearly expressed in the simple blocklike masses which are arranged asymmetrically, separated by the 28 metres clock tower. The building is faced with textured buff brickwork with a minimum of applied decorative detail. Vertical accents are provided to the principal elevation not only by the clocktower but also by the massive threequarter height triplet of door and window openings to the hall. The portico added in 1994 attempted a contextual solution but unfortunately now partially obscures this important element. The auditorium, now known as the Great Hall, achieves a very wide clear span by incorporating an innovative welded steel frame in its structure.The parquetry floor, capable of seating 1,000 people, is flanked by vestibules for lounge seating. Above the vestibules are arcades with curved balconies overlooking the auditorium. Internally the building makes extensive use of Australian native timber, principally Queensland maple. Art Deco style fittings include original light fittings and concealed lighting, door furniture, clocks, some original signage, and use of chrome and marble. Although there have been some alterations, there are several spaces within the building which have high integerity, and are a contributory part of the distinctive styling of the building and which assist in an understanding of the responsibilities of local government in Victoria in the 1930s. These are: -the entrance to the Municipal offices and the stair lobby on the ground and first floor; -the Council Chamber; bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 12 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct -the Mayors Room; -the first floor hallway connecting the stair lobby and serving the Council chamber, adjoining offices and the Withers room; -the Withers Room; -the whole of the Town Hall including the entrance foyer, lounges and assoicated service rooms and stairways; -the Streeton Room; -the Condor Room (note that the original west face-brick external wall is extant); -the northern staircase and associated lobbies serving the Streeton and Condor rooms including the phone box; A substantial addition creating office space was added to the south of the building in the early 1970s. The building won the Royal Victorian Institute of Architects Street Architecture medal in 1939. The RAIA commented on the strong character of the building and commended the texture and colour of the brick elevations. How is it significant? Heidelberg Town Hall is of architectural significance to the State of Victoria. Why is it significant? Heidelberg Town Hall is architecturally significant as the greatest and most eloquent expression of the inter-war brick Moderne style in Victoria. It should be compared to MacRobertson's Girls High School in South Melbourne of 1934-5, and to the Church of Christ the Scientist in Camberwell of 1937, which also won an RAIA Street Architecture medal. The choice of brick in the Moderne style sat comfortably within the Melbourne context, of a city with a preference for brick buildings. Heidelberg Town Hall is clearly informed by developments in functionalist Modern architecture in Europe in the late 1920s, and specifically draws on the exemplar of Willem Dudok's Hilversum Town Hall in the Netherlands, and which was Dudok's most important and influential work, an inspiration to several leading architects in Victoria. The building has landmark qualities for the surrounding suburbs where its location on high ground can be viewed from close and distant locations. The building is historically significant as a confident expression of the expansion of municipal facilities as a consequence of rapid suburban expansion of the municipality in the inter-war period. It is noted that most heritage assessments of the civic centre precinct carried out to date have focussed essentially on the former Heidelberg Town Hall and municipal offices, and typically make no specific reference to the Ivanhoe Library, even though it is located within Heritage Victoria's extent of registration. There is nonetheless a brief statement of significance for the library in the Survey of Post War Built Heritage in Victoria (Heritage Alliance, 2008): A particularly notable (and substantially intact) example of a municipal library in the post war modernist tradition, expressed as a rectilinear volume with a fully glazed side wall, enclosing a double-height reading room with mezzanine level. The north side of the building incorporated a loading dock for the mobile library, which may have been a unique feature at the time. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 13 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct This is a view that seems difficult to sustain given the analysis earlier in this report in relation to the comparative architectural interest of the place. Rather than being particularly notable, the Ivanhoe Library is a representative example of a post-war municipal library in terms of its architecture. The library does not appear to have built using innovate construction techniques or materials, and the loading dock is not in itself especially remarkable. In regards to its context, the library has no strong visual relationship to the adjacent 1937 town hall, aside from both buildings having rectilinear massing and face brick walls. It should nonetheless be pointed out that the library has tan coloured bricks of an entirely different appearance to the mottled cream bricks of the town hall. With regards to the site history, no particular interest or significance arises from the opening of the library by the then State Minister of Immigration, Vernon Wilcox. One would expect a library to have an opening ceremony, and this would seem to have been a typical example of such an opening. It is more reasonable to conclude that the library has some social and historical significance at a local level as a valued community resource for the past 46 years. Having regard for this, the key question to be addressed in this report is whether the Ivanhoe Library is of significance at a local level, and warrants retention either in its own right or as a component part of the extent of registration of the Town Hall precinct and the associated curtilage of the heritage overlay. 8.0 Discussion As noted above, this analysis has been prepared in relation to Council’s intention to develop a master plan for the future development of the Ivanhoe Civic Precinct (comprising the former Heidelberg Town Hall, municipal offices and Ivanhoe Library). This report looks at the significance of the site, with particular reference to the Ivanhoe Library, and provides an assessment of the potential heritage impacts resulting from changes to the complex anticipated by current master planning concepts, including the suitability or otherwise of retaining the existing library and the possibility of building a new library. This office is advised that the current library no longer meets library servicing requirements and is no longer fit for purpose. If the building is to be retained, it would need to be adapted to an alternative use such as offices, with a new library facility to be developed that meets current community needs and library servicing standards. It is noted that Heritage Victoria's extent of registration and the heritage overlay, HO77, relate to the town hall, not to the library specifically. The library is not referenced in the conservation management plan for the Heidelberg Town Hall, and in most heritage assessment relating to the site. The building can be considered to have no status with regard to the heritage overlay and relevant statutory documents at this stage, although the land on which it is sited is within the overlay. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 14 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Indeed, it is clear that the extent of the overlay and of the registration each relate to standard mapping practices, in which a heritage control of this type is generally mapped to the full curtilage or lot boundaries of a place, rather than because of any sense that the buildings on the land other than the Town Hall need to be protected or warrant heritage protection. Having inspected the site and its environs in some detail, and having assessed the significance of the civic precinct and its component parts, it could be argued that the library building is of some modest local significance as a good representative example of low-key civic modernism of the 1960s by a reputable architectural firm. It also has social value as a community resource, and historical interest for its ability to demonstrate the evolution of the civic precinct. It is by no means certain, however, that this level of significance is sufficient to justify retention of the building in the face of alternative plans for the site that make appropriate provision for ongoing community use of the site, including a new library facility. At least some of the significance of the extant library can be recognised through means other than retention of the building. For example, if the library were to be altered or demolished and replaced with a new library, it would be appropriate to prepare an archival quality photographic record of the structure, both external and internal, prior to any works taking place. Indeed, it is worth noting that construction of a new civic facilities on this site will itself maintain a history of civic development and evolution on the land around the Heidelberg Town Hall. A similar matter has recently arisen at Wangaratta, where the Leith and Bartlett designed Memorial Town Hall of 1962-63 was demolished to make way for a new performing arts centre (see figure 21 below). The town hall was, like the Ivanhoe library, considered a good representative example of low key civic modernism of the 1960s. The site also had social and historical interest arising from its civic use dating back to the 1860s. The role associated with Council offices in the Leith and Bartlett designed building had nonetheless been superseded by the construction of the neighbouring municipal offices in the 1970s and 1980s. The hall’s other role as a public auditorium had been important but was continued in the new performing arts centre. In this way the redevelopment allowed for historically and socially important civic uses to continue on the site. Accepting the above, a future proposal for demolition of the Ivanhoe Library may be acceptable, subject to provision for appropriate archival format documentation of the building for historical purposes. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 15 Ivanhoe Library Ivanhoe Civic Precinct Figure 21 Wangaratta Memorial Town Hall, 1970. Source: State Library of Australia. Furthermore, it is possible that the demolition of this building may provide options for better overall outcomes on the site that are complementary to, and protective of, the higher order of significance that is attached to the 1937 Town Hall. Depending on the nature of future development, the may well be an argument that it is preferable to build a new library facility on some other part of the site, such as at the immediate rear of the Town Hall, replacing other modern additions of no significance, in order to free up as much of the balance of the precinct land as possible for positive and sensitive development. Further to this, retention of the extant Library could prove a constraint on future use of the precinct land that ultimately results in less preferable outcomes in relation to the Town Hall and adjoining land. 9.0 Conclusion In summary, the Ivanhoe Library is of some modest local heritage interest, as noted above. This significance is worthy of recognition in some form, and it may be appropriate to maintain the building in its library use for as long as it can adequately fulfil its community role. However, the building is not a key example of its type or style in a broader sense, and as a result there is some basis for argument that replacement of this building with another structure of improved facilities and appropriate design would be a reasonable outcome on the site, accepting that this is in any case a building that has itself replaced an earlier library in the local community’s use. This would in part maintain the social and historical significance associated with the site. bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 16 BRYCE RAWORTH PTY LTD CONSERVATION•URBAN DESIGN CONSERVATION CONSULTANTS A R C H I T E C T U R A L H I S T O R I A N S _______________________________________________________ BRYCE RAWORTH M. ARCH., B. A. (HONS), ICCROM (ARCH) Bryce Raworth has worked with issues relating to heritage and conservation since the mid-1980s, and has specialised in this area since establishing his own consultant practice in 1991. Bryce Raworth Pty Ltd, Conservation•Urban Design, provides a range of heritage services, including the assessment of the significance of particular sites, preparation of conservation analyses and management plans, design and/or restoration advice for interventions into significant buildings, and detailed advice regarding the resolution of technical problems relating to deteriorating or damaged building fabric. Since 2004 Raworth has been a member of the Official Establishments Trust, which advises on the conservation and improvement of Admiralty House and Kirribilli House in Sydney and Government House and The Lodge in Canberra. As a member of the former Historic Buildings Council in Victoria, sitting on the Council's permit, planning and community relations committees, Raworth has been involved with the registration and permit processes for many registered historic buildings. In 1996 he was appointed an alternate member of the new Heritage Council, the successor the Historic Buildings Council, and in 1998 was made a full member. At present he provides regular advice to architects and private owners on technical, architectural and planning issues relative to the conservation and adaptation of historic buildings, and is occasionally called upon to provide expert advice before the VCAT. He is currently the conservation consultant for the cities of Melbourne and Stonnington and conservation consultant to the Melbourne Heritage Restoration Fund. Bryce Raworth Pty Ltd has prepared conservation plans for a number of registered historic buildings, including Walter Burley Griffin's Essendon Incinerator. The company's experience with institutional buildings has led to preparation of conservation plans for the Mac.Robertson Girls' High School, Castlemaine Gaol, J Ward, Ararat, the former Russell Road Police Headquarters, Ballarat State Offices, Camberwell Court House, Shepparton Court House and the Mont Park asylum precinct. With respect to historic precincts, the company has provided detailed advice towards the resolution of heritage issues along the Upfield railway line. The company is currently contributing to redevelopment plans for the former Coburg Prisons Complex (comprising Pentridge Prison and the Metropolitan Prison) and the former Albion Explosives Factory, Maribyrnong. In 1993 Bryce Raworth led a consultant team which reviewed the City of Melbourne's conservation data and controls for the CBD, and in 1997 Bryce Raworth Pty Ltd revised the former City of South Melbourne Conservation Study with respect to the area within the present City of Melbourne. The firm is currently undertaking heritage studies on behalf of the cities of Melbourne and Kingston and is completing documentation for significant heritage places and areas in the City of Stonnington In recent years Bryce Raworth Pty Ltd has also provided documentation and advice during construction on the restoration of a number of key registered and heritage overlay buildings, including the Ebenezer Mission church and outbuildings, Antwerp, the former MMTB Building, Bourke Road West, Melbourne, the former Martin & Pleasance Building, 178 Collins Road, Melbourne, and the former Uniting Church, Howe Crescent, South Melbourne. At present the office is documenting substantial restoration works to the MOMA at Heide, Templestowe Road, Bulleen, to the Church of the Sacred Heart, Grey Road, St Kilda, and to the Coburg Prisons Complex (including the Pentridge Prison entry buildings and walls to Champ Road). bryce raworth pty ltd conservation•urban design 1