Federal Coffee Palace
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The Federal Hotel and Coffee Palace was a large elaborate Second Empire style temperance hotel in the
city centre A city centre is the commercial, cultural and often the historical, political, and geographic heart of a city. The term "city centre" is primarily used in British English, and closely equivalent terms exist in other languages, such as "" in Fren ...
of
Melbourne, Victoria Melbourne ( ; Boonwurrung language, Boonwurrung/Woiwurrung–Taungurung language, Woiwurrung: ''Narrm'' or ''Naarm'') is the List of Australian capital cities, capital and List of cities in Australia by population, most populous city of the St ...
, built in 1888 at the height of Melbourne's Boom era, and controversially demolished in 1973. Located on Collins Street, Melbourne's premier thoroughfare, on the corner of King Street, near
Spencer Street Station Southern Cross railway station (until 2005 known as Spencer Street station) is a major railway station in Docklands, Victoria, Docklands, Melbourne. It is on Spencer Street, Melbourne, Spencer Street, between Collins Street, Melbourne, Collins ...
(the address is now 555 Collins Street), it is prominent in lists of the buildings Melburnians most regret having lost.


Design & construction

In June 1885, the local businessmen and politicians James Mirams and James Munro established the Federal Coffee Palace Company, and announced their intention to issue £100,000 of shares to buy the plot on the corner of Collins and King, and build a seven-storey temperance hotel to the design of Tappin Gilbert and Dennehy, that would be 'the finest in the city'. In November 1885, perhaps not satisfied with that design, the Company held a competition, with 13 entries; the first prize was awarded to Ellerker & Kilburn, and the second to William Pitt, who then worked together to design 'the massive edifice'. Construction began in early 1886, and it opened in July 1888, in time for Melbourne's Centennial Exhibition, which opened at the Exhibition Buildings on the 1st August. The exterior stucco facades included sculpted figures, and multiple setbacks to relieve its great bulk, dominated by a lofty corner domed turret that was 165ft high, and topped by Second Empire mansard roofs. The interior had a huge, four storey lobby with a grand staircase, and impressively appointed dining and entertaining rooms. The hotel had 370 guest bedrooms, with a penthouse suite in the tower at the top of the building. The construction took five million bricks and cost £110,000. The Federal Hotel and Coffee Palace was by far the largest and grandest product of the late 19th century temperance movement in Australia that saw numerous Coffee Palaces built all over the country, but particularly in Victoria, with examples in most country towns and Melbourne suburbs. All built in the boom years of the 1880s, often in competition with nearby hotels that did sell alcohol, once the Boom of the 1880s became the Crash of the 1890s, many struggled to remain viable, and often eventually gave up on the temperance aspect of the business. In 1923, The Federal Coffee Palace became licensed, and was renamed The Federal Hotel.


Demolition

Located at the warehouse /shipping end of the CBD, far from the shopping and recreation centres, and with a decline in country railway passengers arriving at Spencer Street Station, the Federal struggled to remain viable. Renovations in the late 1960s did not save the hotel from this declining popularity, and Federal Hotels P/L sold it to developers in 1971. Closure and demolition for an office development was announced in 1972, demolition completed in 1973, and the 23 storey Enterprise House was completed by 1975. In 2017 approval for the replacement of that building with a 46 level hotel and apartment tower was granted. In 2019 the design changed to a 35 level office building with retail at ground level. Some elements of the building were carefully removed by Whelan the Wrecker; three of the four female statues by modeller Charles William Scurry were relocated to the then new Chateau Commodore in Lonsdale Street, and when that changed hands over 20 years later, they were donated to the
McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery (stylised as McClelland Sculpture Park+Gallery) is an Australian sculpture park and gallery located in Langwarrin (near Frankston) in Melbourne, Victoria. It displays more than 100 large-scale works by promi ...
in Langwarrin outside Frankston, Victoria in 1996, and a panel of th
cast-iron stair balustrade
(with 'FCP' in the pattern) was donated by Myles Whelan to the
Museum of Victoria Museums Victoria is an organisation which operates three major state-owned museums in Melbourne, Victoria: the Melbourne Museum, the Immigration Museum and Scienceworks Museum. It also manages the Royal Exhibition Building and a storage fac ...
in 1992.


Gallery

File:Federal Coffee Palace, Melbourne, Australia.jpg, Federal Coffee Palace 1890s File:Federal Coffe Palace, Melbourne, Victoria.jpg, Federal Coffee Palace from north along King Street, 1890s File:Federal Coffee Palace Melbourne.jpg, Federal Coffee Palace postcard 1908 File:Federal Coffee Palace in Melbourne, 1950s.jpg, Federal Coffee Palace in the 1950s File:Federal Coffee Palace - Hotel, John T Collins, 1972, State Library Victoria.jpg, Federal Hotel in 1972, John T Collins File:Federal Coffee Palace cast iron balustrade.jpg, Federal Coffee Palace cast-iron balustrade


See also

*
Architecture of Melbourne The architecture of Melbourne, the capital of the state of Victoria and second most populous city in Australia, is characterised by a wide variety of styles dating from the early years of European settlement to the present day. The city is part ...
* Coffee Palace *Photos taken in 1972 by Graeme Butle
shortly before demolition on Flickr


References

{{coord missing, Victoria (Australia) Hotels in Melbourne Hotel buildings completed in 1888 Buildings and structures demolished in 1973 Australian architectural history Demolished buildings and structures in Melbourne Demolished hotels in Australia Temperance movement Coffeehouses and cafés in Australia