Bates Smart

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Practice information
Founders
Founded1853
LocationMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
Significant works and honors
Buildings
Awards
  • RAIA Walter Burley Griffin Award for Urban Design (2003, 2005)
  • RAIA National Award for Interior Architecture (2003)
Website
www.batessmart.com.au

Bates Smart is an architectural firm with studios in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia. Founded in 1853 by Joseph Reed it is known as one of Australia's oldest architectural firms, and has been responsible for numerous landmark buildings.

History[]

Joseph Reed established his firm on arrival in Melbourne in 1853 and immediately won important commissions such as the Public Library. In 1863 he joined with Frederick Barnes to become Reed & Barnes. In 1883 Barnes retired, and A. Henderson and F. Smart joined Joseph Reed as partners to create Reed, Henderson & Smart. In 1890 Reed died, Henderson withdrew and W Tappin joined creating Reed Smart & Tappin, retaining the deceased partner's great name. In 1907 N. G. Peebles joined creating Smart Tappin & Peebles, but with the rapid departure of Tappin, and addition of E Bates, became Bates Pebble & Smart the next year.[1] After Peebles died in 1923, and the firm became Bates Smart McCutcheon in 1926 when (Sir) became a partner; he remained Principal Partner until his retirement. After 1995 the firm has been known simply as Bates Smart.[2]

Partners and directors[]

  • Joseph Reed (1822-1890) partner 1853-90;
  • Frederick Barnes (c.1823-1884) partner circa 1862-1883;
  • (1853-1923) partner 1883-1890;
  • (c. 1852-1907) partner 1883-1907;
  • (1854-1905) partner 1890-1908;
  • (1882-1950) partner 1907-1950;
  • (died 1923) partner 1907-1922;
  • (1865-1931) partner 1908-1931;
  • Sir (1899-1983) partner 1926-1977;
  • (1906-1962) partner 1937-1962;
  • Douglas Gardiner (1905-2001) partner 1945-1969;
  • (1905-1982) partner 19145-1977;
  • (1909-1989) partner 1949-1979;
  • (1905-1973) partner 1961-1970;
  • (1906-1988) partner 1961-1979;
  • Richard Maxwell (born 1928) partner 1967-1984;
  • (born 1931) partner 1970-1992;
  • (born 1933) partner 1970-1994;
  • (born 1938) partner 1970-2002;
  • Tim Hurburgh (born 1943) director 1981-1999;
  • Roger Poole (born 1942) director 1981-2015;
  • Roger Arnall (born 1944) director 1984-1991;
  • James Milledge (born 1951) director 1992-2014;
  • Jeffery Copolov, director 1995-current;
  • Philip Vivian, current director;
  • Simon Swaney, current managing director;
  • Guy Lake, current director;
  • Kristen Whittle, past director;
  • Jenny Nolan, current finance director;
  • Sheree Proposch, director 2008-2013;[3]
  • Brenton Smith, director 2017-current;
  • Julian Anderson, current director;
  • Matthew Allen, director 2014-current.[4]

Notable projects[]

Completed Firm name Project name Location Award Notes
1867 Reed & Barnes
(1862-1883)
Melbourne Town Hall Melbourne, Victoria [5]
1867 Scots' Church Melbourne, Victoria
1880 Royal Exhibition Building Melbourne, Victoria
Reed, Henderson & Smart
(1883-1890)
Reed, Tappin & Smart
(1890-1907)
1903 Bates, Peebles & Smart
(1908-1926)
Central Hall Melbourne, Victoria
1910-13 Melba Hall, University of Melbourne Melbourne, Victoria [6]
1912 & 1913 Buckley & Nunn, now David Jones 298-310 Bourke Street, Melbourne, Victoria [7]
1930 Bates, Smart, McCutcheon
(1926-1995)
AMP Building Collins Street, Melbourne, Victoria [8]
1933 Buckley & Nunn's Menswear Store (now David Jones), 312 Bourke StreetMelbourne, Victoria
1937 Second Church of Christ Scientist Camberwell, Victoria Street Architecture Medal 1938 [9]
1956 Wilson Hall Melbourne University [10]
1957 MLC Building, North Sydney North Sydney [11][12]
1937-8 MLC Building, Sydney 42-46 Martin Place, Sydney [13]
1958 ICI House Melbourne, Victoria
1960 Johns & Waygood, City Road South Melbourne, Victoria
1975 Optus Centre Melbourne, Victoria
1997 Bates Smart
(since 1995)
Crown Casino and Entertainment Complex Melbourne, Victoria
2000 Federation Square including the
Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia
Melbourne, Victoria
  • RAIA Walter Burley Griffin Award for Urban Design (2003)
  • RAIA National Award for Interior Architecture (2003)

[14][15]
2000 Toyota Headquarters Woolooware, Sydney [16]
2001 Melbourne, Victoria
2003 NSW Police Headquarters Sydney
2004 420 George Street Sydney central business district
2005 Walsh Bay Redevelopment Woolloomooloo
  • RAIA Walter Burley Griffin Award for Urban Design (2005)
[17]
2006 Freshwater Place Melbourne, Victoria
2007 NSW Attorney General's Department Headquarters
2007 Pinnacle Office Development North Ryde
2007 AHM Headquarters Wollongong
2008 Government Service Centre Queanbeyan
2010 Mid City Sydney central business district
2018 Opal Tower Sydney Olympic Park

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. ^ Goad, Philip (2012). Encyclopaedia of Australian Architects. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press. pp. 586–588.
  2. ^ Goad, Philip (2004). Bates Smart: 150 years of Australian Architecture. Australia: Thames and Hudson.
  3. ^ Goad, Philip; Willis, Julie (2012). Encyclopaedia of Australian Architects. Melbourne: Cambridge University Press. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-521-88857-8.
  4. ^ Bates Smart Directors Archived 5 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Saunders, David. "Reed, Joseph (1823? - 1890)". Australian Dictionary of Biography Online. Australian National University. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  6. ^ "Melba Hall". Victorian Heritage Database.
  7. ^ Statement of significance at Heritage Council of Victoria
  8. ^ "AMP Building". Victorian Heritage Database.
  9. ^ "Second Church of Christ Scientist". Victorian Heritage Database.
  10. ^ "Wilson Hall". Victorian Heritage Database.
  11. ^ "OUR GIANT BUILDING". The Argus (Melbourne). Victoria, Australia. 13 May 1955. p. 3. Retrieved 8 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ "MLC Building". New South Wales Heritage Database. Office of Environment and Heritage. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  13. ^ "MLC Building (Former)". New South Wales State Heritage Register. Office of Environment and Heritage. H00597. Retrieved 13 October 2018.
  14. ^ "AIA Awards: Federation Square". Australian Institute of Architects. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  15. ^ "AIA Awards: The Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia at Federation Square". Australian Institute of Architects. Archived from the original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  16. ^ "Projects". Architecture Australia. 88 (5). 1 September 1999. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  17. ^ "AIA Awards: Walsh Bay Redevelopment". Australian Institute of Architects. Retrieved 18 November 2010.

External links[]

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