Rialto Towers

Skyscraper in Melbourne Australia

37°49′08″S 144°57′30″E / 37.81889°S 144.95833°E / -37.81889; 144.95833Construction started1982Completed1986HeightArchitectural251 m (823 ft)[1]Roof247 m (810 ft)[1]Observatory234 m (768 ft)[1]Technical detailsFloor count55 (plus 3 underground)Floor area84,000 m2 (904,200 sq ft)Design and constructionArchitect(s)Gerard de Preu and Partners
Perrott Lyon MathiesonMain contractorGrollo Australia

Rialto (often The Rialto, or Rialto Towers) is a skyscraper located at 525 Collins Street, in the western side of the Melbourne central business district, Victoria, Australia. It was the tallest office building in the Southern Hemisphere when it was constructed.

The Rialto featured Melbourne's first skyscraper public observation deck, which operated between 1994 and 31 December 2009.[2] It was also the location of Melbourne's first Tower running event.

Background

Robbs Building, demolished in 1982 to make way for an open forecourt on the corner
Original Rialto Building, retained as part of the development

The site of the whole Rialto development ran between Flinders Lane and Collins Street, and was occupied by several buildings including numerous small warehouses on Flinders Lane, with lanes between including and Winfield Square and Robbs Lane. On the corner of Collins and King Street stood Robb's Buildings, named for the owner, railway builder John Robb, a grand classical styled 5-storey Victorian office building designed by Thomas Watts and Sons[3] in 1885, and one of the largest in the city at the time.[4] Next to that along Collins Street stood two interwar buildings, then the Rialto Building (1891) designed by William Pitt and the Winfield Building (1890) designed by Charles Debro & Richard Speight, both part of the five building Rialto building group, an historic streetscape along Collins Street running up to the 1880s Olderfleet Building to the east.

Through the late 1960s and early 1970s, National Mutual Life Association of Australasia purchased the various historic buildings on the site, but had to rethink plans when the Rialto and Winfield buildings were listed by the new Historic Buildings Preservation Council in 1974, and the National Trust of Victoria opposed the demolition of other buildings on the site.

Little progress was made until 1980 when the site was acquired by Grollo Australia in a joint venture with St Martin's Properties.[5] Grocon successfully argued that Robb's Building stood in the way of its major three-tower proposal, which they modified to a two-tower proposal, but still demolished the Robbs building. A hotel was created utilising the whole of the long rear wing of the Rialto Building, the replacement of the rear wing of the Winfield Building, and the creation of an atrium between.

Construction

Rialto at night.

Designed by architects Gerard de Preu and Partners in association with Perrott Lyon Mathieson, the building was built between 1982 and 1986, opening in October 1986, and takes its name from the much older Rialto Building next door. The massive glass curtain wall façade of reinforced blue tinted mirrored glass is its central feature and changes colour during the day, ranging from a trademark dark blue to a brilliant gold during sunset.

It is 251 m (823 ft) high, with 55 floors[6] and 3 basement floors. It comprises two conjoined towers, the shorter North Tower being 185 m (607 ft) high with 43 floors. In total, there are 84,000 m2 (900,000 sq ft) of office space.

Early tenants moved into the lower floors while the upper floors were still under construction in 1984.

Rialto Run-up

Inspired by the popular Empire State Building Run-Up, a stair race up the 242 m (794 ft), 1222–1254 step race to the 53rd floor of the Rialto building was first run in the late 1980s and became an annual event with both men's and women's divisions known as the Rialto Run-up. Previous winners include Robin Rishworth (1989, 1990); Geoff Case (1991). The winner was awarded with a trip to New York City to compete in the Empire State Building race. The event was run until 2005 and competitors had to go up 1254 steps.[7]

Observation Deck

The Melbourne Observation Deck opened to the public on 19 July 1994 and was located on the 55th floor of the South Tower, at 234 m (768 ft). Views of up to 60 km (37 mi) can be had on a clear day. The floor is serviced by two passenger lifts. On 31 December 2009, the observation deck closed. In 2010, the fine dining restaurant, Vue de Monde, and associated cocktail bar, Lui Bar, opened for trade on Level 55.[8]

Panoramic view from the Rialto at night showing the Melbourne city centre and Southbank illuminated
A ~180-degree panoramic image of Melbourne's Hoddle Grid (CBD) and Southbank on the right side, as viewed from the Rialto Observation Deck

New podium

In 2015–17, the partly roofed, partly open forecourt-podium was replaced with a 5 level perimeter building containing offices, with retail at ground level, and an internal glass-roofed area between it, the towers, and the side wall of the original Victorian era Rialto building. This addition was designed by Woods Bagot architects.[9][10]

Statistics

Rialto dominating Melbourne's western skyline

Rialto consists of two interconnected towers, North and South, with rooftop floors at Level 41 and Level 58 respectively. There are 36 passenger lifts, 95 km (59 mi) of lift cables, 706 lift door openings and 1,450 staircase steps. The outer surface of the building has 13,000 windows. There are five basement levels of car park available for occupiers and casual users. When completed in 1986, The Rialto surpassed Sydney's MLC Centre to become Australia's tallest building at 251 m (823 ft). It was the tallest for five years until being surpassed by 101 Collins Street in 1991. It is currently the tenth tallest building in Australia.

List of tallest buildings in Australia
Next Shortest
Infinity Tower
249 metres (817 ft)
Next Tallest
Bourke Place
254 metres (833 ft)
Heights are to highest architectural element.
List of tallest buildings in Melbourne
Next Shortest
Melbourne Central
246 metres (807 ft)
Next Tallest
Bourke Place
254 metres (833 ft)
Heights are to highest architectural element.

Gallery

  • August 2007
    August 2007
  • March 2010
    March 2010
  • August 2015
    August 2015

See also

  • iconArchitecture portal
  • flagAustralia portal

References

  1. ^ a b c Emporis – Rialto Towers
  2. ^ "Rialto Observation Deck to close". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on 2 December 2009.
  3. ^ Robb's buildings, corner of Collins and King Streets Melbourne [picture] by
  4. ^ John Lack (1976). "Robb, John (1834–1896)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 6. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538.
  5. ^ "Building Construction". pp. (Building Profile → Features → Construction). Retrieved 17 January 2007.
  6. ^ "Leasing".
  7. ^ "Rialto Run-Up 2005 Run 1254 stairs to the top!", coolrunning.com.au. Retrieved 8 April 2015
  8. ^ Dobbin, Marika (8 October 2009). "End in view for Rialto's top deck". The Age. Retrieved 21 December 2009.
  9. ^ "Retail & Office Architecture". Architecture & Design. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  10. ^ "Rialto Regeneration". Woods Bagot. Retrieved 16 March 2021.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rialto Towers.
  • Official website
  • Melbourne Observation Deck
  • Walking Melbourne profile
  • Rialto Run Up
  • Grollo Group built & owns the Rialto Towers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Skyscrapers in Melbourne over 150 metres in height
Completed
Over 300 m
250–299 m
200–249 m
150–199 m
  • Empire Melbourne (198 m, 2017)
  • Collins House (190 m, 2018)
  • Abode318 (187 m, 2015)
  • 80 Collins South (187 m, 2019)
  • Sofitel Hotel (185 m, 1980)
  • ANZ Tower (185 m, 1978)
  • Nauru House (182 m, 1977)
  • LK Tower (178 m, 2019)
  • MY80 (173 m, 2014)
  • Melbourne Square Tower 2 (226 m, 2021)
  • Victoria Police Centre Tower 2 (171 m, 2020)
  • Upper West Side Tower 5 (170 m, 2016)
  • 385 Bourke Street (169 m, 1983)
  • Zen Apartments (168 m, 2012)
  • Platinum Tower One (167 m, 2016)
  • Avant (167 m, 2018)
  • Australian Stock Exchange Building (167 m, 1991)
  • Southbank Place (166 m, 2018)
  • Casselden Place (166 m, 1992)
  • 35 Spring Street (166 m, 2017)
  • The Fifth (166 m, 2017)
  • Ernst & Young Tower (165 m, 2005)
  • SX Stage 1 (163 m, 2005)
  • Royal Domain Tower (162 m, 2005)
  • ANZ World Headquarters (162 m, 1993)
  • National Bank House (161 m, 1978)
  • 2 Southbank Boulevard (161 m, 2005)
  • Verve 501 (159 m, 2006)
  • 477 Collins Street (158 m, 2019)
  • Upper West Side Tower 2 (156 m, 2014)
  • Shadow Play (153 m, 2018)
  • Southbank Central (153 m, 2017)
  • Optus Centre (153 m, 1975)
  • Crown Towers (152 m, 1997)
  • 140 William Street (152 m, 2005)
  • Urban Workshop Lonsdale (150 m, 2005)
Melbourne skyline in 2015
Under construction
200–249 m
Approved
Over 250 m
200–249 m
  • Queens Place South Tower (251 m, TBA)
  • Elysium (244 m, TBA)
150–199 m
Proposed
  • Buildings listed in order of height and with year of completion
  • Building data source: Skyscraper Center