Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court

The Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court was the original home of Melbourne's City Court and District Court, as well as their emergency court. The French Romanesque building is located on the corner of La Trobe and Russell streets in the Melbourne city centre.

Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court
RMIT Building 20
Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court on the corner of La Trobe Street and Russell Street
General information
TypeEducation, former court
Architectural styleFrench Romanesque
AddressCorner of La Trobe Street and Russell Street
Town or cityMelbourne, Victoria
CountryAustralia
Coordinates37.8087°S 144.9660°E / -37.8087; 144.9660
Completed1914
OwnerRMIT
Design and construction
ArchitectGeorge B.H. Austin
Architecture firmVictorian Public Works Department

History

It was opened on 20 January 1914,[1] and served the City for 81 years, before a new Magistrates' Court building was opened on William Street in 1995.

Notable trials conducted at the court include that of Squizzy Taylor[1]

Courthouses have occupied the site since 1843[2].

RMIT

The Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court became part of the neighbouring City campus of the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in 1997, and is officially known as RMIT Building 20 (Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court).[1] RMIT also acquired the Former City Watch-house, located next to the Court, and together they form Building 20. The Court building is currently used for lectures and moot courts, and houses offices for RMIT's administration and Chancellery. The Watch-house building is currently used as a museum.

Architecture

A notable feature of the District Court is the historic wooden canopy located over the seat upon which the Magistrate sits in the main courtroom.[1] The canopy was taken from old Supreme Court which had originally been located at the site. At the corner of Latrobe Street and Russell Street, in the former main entrance, there are numerous holes in the bricks that were caused by shrapnel from the Russell Street Bombing that can still be seen today.

gollark: I think they have ASICs for that now?
gollark: Bitcoin is mined on ASICs, so no.
gollark: Probably there'd be less openness about AI development too.
gollark: Semiconductors are Very Important™ so a lot of money/political things would get spent on more resilient supply chains.
gollark: It still probably wouldn't actually work, at least for very long.

See also

References

  1. Former Melbourne Magistrates' Court and City Watch-house. RMIT University, retrieved 12 July 2013
  2. "Australian Heritage Database". www.environment.gov.au. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.