Quay Quarter Tower
Quay Quarter Tower | |
---|---|
Former names | AMP Centre |
General information | |
Status | Completed |
Type | Commercial |
Location | 50 Bridge Street, Sydney |
Country | Australia |
Coordinates | 33°51′47″S 151°12′41″E / 33.86306°S 151.21146°E |
Current tenants | AMP Corrs Chambers Westgarth Deloitte EQT |
Opening | 1976 |
Renovated | 2018–2021 |
Owner | Mirvac Wholesale Office Fund Dexus Wholesale Property Fund Rest |
Height | 188 m (617 ft) (1976–2018) 216 m (709 ft) (2022–present) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 45 (1976–2018) 54 (2022–present) |
Floor area | 90,000 m2 (970,000 sq ft) |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | PTW Architects |
Developer | AMP Capital |
Main contractor | Mainline |
Renovating team | |
Architect(s) | 3XN & BVN |
Renovating firm | AMP Capital |
Structural engineer | BG&E |
Main contractor | Multiplex |
Website | |
Official site |
Quay Quarter Tower is a skyscraper located at 50 Bridge Street, Sydney, Australia. Built as the AMP Centre in 1976, the structure underwent a redevelopment from 2018 to 2021 which increased its height, introduced cantilevers, created additional office space, and modernised the tower's overall form and design. The AMP Centre re-opened as Quay Quarter Tower in early 2022, and stands at a height of 216 metres (709 ft) with 54 floors.
History
[edit]AMP Centre
[edit]The tower in its original form as the AMP Centre was completed in 1976, consisting of 45 floors. It was used for commercial office space and was made up of concrete, glass, and steel. Designed by Peddle Thorp & Walker and built by Mainline. The centre's roof-height reached 188 m (617 ft), making it the tallest building in Sydney at the time of its completion, prior to the completion of the MLC Centre in 1977.[1][2] From 2011 until 2017, the Port Authority of New South Wales had a radar on top of the building to track commercial shipping in Sydney Harbour.[3]
Quay Quarter Tower
[edit]In 2013, Australian architectural practice BVN designed a new masterplan for the Quay Quarter Sydney precinct and a design envelope for a new tower. Together with AMP Capital and the City of Sydney, the BVN architects ran a design competition for Quay Quarter Tower. On 24 September 2014, the winning design from architect 3XN was revealed and BVN was appointed Executive Architect to collaborate with 3XN and develop their design concept for construction.
Approval for the project was finalised in November 2015 and construction began in early 2018.[4]
In 2023 the tower received the award for the world's best new tall building from the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH).[5]
Multiplex was appointed lead contractor and with the work involving a rebuild and reclad of the building's entire exterior; increasing its height, incorporating additional floorspace, and modernising its overall physical form, design and façade.[6] The AMP Centre's internal core, along with 66% of its existing columns, beams and slabs and 95% of its internal walls, were retained as part of the redevelopment.[7] During initial stages of construction, the northern half of the original structure was dismantled, while the rest of the original exterior cladding was stripped off completely. Following this, a new northern section for the structure was gradually built, incorporating it with the existing core and the southern section of the building, which was also reclad in a corresponding new façade.[8]
The redevelopment resulted in a new height of 216 m (709 ft) with 54 floors, a completely new interior layout with twice the amount of total floorspace, and a new cantilevered exterior design. During construction, key-tenant AMP relocated its headquarters in March 2018 into the AMP Building at 33 Alfred Street, while all other commercial tenants found premises elsewhere in the city.[9] The building in its new form, now known as Quay Quarter Tower, was topped out in early 2021, before its completion in early 2022.[10][11]
In November 2022, architects 3XN and BVN won the International High-Rise Award for Quay Quarter Tower,[12][13] while in December of that year the building won the World Building of the Year Award at the World Architecture Festival.[14][15]
It is the world's first upcycled syscraper retaining 68% of the existing buildings structure[16] and named World Building of the Year at the 15th annual World Architecture Festival.[17][18]
Owned by AMP Capital Wholesale Office Fund, Dexus Wholesale Property Fund and Rest, tenants include AMP, Corrs Chambers Westgarth, Deloitte, EQT and Johnson Winter Slattery.[19]
References
[edit]- ^ Sydney's Tallest Buildings Visit Sydney
- ^ $24.8m contract Canberra Times 24 September 1970 page 31
- ^ Shipping radar finds new home in Sydney Harbour Port Authority of New South Wales 27 November 2017
- ^ AMP Capital receives Stage 2 DA approval for Quay Quarter Sydney AMP
- ^ "Quay Quarter Tower - The Skyscraper Center". www.skyscrapercenter.com. Retrieved 18 October 2024.
- ^ AMP Names Builder for Quay Quarter, Secures $900m Boost from Rest The Urban Developer 5 April 2018
- ^ Quay Quarter Tower Australian Circular Economy Hub
- ^ Quay Quarter Tower, Sydney, Australia Design Build Network
- ^ AMP prepares grand exit from its Circular Quay home of 60 years Australian Financial Review 28 July 2021
- ^ 3XN designs Sydney high rise AMP
- ^ Transformational project in Sydney's Circular Quay Arup
- ^ 3XN's Quay Quarter Tower in Sydney Wins the International High-Rise Award 2022/23 ArchDaily 9 November 2022
- ^ From low-raze to top praise: Sydney high-rise wins international architecture prize Sydney Morning Herald 9 November 2022
- ^ Sydney tower named the world's best building Sydney Morning Herald 6 December 2022
- ^ World's first upcycled skyscraper saves Australian tower from demolition CNN News 6 December 2022
- ^ "World's first 'upcycled' skyscraper saves Australian tower from demolition". CNN. 6 December 2022.
- ^ "Sydney tower named the world's best building". Sydney Morning Herald. 6 December 2022.
- ^ "Australian project named World Building of the Year at WAF". ArchitectureAu. 5 December 2022.
- ^ Retail leases snapped up at Quay Central Tower AMP Capital 8 September 2022
External links
[edit]Media related to AMP Centre at Wikimedia Commons