A closer look at ABC Southbank's new digs

A closer look at ABC Southbank's new digs
Mark BaljakMarch 28, 2014

Premier Denis Napthine may have turned the first sod at ABC's Southbank redevelopment mid February, but the first tangible signs of construction is due this month as site demolition commences. Incorporating the adjoining car park at 102 Sturt Street, the $176 million dollar expansion will see ABC's Ripponlea complex abandoned in favour of a larger Southbank premises which will also house the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.

Premier Napthine during the ceremony remarked “This exciting project represents the ABC’s long-term commitment to Melbourne... The cost of construction will be $176 million and will generate about 300 full time jobs in Victoria over the life of the project, which is expected to produce indirect benefits of $491.5 million.”

A closer look at ABC Southbank's new digs

The first feature to catch the eye is COX Architecture's luminous, open design. The current ABC Southbank Centre at 120 Southbank Boulevard looks very much 1990's with a strong street level bluestone edifice and dark recessed windows - not the most welcoming of buildings. Enter the new ABC Melbourne Accommodation Project (MAP) with its transparent facade that provides a highly visible internal environment when viewed externally.

When including a full-height void facing Southbank Boulevard, the design seeks to give something back to the public via interaction rather than isolation. If and when the Arts Precinct Blueprint is adopted, the new MAP building will fit within the blueprint nicely.

A closer look at ABC Southbank's new digs

The MAP building involves the design and construction of a new southern building over the aforementioned adjoining car park while the current ABC Centre will be essentially stripped back to the concrete structure and augmented. The eventual common building will house over 30,000 sqm of Gross Floor Area, a marked increase over the existing facility.

Included within the new extension are 77 below ground car parking spaces, 122 bicycle bays and four rain water tanks whilst car park ramps, services and loading bays are all accessed via Moore Street. This in turn allows office production facilities to front both Sturt Street and Southbank Boulevard whilst Studio 31 will hug the western boundary. A large rooftop terrace will sit atop the bluestone annex.

A closer look at ABC Southbank's new digs

Like many projects that suffer delays for a myriad of reasons, head contractor Probuild's initial 2013 Target Program has slipped and has no doubt been superseded by an amended version. After suffering a roughly four month delay in demolition, the project looks set to achieve an early 2017 completion as works commence this month.

The final product will go a long way to enhancing its immediate surrounds.

For further reading and to see more architectural drawings, view the PDF on the Parliament of Australia website.

Mark Baljak

Mark Baljak was a co-founder of Urban.com.au. He passed away on Thursday 8th of November 2018 after a battle with cancer. He was 37. Mark was a keen traveller, having visited all six permanently-inhabited continents and had a love of craft beer. One of his biggest passions was observing the change that has occurred in Melbourne over the past two decades. In that time he built an enormous library of photos, all taken by him, which tracked the progress of construction on building sites from across metropolitan Melbourne.

Editor's Picks

Kangaroo Point's iconic Shafston House gets closer to apartment redevelopment
Inside Australia 108: The groundbreaking Melbourne apartment tower offering the highest apartments in the southern hemisphere
Discover Avery: A Boutique Sanctuary in the Heart of Glen Iris [Video]
"A once-in-a-lifetime opportunity": Don O'Rorke discusses the Monarch Residences Penthouse Collection
Why apartments at Killarney Ponds in Box Hill are suiting the family buyer: Urban Buyer Q&A