Albany Post Office | |
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![]() Albany Post Office as viewed from Stirling Terrace
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General information | |
Status | Complete |
Location | 31-39 Stirling Terrace, Albany, Western Australia |
Coordinates | 35°01′39″S 117°53′14″E / 35.0275°S 117.8871°E |
Current tenants | |
Completed | 1869 1895 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | James Manning (1869) George Temple-Poole (1895) |
Albany Post Office is a heritage site of the former post office in Albany, Western Australia. The site was also a Customs office, a base station of the overland telegraph, and is noted for its architectural and historical significance. It was listed by the Register of the National Estate in 1992.
The building is situated on Stirling Terrace, opposite Spencer Street, on a multilevel site that overlooks Princess Royal Harbour.
The main building was constructed in two stages, the first in local materials such as brick, granite and sheoak shingles, the second also included materials imported from New South Wales. The original building was completed in 1869, after requests from the Government Resident to the administration in Perth, Western Australia. Large scale site works included excavations, by convict labour, and a large granite retaining wall up to 5 feet thick. The design by James Manning, the Clerk of Works, now forms the eastern section of the building. The functions of the region's first government building included postal, judicial, customs, and a meeting place for the Road Board and local government.
The second phase of construction, completed in 1895, was to a design of the Government architect George Temple Poole. It was an extension that was sympathetic to the earlier building, incorporating the same local materials, and successfully accommodating its multileveled situation. The granite, brick, and sheoak shingles, were used again, freestone, bluestone, and cedar was imported. A clock tower was included in the western extension, four clockfaces 4 feet across, with a spiral staircase. The steps of this staircase are supported by the outer wall, each atop the previous, in the flying style of Palladio. The tower was extended 20 feet in 1901 to increase the drop required by the weight-driven clocks, this increased its height to 84 feet. Wooden shingles were retained on the tower when the roof was later replaced by terracotta tiles.