Nahum Barnet

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Nahum Barnet (16 August 1855 1 September 1931) was an architect working in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia during the Victorian and Edwardian periods.

Barnet was born in the Melbourne Hospital on Swanston Street, the son of a Polish-born pawnbroker, jeweller and tobacconist.[1] He was an active member of Melbourne's Jewish community, serving on many committees and often writing letters to the Jewish press.

He produced a number of significant buildings including Her Majesty's Theatre (1886), Austral Building (1891), St Kilda Synagogue re-development (1903–04), the Empire Building (1905) on Flinders Street, the former Auditorium (1912), 280-282 Bourke Street and Alston's Corner (1913) and Georges Department Store (1913) all on Collins Street and the Wertheim Piano Factory in inner suburban Richmond, Melbourne Synagogue (1929) in South Yarra. (The Wertheim factory later became a Heinz factory and, for over 50 years, has been the studios for television station GTV-9.)

The popular claim that there was not a street in Melbourne where a Barnet building could not be found was first coined by Isaac Selby and reiterated in Barnet's obituary in The Argus. Popular culture holds that when challenged with the street Brunton Avenue, the reply was that Barnet had designed the small cabman's shelter in 1903.[2]

He died in St Kilda, 1 September 1931.[1]

Gallery of works

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Miles Lewis: Nahum Barnet at Australian Dictionary of Biography, access date Jan. 2010.
  2. Landmarks in The Age, 11 June 2005


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