Joseph Reed (architect)
Joseph Reed | |
---|---|
Born |
1823 Cornwall, England |
Died |
29 April 1890 (aged c.67) Melbourne, Victoria |
Nationality | British |
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings | State Library of Victoria, St Michael's Uniting Church |
Projects | Royal Exhibition Building |
Joseph Reed (c. 1823–1890), a Cornishman by birth, was one of the most talented, prolific and influential Victorian era architect in Melbourne, Australia.[1] He established his practice in 1853, which through various partnetships and name changes, continues today as Bates Smart, one of the oldest firms continually operating in Australia.
Biography
Probably born in 1823 in Cornwall, England, Joseph Reed arrived in Melbourne in 1853. The following year he won a design competition for the State Library of Victoria, designed the Bank of New South Wales in Collins Street and the Geelong Town Hall. In 1862 he partnered with Frederick Barnes (1824-1884).[2]
In 1883 Barnes retired from the partnership and Reed was joined by A. M. Henderson and F. J. Smart. In 1890 Henderson withdrew while N. B. Tappin joined the firm. The office later became Bates, Peebles & Smart.[2]
In 1890 Reed came into financial difficulties, and died of "inanition and exhaustion", on 29 April.[2]
Architectural expression
Reed's buildings represent an impressive body of work, in a range of then popular styles, each one a fine essay in the chosen idiom. He could design in Neoclassical, Renaissance Revival, Gothic Revival, Italianate, Baroque, French Second Empire, Romanesque and Queen Anne, and in many variations. Following a visit to Europe in 1863 he experienced first hand the late medieval brick architecture of Lombardy, the source for the bold polychrome then popular in England, which he immediately expressed in his designs for the Independent Church on Collins Street, St Jude's in Carlton, and Frederick T. Sargood's Rippon Lea Estate at Elsternwick. Major works include the classical State Library of Victoria (1856), Collins Street Independent Church (1867), Frederick Sargood's Rippon Lea Estate (1868) and Melbourne Trades Hall (1873). In contrast to the polychrome Romanesque of Rippon Lea and the Independent Church is the stern Gothic manner of Scots' Church (1871-4) across the road; the energetic spire was for the last decades of the nineteenth century Melbourne's tallest structure. The Trades Hall is grandly palatial, the world's oldest and probably most splendid trades hall. In the fashionable Second Empire style Reed also designed Melbourne Town Hall (1870) while the World Heritage-listed Royal Exhibition Building, completed for the 1880 International Exposition in Melbourne is Italianate with a Florentine dome. Reed completed the building of St Paul's Anglican Cathedral to the designs of William Butterfield after that architect resigned the project in 1887. Reed was faithful to the original design, but provided most of the furnishings, including the elaborate pulpit.
List of works
- State Library of Victoria (designed 1854, built in many stages)
- Collins Street Baptist Church (1854)
- Geelong Town Hall (1855)
- Bank of New South Wales, Collins St (1856) 9facade relocated to Melbouren University)
- Wesley Church (1857)
- 182-186 George Street, East Melbourne (1857)
- Frogmore House, Carnegie (c.1857)
- Royal Society Buildings (1858)
- 157 Hotham Street, East Melbourne (1861) (attributed)
- Commercial Banking Company of Sydney (1862) (demolished 1956)
- St Michaels Uniting Church (1866)
- The Menzies Hotel (1867)
- Rippon Lea Estate (1868)
- Melbourne Town Hall (1869)
- Carlton Methodist Mission, now Church of All Nations, Palmerston St, Carlton (1870)
- Melbourne Trades Hall (1873)
- Scots' Church (1873)
- Bank of Australasia (later ANZ), Collins Street (1876)
- Faraday Street School, Carlton (1876)
- Academy of Music, Bourke St East (1876). Renamed Bijou Theatre 1880. Burnt down 1889.
- Eildon Mansion, St Kilda (1877)
- Eastern Market (1877) (Reed & Barnes) (demolished in the 1960s)
- Wilson Hall, Melbourne University (destroyed by fire in 1952)
- Royal Exhibition Building (1879)
- Ormond College, Melbourne University (1881)
- Holy Trinity Church, East St Kilda (1882–1889)
- Old Pathology Building, Melbourne University (1885)
- Sacred Heart Church, St Kilda (1884)
- Lombard Building (15-17 Queen Street) (1887)
- Baldwin Spencer Building, Melbourne University (1887)
- Old Physics Conference Room and Gallery, Melbourne University (1888)
- Redcourt Estate (Armadale) (1888)
Gallery
- State Library of Victoria. Swanston Street, Melbourne
- Former Bank of New South Wales. Transplanted from Collins Street to the University of Melbourne Union Lawn
- Collins Street Baptist Church
- Geelong Town Hall
- Melbourne Trades Hall, Carlton
- The Scots' Church. Collins Street, Melbourne.
- 157 Hotham Street, East Melbourne.
- Rippon Lea Estate. Elsternwick, Victoria.
- Melbourne Town Hall, Collins Street
- The Royal Exhibition Building, Carlton
- St Paul's Cathedral, Flinders Street
- Wesley Church, Melbourne
- Eildon Mansion
- Ormond College Clock Tower, University of Melbourne
- Holy Trinity Church, St Kilda
- Sacred Heart Church, St Kilda
- Lombard Building
- Redcourt Estate, Armadale
References
- ↑ Dunstan, David: "Joseph Reed: A city’s greatest architect", in Australian Heritage, Autumn 2010
- 1 2 3 Saunders, David. "Reed, Joseph (1823? - 1890)". Australian Dictionary of Biography Online. Australian National University. Retrieved 23 September 2012.
External links
- Saunders, David. "Reed, Joseph (1823? - 1890)". Australian Dictionary of Biography Online. Australian National University. Retrieved 16 January 2011.