Plimmer Towers

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Plimmer Towers
Plimmer Towers.jpg
Plimmer Towers
General information
TypeOffice & hotel
Architectural style Late Modern
Location Plimmer Steps, Wellington, New Zealand
Coordinates 41°17′9″S174°46′30″E / 41.28583°S 174.77500°E / -41.28583; 174.77500
Current tenants Brother NZ, Travelodge
Completed1977
Owner Eureka Funds Management, Toga Group
Height84 metres (276 ft)
Technical details
Floor count27
Design and construction
Main contractorWilliams Construction

Plimmer Towers is a high-rise office, hotel and car park complex in central Wellington, New Zealand, named after John Plimmer, active in business and politics during Wellington's early years. [1] The office building is 84m high and has 31 storeys: [2] it was the tallest building in New Zealand until Auckland's Quay Tower was opened in 1981. [3]

Contents

History

The complex is located at the corner of Boulcott Street and Gilmer Terrace, and can also be accessed from Lambton Quay via Plimmer's Steps. The complex was originally developed by construction tycoon Arthur Williams and known as the Williams Centre. The multi-level car parking building was completed in 1963, [2] followed by the office building which opened in 1973 as the Williams Centre and is now called Plimmer Towers. [4] It is built of reinforced concrete with pre-stressed concrete beams. Plimmer Towers was Wellington's tallest building until 1984, when the nearby BNZ Centre opened. It featured a penthouse restaurant on the 31st floor called 'Windows on Wellington' which offered a piano bar and excellent views across the city. [2] [5] Windows on Wellington closed and became '31' in July 1985. [6]

A second tower, the Plimmer Towers Hotel, was completed in 1986. When built it contained 96 serviced apartments [7] but the layout was later modified and the building became a hotel with 132 guest rooms. [8] This building consists of 13 storeys built on top of a six-storey building completed in 1976 after the first tower was built. The original six-storey building had been constructed with future expansion in mind, so had foundations that could cope with the additional floors. [9]

Williams sold the complex to Smart Group NZ in 1986, which was then severely affected by the 1987 sharemarket crash. [4] The complex was later purchased by the Singapore-based Grand Central Group in 1993, [10] by which time it was renamed the Plimmer City Centre, with the hotel section rebranded as a Copthorne.

In 2010, the complex was refurbished and repainted by its current owners, Australian-based Eureka Funds Management and the Toga Group. [11] Hotel naming rights were passed on to the Travelodge group.

Due to the slope the building is on, the Lambton Quay side of the office building is 106m above street level rather than the 84m on the other side of the tower.

In 2022 the Travelodge was advertised for sale. [8]

See also

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References

  1. Plimmer Towers - History
  2. 1 2 3 Kernohan, David (1989). Wellington's New Buildings. Wellington, New Zealand: Victoria University Press. p. 80. ISBN   0864730853.
  3. "Copthorne Hotel Plimmer Towers, Wellington". Emporis. Archived from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  4. 1 2 Arnold Pickmere (24 November 2001). "Obituary: Arthur Williams". NZ Herald.
  5. "The Menu Guide : The most comprehensive guide to Wellington and regional restaurants (1982)". Wellington City Libraries. p. 60. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  6. Burton, David (December 1985 – January 1986). "City Fare: Additions and Deletions". Wellington City Magazine. p. 119. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  7. "Central city hotel nears completion". Evening Post. 17 February 1986. Retrieved 23 July 2022 via Wellington City Archives (page 99 in online file).
  8. 1 2 Fuller, Piers (5 May 2022). "Prominent Travelodge hotel in central Wellington for sale". Stuff. Retrieved 23 July 2022.
  9. Sanders, Linda (3 July 1984). "Williams adds motel complex". The Dominion. Retrieved 23 July 2022 via Wellington City Archives (page 100 in online file).
  10. Mathew Loh (27 June 1993). "Singaporeans snap up bargains". South China Morning Post.
  11. Plimmer Towers - The Building