Plimmer Towers | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Office & 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 |
Current tenants | Brother NZ, Travelodge |
Completed | 1977 |
Owner | Eureka Funds Management, Toga Group |
Height | 84 metres (276 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 31 |
Design and construction | |
Main contractor | Williams 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 opened in 1981. [3]
Plimmer Towers is located at the corner of Boulcott Street and Gilmer Terrace, and can also be accessed from Lambton Quay via Plimmer 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 New Zealand's tallest building until Quay Tower opened in Auckland in 1981, and was Wellington's tallest building until 1984, when the nearby BNZ Centre opened. [3] 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 the restaurant reopened as '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 hotel.
In 2010, the complex was refurbished and repainted by its then owners, Australian-based Eureka Funds Management and the Toga Group. [11] Hotel naming rights were passed on to the Travelodge group.
In 2015, Plimmer Tower was sold by its Australian owners to a Singaporean private investor. The freehold 34-level tower and car park was sold on behalf of Australian owners Toga NZ No 1 Ltd and Core 3B Plimmer Complex.
The tower is believed to have sold for about $24m and the adjoining 642-bay parking building has been sold separately for about $16m to Penrith Holdings, a company operated by local property investor and developer Paul Benjamin. The sale did not include the Travelodge Hotel, which is part of the complex. [12]
The building is constructed on a sloping hillside, so 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]
Lambton Quay is the heart of the central business district of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand.
New Zealand Parliament Buildings house the New Zealand Parliament and are on a 45,000 square metre site at the northern end of Lambton Quay, Wellington. From north to south, they are the Parliamentary Library building (1899); the Edwardian neoclassical-style Parliament House (1922); the executive wing, called "The Beehive" (1977); and Bowen House. Currently, an additional building for housing Members of Parliament is under construction, which is expected to be completed in 2026. Whilst most of the individual buildings are outstanding for different reasons, the overall setting that has been achieved "has little aesthetic or architectural coherence".
Riverpoint is a two-tower mixed-use building complex located in Limerick, Ireland. Standing at 58.52 metres it is currently the eighth-tallest storeyed building in the nation, the sixteenth-tallest on the island of Ireland and the third-tallest in Munster after the Cork County Hall and The Elysian, both in Cork. The Riverpoint tower is 1.5 m (4.9 ft) taller than the nearby Clayton Hotel, which at 57.0 m (187.0 ft) is the tallest hotel in Ireland. The Riverpoint development as a whole forms most of the block surrounded by Henry Street, Lower Mallow Street, the Bishop's Quay and Mill Lane. The only other buildings on the site are an apartment building on the corner of Lower Mallow Street and Henry Street, and Estuary House on Henry Street.
Wellington railway station, Wellington Central station, or simply Wellington station, is the main railway station serving Wellington, New Zealand, and is the southern terminus of the North Island Main Trunk, Wairarapa Line and Johnsonville Line.
The Aon Centre is a commercial office building at 1 Willis Street in Wellington, New Zealand, formerly named the BNZ Centre then the State Insurance Building. When completed in 1984, it was the tallest building in New Zealand, overtaking the 87m Quay Tower in Auckland. It is notable for its strong, square, black form, in late International Style modernism, and for a trade dispute which delayed the construction by a decade. It remained the tallest building in New Zealand until 1986, when the 106 meter BNZ Tower opened in Auckland, and is currently the second tallest building in Wellington after the Majestic Centre.
John Plimmer was an English settler and entrepreneur in New Zealand who has been called the "Father of Wellington".
Kirkcaldie & Stains was a department store in Wellington, New Zealand. It was established in 1863 by John Kirkcaldie and Robert Stains with a capital of £700. The first store was opened on Lambton Quay. In 1868 Kirkcaldie & Stains moved to their final location at the corner of Lambton Quay and Brandon Street, expanding several times. There was a branch on Cuba Street, Wellington from 1870 –1876 and one in Napier from 1897 until 1917. French luxury skincare brand Sisley was exclusive to the store in New Zealand.
Willis Street is a prominent street in the central business district of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand. Along with Courtenay Place, Manners Street and Lambton Quay, the lower reaches of Willis Street form part of the "Golden Mile", Wellington's primary entertainment and retail district.
The Old Bank Arcade is a retail and office complex on a corner site at Lambton Quay, Wellington, New Zealand.
Wellington Harbour Board was the body which formerly managed the shipping and commercial affairs of the port of Wellington in New Zealand. It was constituted in 1880 and was disestablished in 1989.
The NTT Tower was designed by Peddle Thorp & Montgomery Architects and was completed in 1999. The main architect on the build was Robert Montgomery and the building was built by Mainzeal Construction. The building was engineered by Connell Wagner Structural Engineers,.
Travelodge Hotels is an Australian-owned brand of hotels. As at 16 February 2018, Travelodge has 18 hotels and 3,030 rooms across Australia and New Zealand
Whitmore Street is at the boundary of the central business district and the government buildings area of Wellington, New Zealand's capital. The street runs almost north-south and is one of those linking Lambton Quay, Wellington's main shopping street, with Stout Street, Featherston Street and the harbourside at Customhouse/ Waterloo Quay. It is in the suburb of Pipitea.
The Wellington Sculpture Trust is an independent charitable trust which funds and advocates for public sculptures in Wellington, New Zealand. It is funded by private and corporate donations and works with the Wellington City Council. It has commissioned and bought sculptures sited in the Botanic Garden, Cobham Drive at the head of Evans Bay in Rongotai, the Wellington waterfront and Lambton Quay in the central city.
The Fujitsu Tower is a 17-floor office skyscraper on 141 The Terrace in Wellington, New Zealand. As of March 2021, 97 percent of the tower is leased, making the lettable area 8,825.36sqm. Its occupants include the Ministry of Justice and the New Zealand Productivity Commission. As of March 2021 it has an annual income of $2,205,050.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)