Crown Towers

Hotel skyscraper

Crown Towers
Crown Towers in 2010
Map
Alternative names
  • Crown Towers Hotel
  • Crown Melbourne
  • Crown Casino Hotel
  • Crown Towers [1]
General information
StatusCompleted
Location8 Whiteman Street, Melbourne, Australia
Completed1997
Opened8 May 1997 (1997-05-08)
Height
Architectural152.5 m (500 ft)[2]
Roof141.5 m (464 ft)[2]
Technical details
Floor count43[2]
Design and construction
Architecture firm
  • Daryl Jackson Pty Ltd
  • Hudson Conway Architects
DeveloperCrown Resorts
Main contractorGrocon
Other information
Number of rooms482[3]
Website
www.crownmelbourne.com.au/hotels/crown-towers

Crown Towers is a hotel skyscraper located in the Southbank precinct of Melbourne, Australia. Built in 1997, the hotel is one of three hotels at the Crown Casino and Entertainment Complex, the others being: Crown Promenade (2003) and Crown Metropol (2010). Located on the banks of the Yarra River, it overlooks the city centre, Kings Domain, Port Phillip and Docklands.

Description

Proposals for a Crown hotel to join the casino date back to as early as 1994, at a time when Crown casino was situated in a temporary location on the north bank of the Yarra River.[4][5] Designed by Daryl Jackson and Hudson Conway, the Crown Towers hotel was completed in 1997 in Southbank, alongside the new casino complex.[1] The 5–star hotel opened on 8 May 1997, albeit behind schedule.[6][7] With 482 hotel rooms, across 43 levels, Crown Towers stands at 152.5 metres (500 feet) in height – making it the tallest all-hotel building in Australia.[2][3][8] The hotel is the first skyscraper (building to reach at least 150 metres (492 ft)) to be constructed in the Southbank precinct of Melbourne, a location wherein some of the tallest buildings in the city stand.[9][10]

See also

  • Hotels portal

References

  1. ^ a b "Crown Towers". The Skyscraper Center. Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d "Crown Towers". Emporis. Archived from the original on 9 October 2016. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  3. ^ a b Felstead, Barry (7 November 2013). "Public Disclosure Summary April 2013 - Crown Hotels and Events Carbon Offset Program" (PDF). State Government of Victoria. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  4. ^ Walker, David; Tuohy, Wendy (24 February 1994). "Government offers hope over casino hotel". The Age. p. 3.
  5. ^ Hurley, John (12 June 1996). "Traffic concern over growing size of casino". The Age. p. 8.
  6. ^ Ervin, Max (31 May 1997). "Melbourne Crown Casino – Geotechnical Issues". Australian Geomechanics Society. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  7. ^ Gibson, Rachel (15 November 1996). "Casino hotel delayed again". The Age. p. 1.
  8. ^ "Hotels in Australia". The Skyscraper Center. Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  9. ^ Green, Shane (15 September 2014). "Melbourne becomes the city of soaring skyscrapers – and the envy of Sydney developers". The Age. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  10. ^ Chua, Geraldine (6 January 2014). "Melbourne's tallest skinny skyscraper by BKK Architects approved". Architecture & Design. Retrieved 8 October 2016.

External links

  • Official website
  • Crown towers — on CTBUH Skyscraper Center
  • v
  • t
  • e
Skyscrapers in Melbourne over 150 metres in height
Completed
Over 300 m
250–299 m
200–249 m
150–199 m
  • Empire Melbourne (198 m, 2017)
  • Collins House (190 m, 2018)
  • Abode318 (187 m, 2015)
  • 80 Collins South (187 m, 2019)
  • Sofitel Hotel (185 m, 1980)
  • ANZ Tower (185 m, 1978)
  • Nauru House (182 m, 1977)
  • LK Tower (178 m, 2019)
  • MY80 (173 m, 2014)
  • Melbourne Square Tower 2 (226 m, 2021)
  • Victoria Police Centre Tower 2 (171 m, 2020)
  • Upper West Side Tower 5 (170 m, 2016)
  • 385 Bourke Street (169 m, 1983)
  • Zen Apartments (168 m, 2012)
  • Platinum Tower One (167 m, 2016)
  • Avant (167 m, 2018)
  • Australian Stock Exchange Building (167 m, 1991)
  • Southbank Place (166 m, 2018)
  • Casselden Place (166 m, 1992)
  • 35 Spring Street (166 m, 2017)
  • The Fifth (166 m, 2017)
  • Ernst & Young Tower (165 m, 2005)
  • SX Stage 1 (163 m, 2005)
  • Royal Domain Tower (162 m, 2005)
  • ANZ World Headquarters (162 m, 1993)
  • National Bank House (161 m, 1978)
  • 2 Southbank Boulevard (161 m, 2005)
  • Verve 501 (159 m, 2006)
  • 477 Collins Street (158 m, 2019)
  • Upper West Side Tower 2 (156 m, 2014)
  • Shadow Play (153 m, 2018)
  • Southbank Central (153 m, 2017)
  • Optus Centre (153 m, 1975)
  • Crown Towers (152 m, 1997)
  • 140 William Street (152 m, 2005)
  • Urban Workshop Lonsdale (150 m, 2005)
Melbourne skyline in 2015
Under construction
200–249 m
Approved
Over 250 m
200–249 m
  • Queens Place South Tower (251 m, TBA)
  • Elysium (244 m, TBA)
150–199 m
Proposed
  • Buildings listed in order of height and with year of completion
  • Building data source: Skyscraper Center

37°49′21″S 144°57′38″E / 37.822370°S 144.960434°E / -37.822370; 144.960434