Buckley and Nunn's Emporium, 306-312 Bourke Street, Melbourne
Butler, Graeme1985
Archives
Total copies: 1
The David Jones store, formerly Buckley & Nunn, is historically significant as the site of Melbourne's longest continuously operating retail establishment. It is historically significant for its association with two of Melbourne's most important retail stores: Buckley & Nunn and David Jones.
Title:
Buckley and Nunn's Emporium, 306-312 Bourke Street, Melbourne
Creator:
Date of work:
1985
Reference number:
BIF-CITY 101195 4
Level of description:
Item from Collection: Heritage Collection (HC)
Type of materials:
Graphic materialsTextual material
Part of:
Series: Central City (BIF-CITY)
Access restrictions:
UnrestrictedOpen access.
Use restrictions:
UnrestrictedPlease contact City of Melbourne Libraries about obtaining permission to reproduce images.
General notes:
Style: Neo-BaroquePeriod: EdwardianConstruction date: 1911-Notable features: 1. Wrought iron friezes, ornamental panels. 2. Leadlight glazing.ASSOCIATED RESEARCH ADDED BY GRAEME BUTLER:.VICTORIA HERITAGE REGISTERH2153https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/29906DAVID JONES STORE (FORMER BUCKLEY & NUNN)294-312 BOURKE STREET and 285-295 LITTLE BOURKE STREET MELBOURNE, MELBOURNE CITYStatement of SignificanceWhat is significant?The David Jones store on the north side of Bourke Street was built for the retail store Buckley & Nunn, the western Edwardian Baroque section in two stages as the Buckley & Nunn Emporium in 1911 and 1912, and the eastern Moderne style Buckley & Nunn Men's Store in 1933. Buckley & Nunn was established by Mars Buckley, an Irishman who had arrived in Melbourne in 1851 with goods to sell, and after spending several successful months on the goldfields set up a drapery store in a rented wooden building in Bourke Street in 1852. He took into partnership Crumpton Nunn, who returned to England to manage that end of the business. Expansion during the 1850s enabled Buckley to rent larger premises, which he soon purchased, and by the late 1850s he occupied a site extending back to Little Bourke Street. In 1891 Nunn died and Buckley sold the business, which became Buckley & Nunn Pty Ltd. Department stores boomed in the early twentieth century and the store was rebuilt and later extended in the latest architectural styles. In 1910-12 the Emporium was rebuilt by the builder Arthur Palmer to designs by the prominent architectural firm Bates Peebles & Smart. In 1925 the same architects, now known as Bates & Smart, added two floors to the 1911 half of the building. In 1933 the store was extended to the east, with the building of a new Men's Store, designed by Walter Osbert McCutcheon of the same architectural firm, now known as Bates Smart & McCutcheon. In 1934 it won the RVIA Street Architecture Award. In the same year Moderne style lifts designed by Bates Smart & McCutcheon were installed in the Emporium. The original shopfronts have been replaced, cantilevered verandahs added across the entire Bourke Street facade and the interiors have been continually altered and updated to suit changing needs. The entire site was sold to and refurbished by David Jones in 1982. David Jones is Australia's oldest department store company, having opened their first store in Sydney in 1838. In 1986 David Jones also purchased the former Coles Store (VHR H2154) on the south side of Bourke Street for use as their menswear store.The Bourke Street elevation of the David Jones store consists of three main elements: the two sections (numbers 306-12 and numbers 298-304 Bourke Street) of the former Buckley & Nunn Emporium, four storey buildings in the Edwardian Baroque style, and the 1933 Moderne style former Buckley & Nunn Men's Wear store. The former Emporium has an Edwardian Baroque style facade with rusticated giant order columns, unusual lattice-effect balustrades with Art Nouveau detailing, and colourful mosaic panels which include the names Buckley & Nunn Limited and Victoria House. The two storeys added to the 1911 building, in a similar but less decorated style to the earlier building, destroyed the symmetry of the 1911-12 Emporium. Internally some of the original Art Deco style plaster ceiling decoration survives. The Men's Store is a four storey building with a Jazz Moderne facade, with a border of black terracotta faience framing the three levels of steel framed windows, with sunburst motifs and Staybrite steel chevrons, inset with coloured enamels, decorating the spandrels at each floor. Below the parapet three cast terracotta panels depict men's wear in sport, evening dress and everyday attire. The Art Deco style lift surrounds feature black marble with chromium detailing and the interiors have tinted mirrors and ornate Art Deco timber and metal work.How is it significant?The David Jones store is of architectural, historical and social significance to the State of Victoria.Why is it significant?The David Jones store, formerly Buckley & Nunn, is historically significant as the site of Melbourne's longest continuously operating retail establishment. It is historically significant for its association with two of Melbourne's most important retail stores: Buckley & Nunn and David Jones. Buckley & Nunn was Melbourne's oldest surviving retailer and David Jones Australia's oldest surviving retailer under the same name, having started trading in Sydney in 1838.The David Jones store is architecturally significant for its Bourke Street facades, in two distinct styles, both of which are fine examples of their type. The former Emporium facade is a notable example of the Edwardian Baroque style and the adjacent men's store an outstanding example of the Jazz Moderne style. Both buildings are important works by Melbourne's oldest established architectural firm, known in 1911-12 as Bates Peebles & Smart, and in 1933 as Bates Smart & McCutcheon. Both buildings are significant elements in the streetscape of the Bourke Street Mall, the retail heart of Melbourne. The former men's store is significant as a demonstration of the increasing use of colour on the facades of city buildings in the 1920s and 1930s. Remnants of the plaster decoration in the interior are significant as extensive surviving examples of their kind, and reflect the elegance expected of department stores in the early twentieth century. The lifts are significant as one of only four known examples of inter-war lifts in Victoria, as rare survivors of inter-war interior design and one of the best examples of the Art Deco style in Melbourne.The David Jones store, formerly Buckley & Nunn, is socially significant as an important focus for city shopping trips for many Victorians for over a century and half..NIGEL LEWIS DECEMBER 1976, HISTORIC AND ARCHITECTURAL SURVEY OF THE CENTRAL CITY OF MELBOURNE BOURKE STREET, EAST AREA 8 OF THE SURVEY COMMISSIONED BY THE HISTORIC BUILDINGS PRESERVATION COUNCIL: 8, 32-3:BUCKLEY AND NUNN LTD.M22 L36 & 37298-312 Bourke StreetMessrs. Mars Buckley and C. J. Nunn. commenced their Melbourne operations in 1852 on part of the present site 1. The Cobb and Co. coaches began their journeys from outside Buckley and Nunns. The existing building was erected in stages, beginning with the western half, no. 306-312, in 1911. The specification for this section is dated December 1910, the architects being Bates, Peebles and Smart 3. The eastern' half followed in 1912, the contract date being 15th April 1912. The contract is signed by Arthur Palmer as the builder.In February 1925 alterations to the floor levels in fireproof construction. were designed by Bates, Peebles and Smart with Mr. Shilleto as the contractor. A record of the building permit was published in Building and Construction, 1st October 1935 for alterations to Buckley and Nunns, E. A. Watts being the builder and Bates, Smart and McCutcheon the architects. The two extra floors added to no. 306-312 appear to have been constructed at this time.Soon after this the eastern portion 298-304 was let to G. J. Coles & Co. until 1938 when Building and Construction of 23rd August reported: "Premises in Bourke Street, vacated recently by G. J. Coles & Co. Ltd., are to be remodelled for Buckley and Nunn. Bates, Smart and McCutcheon are the architects". This work appears to be internal alterations.This building has an unusual form and decoration which is virtually intact above the awning line. Originally the halves were identical, the only changes occurring with the addition of the two floors to the western half. The composition of the facade is dominated by the bulky rusticated Ionic columns derived from the English Renaissance which are inserted at second floor level. These two storey columns have unusual square blocks threaded over their lower half. These are the main decorative elements on the facade, with the remaining decoration being in the variety of window shapes and the incised linear patterns on the parapet and below the columns.The facade is broken into many elements by the use of bay windows at the first floor level, the columns and the separately treated end bays. Each half is treated as a complete building, the 1912 portion repeating the 1911 composition.The use of the coloured mosaics as an advertising and decorative device and the large etched bay windows of the first floor showrooms provide a sense of intactness and attention to detail that is rarely found today in a building of this vintage. This building is an excellent example of Edwardian Baroque and would definitely have been nominated for the Register except for the additional two floors added in 1935, which lessen the coherence of the original 1912 building. Nonetheless, these additions are well executed and make a successful blend of a form of Art Deco with the original; it also serves to provide a complementary massing to Myers and helps create an incremental streetscape massing from lower buildings such as Portmans to Myers.Internally the alterations in 1935 produced an extremely well designed lift complex intact. It is a fine intact example of an original lift lobby and interior, few of which remain today. The black marble lobby with chromium details and graphics, the lift interiors with full-height tinted mirrors on three sides (providing endless vistas to the delight of children), the Art Deco friezes and lighting combined with well executed timber panelling provide more than adequate grounds for recommending the lift complex to be added to the Register.RECOMMENDATION:The building is an important part of the Bourke Street Environmental Area and should be protected under the proposed planning controls. Only the lift complex is recommended for addition to the Historic Buildings Register. The whole building would have been nominated except for the later 2 storied addition.1. Sutherland: Victoria and its Metropolis, v.II, p. 558.2. Victorian Historical Magazine, v.23, p.663. Melbourne University Archives - Bates, Smart and McCutcheon Collection.
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Record types:
Research and reports
Record number:
1189343
| Type | Reference No. | Extent | Status/Desc |
|---|---|---|---|
| Original | 101195 4 | 1 PDF : 744 KB ; A4 | Group of Items (May not be issued, may not be reproduced) |