Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
arts

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Chifley Tower

Skyscraper in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Chifley Tower

Skyscraper in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

FieldValue
nameChifley Tower
imageChifley Tower, August 2010.jpg
image_size180px
captionChifley Tower in August 2010
locationSydney, New South Wales, Australia
coordinates
highest_regionSydney
highest_prevCitigroup Centre
highest_start1992
highest_end2019
highest_nextCrown Sydney
map_captionLocation in Greater Metropolitan Sydney
map_size280
statusComplete
start_date1988
completion_date1992
building_typeOffice
antenna_spire244 m
roof216 m
floor_count53
elevator_count29
costA$ 1.2 billion
floor_area90000 m2
architectKohn Pedersen Fox
developerBond Corporation & Kumagai Gumi
website

Chifley Tower is a 53-storey skyscraper in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by New York City-based architects Travis McEwen and Kohn Pedersen Fox, with John Rayner as project architect. At a height of 244 metres (801 feet), Chifley Tower was the tallest building in Sydney from 1992 to 2019. It was surpassed in height by Crown Sydney (271 metres) in 2020 along with the Salesforce Tower (263 metres) and One Sydney Harbour (247 metres) in 2022.

Site history

Tower from the south with ground plaza at street level

Chifley Tower is built on an irregularly shaped plot. Due to the organic development of Sydney's street pattern, the streets that run north from this area form a skewed grid that is aligned differently to the streets that run south from this area, which form another skewed grid. The cross streets immediately north and south of the site (Bent and Hunter), on the other hand, follow meandering alignments that do not align with these skewed grids.

At the southwestern corner of the plot, Elizabeth Street terminates at Hunter Street while, a short distance to the east, Phillip Street crosses Hunter Street and continues north to Circular Quay. Elizabeth Street became a major artery, running almost straight from Hunter Street in the north, past Central station through to Waterloo, while Phillip Street runs south from this junction for only two blocks before it is terminated by King Street and St James' Church. As a result, termination of Elizabeth Street at Hunter Street was felt to be unsatisfactory, and from the early 20th century various plans were devised to modernise this junction. The City of Sydney Council adopted a plan to create a Parisian Haussmannian-style geometric plaza, through which Elizabeth Street would connect with the northern section of Phillip Street and form a thoroughfare to Circular Quay.

Land resumptions to create this square continued for many years. In 1957, Qantas House was completed to the northwest of the junction, with a curved frontage conforming to the planned plaza, named Chifley Square. However, in 1962, the Commonwealth Centre, owned by the Federal Government, was completed on the site of today's Chifley Tower complex, and did not align with the planned plaza. Eventually it was demolished in the 1980s, and the Chifley Tower complex was built in its place. The podium building has a curved facade to the southwest which mirrors that of Qantas House and completes the semicircular curve of the planned square. The southwestern corner of the plot became a pedestrian plaza, with a giant, two-dimensional sculpture of Ben Chifley, after whom the square is named.

The building was originally named Bond Tower, after Alan Bond. After Bond's bankruptcy, the building was acquired by Kumagai Gumi, and in 1993 was renamed Chifley Tower, after the square. The retail arcade located in the podium building is named Chifley Plaza.

Features

Arcade Entrance

Located at 2 Chifley Square, its cross streets are Hunter, Philip and Bent Streets with the main entry being on Phillip Street. Due to its prominent location at the peak in the north-east CBD, the Tower has broad harbour views from its 42 storeys. The tower is used primarily for commercial use, mostly financial institutions, law firms and corporations. Current tenants include UBS, BlackRock, Servcorp, Hana Financial Group and Bank of Queensland.

A midrise podium building surrounds the tower. Retail arcades are located on the lower levels, while the upper levels of the podium building are used as commercial offices (for most of the building's history, as trading floors for a succession of investment banks). The entrance foyer for the retail arcades is located on the southwestern corner of the building, facing Chifley Square.

A 3 m lightning rod was added in 2000, extending its original height from 241 m to 244 m. To stop the tower from moving in the wind a giant steel pendulum weighing 400 LT is held from eight 75 mm wires near the rooftop. The tower is named after former Australian Prime Minister Ben Chifley.

At one time All Nippon Airways operated a sales office on Level 32.

References

References

  1. "Chifley Tower – Background".
  2. "Bio".
  3. [https://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/chifley_square Dictionary of Sydney – Chifley Square]
  4. [http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=6441 SkyscraperPage]
  5. "Office space, Virtual Office, Coworking in Sydney {{!}} Chifley Tower".
  6. (August 29, 2018). "Stake in Alan Bond's Chifley Tower up for grabs for $900 million". [[Australian Financial Review]].
  7. "[http://www.ana.co.jp/wws/uk/e/about_ana/corp_info/investor/stock_info/reports/images/1998/98j.pdf ANA Directory]" ([https://web.archive.org/web/20160708184523/http://www.ana.co.jp/wws/uk/e/about_ana/corp_info/investor/stock_info/reports/images/1998/98j.pdf Archive]). [[All Nippon Airways]]. 1998. Retrieved on 9 July 2016. "Sydney Level 32, The Chifley Tower 2 Chifley Square, Sydney N.S.W. 2000, Australia"
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Chifley Tower — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report