Arthur Purnell


William Arthur Purnell FRAIA, generally known as Arthur Purnell, and sometimes A W Purnell, was an Australian-born architect who practised in Canton, China, in the 1900s, and from 1910 mainly in Melbourne, Australia. He is most noted for the few designs in Melbourne that include Chinese references.

Early life and education

William Arthur Purnell was born on 5 January 1878, the eldest son of William Purnell Jnr, and his wife Emily, née Keown of Geelong, Victoria.
He attended Geelong Grammar School and earned a diploma of architecture at the University of Melbourne.
His father and grandfather were partners in Purnell & Sons, builders, and Arthur joined the firm as a draftsman in 1895, then took further studies under C. A. Heyward, a government architect.

The China years

In 1900 Purnell left for China, and established himself in Canton in 1903. In 1904 he teamed up with Charles Souders Paget, a civil engineer from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, as Purnell & Paget, winning the competition for a new Customs House the same year, and they soon developed a busy practice. They designed numerous projects, including large buildings for the Chinese Imperial Post Office, the London Missionary Society, the Canton Christian College, the Southern Baptist Theological School, and a power station for China Light & Power, which have all been demolished as Guangzhou has been redeveloped in recent years.
The former British and French concession Shamian Island however is completely intact, and hosts a number of designs by the firm, as well as alterations such as extra floors. They include the Imperial Maritime Customs Building, Griffith & Co, Karberg & Co,, International Banking Co, Deacon & Co. All of the designs were generally in the Far East British Colonial form known as 'compradoric', featuring multi-level verandahs supported on solid pillars or arches, with Italianate or Edwardian Baroque detailing.
One of his designs outside Shamian to survive is the South China Cement Factory built in 1909, which was later used by Chinese Nationalist leader Sun Yat-sen as his home and headquarters from 1917 to 1923, and is now a museum.
Purnell returned to Melbourne in 1910, and practiced alone for some years. He set up office in the Nicholson Chambers at 101 Swanston Street, and later Phair's Buildings at 327 Collins Street.

Designs with Chinese connections

As soon as he returned, his practice included some Chinese links. He worked for people and businesses of Chinese origin, while a few designs of his own contained elements of Chinese design, or featured Chinese names. For instance he designed a warehouse in Melbourne's Chinatown in Punch Lane off Little Bourke Street in 1911 for cabinetmaker Tye Shing.
His own house at 17 Munro Street Armadale, built in 1914 in an Edwardian style, was called Shameen in a clear reference to his time in China. Very soon after, in 1916, he built his second house nearby at 1050 Malvern Road, also called Shameen. This was an early example of the Bungalow style, with exaggerated verandah piers and projecting chimney pots with a slightly Oriental character.
Clearer use of Chinese design motifs can be seen an unbuilt tearoom design for Malvern in 1913 which featured a distinctly Oriental roof and verandah. This was followed by Tsohshaan Mansions, at the corner of Malvern and Irving Roads in Toorak, built 1917, which has an Oriental feel achieved without overt Chinese elements. In 1928 he designed another teahouse, at 22 Newcombe Street Portarlington, which featured a distinctly Chinese roof shape.
His most well-known Chinese-influenced design, and possibly the best known of all his works, is his third house for himself, located on a busy city artery, at 492 Punt Road, South Yarra. This is a substantial reworking of a house he had designed for his client "Alec" Barlow in 1924, which he bought and named Shan Teng. He added a number of rooms, changing the orientation, and in particular the roof, which he altered just before construction from a simple hipped roof to one with a curved Chinese shape. His daughter recalled that the family had Chinese servants indentured from an American ships captain.

Beaver and Purnell

In 1915 he joined with Isidor Beaver at his practice at Altson's Buildings, 82 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne, on the Collins Street corner. Beaver was a Manchester-born architect who had been in partnership with Edmund Wright in Adelaide and moved to Melbourne in 1890 to supervise construction of their National Mutual Life building on the corner of Collins Street and Queen Street.
A notable design of this time was Michael's Corner, built in 1915 using then relatively new reinforced concrete, which still stands on the south west corner of Elizabeth and Lonsdale Streets.
The next year they designed Ranmoor, 395 Glenferrie Road, Malvern a radical design of plain rendered masses reflecting an influence of the Prairie School, and perhaps Walter Burley Griffin.
In 1925 they designed Carinya, a Spanish / Mediterranean mansion at 61 Clendon Road, Toorak.
Another high profile project by the firm was the 1922 Wattle Path Palais de Danse, a large arched roofed dance hall on the Esplanade at St Kilda. In 1939 it was converted into the well known St Moritz Ice Rink, controversially demolished in 1982.
Purnell left the partnership in 1925; Beaver, 19 years his senior, died in 1934.
In the 1920s Purnell had a close working relationship with car dealer Alexander George "Alec" Barlow, for whom he built a home, car showrooms and racing stables.

After Beaver

In 1925 Purnell moved to offices in the Equitable Building at 314 Collins Street, in a partnership with a Mr Stone which lasted about a year. In 1928 he briefly formed a partnership with Eric Hazel Round and William Alfred Graham as Arthur W. Purnell, Round & Graham, which only lasted only a year, and he went into solo practice again for the next five or so years.
In 1930 he became an early adopter of the new Art Deco style; his office and showroom for Cyclone Wire in Hardware Street completed in September 1930 was amongst the first projects in Melbourne to sport the new geometric decoration.
In 1935 he formed A. W. Purnell & Pearce, with Phillip Foster Pearce ARAIA, still at the same address. By the time Pearce retired in 1946, their offices were at the Colonial Mutual Life building in Collins Street, the same building by a different name.
As well as a great number of private residences in a multitude of styles, works produced during this time include a wide range of commercial projects, many now demolished:
  • Clifton Springs Golf Club
  • A greyhound-racing track at Tottenham
  • Rickards Motor Showrooms, Elizabeth Street
  • Regent Theatre, Ballarat, with Cedric Ballantyne
  • A grandstand at Western Oval
  • Woolstore No 2, Younghusband Woolstore, Kensington
  • Cyclone House, Hardware Street, Melbourne
  • Patersons Furniture Store, 152 Bourke Street
  • Younghusband Woolstore, Albury
  • The Olympia Sea Water Swimming Pool at South Melbourne
  • Southern Stand, Melbourne Cricket Ground
  • The Rosebud Yacht Club
  • Glaciarium, South Melbourne, interior remodelling
  • Avonmore Lodge, Toorak Road, cnr Glenferrie Road, Toorak, 1940
  • The Olympic Stand at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

    Personal life

Purnell returned briefly to Melbourne in 1908 to marry Jane Farrell. Her parents were pastoralists from Lake Monemia near Streatham, Victoria.
Ginnie died on 25 October 1966. The hot humid climate of Southern China did not suit her and may have been the reason they returned to Australia in 1910. Their only child, a daughter Joan, was born in 1918, ten years after their marriage. In 1923 they divorced, but three years later they remarried.
Joan Margaret Purnell married Noel William Dickson in 1939, and died in 2002.