Capita Centre
Capita Centre, now known as 9 Castlereagh Street, is a skyscraper in Sydney, Australia. Located at 9–11 Castlereagh Street, it is tall from spire and tall from roof. The building was designed by Harry Seidler & Associates in 1984 and completed in 1989. The building won Royal Australian Institute of Architects merit award 1991.
Design
The Capita Centre is rectangular and consists of 31 levels, with a total floor area of. The building's floor plan was conceptually divided into six square sections. At each level only four of these squares were built on, leaving a third of the building hollowed out to its full height by a lightwell. This lightwell has a stepped profile, allowing for a diagonal light shaft through the building. Palms and fig trees are planted on the resulting upper setbacks of the building.The design's stepped hollowing created a laterally unstable structural condition. Since no shear-resisting walls were possible, an external vertical truss brace-frame is placed outside the facade. The columns and diagonal bracings are encased in curved glass reinforced concrete panels, giving them smooth cylindrical finishes. The truss is topped with a 30-metre retractable flagpole. The building's exterior is cladded in polished granite facades.
A thoroughfare was originally planned to link Castlereagh Street to Angel Place, via the forecourt of the building. It would have connected with a landscaped transition space at the rear of the building, then lead west to a pathway towards Pitt Street. The link was not implemented and is no longer possible, as the land to the west had since been developed. The rear space has since been incorporated into a glazed courtyard.
History
The building was designed to be the new company headquarters for City Mutual. The land-locked site at 9 Castlereagh St was chosen because of its close proximity to the company's old landmark City [Mutual Life Assurance Building] at 60–66 Hunter Street. City Mutual wanted their new headquarters to be lavish, so no expense was spared in the building design. In 1987, City Mutual changed its name to Capita, which ultimately became the building's namesake.The structural engineer was Miller, Milston & Ferris, while construction was contracted to Civil & Civic. The building was built at a cost of $110m and was opened in 1989. At the time, Capita held one of the largest office tenancies in the Sydney CBD's financial sector, among Commonwealth Bank and National [Australia Bank].
After Capita went into liquidation, the building at 9 Castlereagh St then became a tenanted commercial office tower. In 1994, Keppel Corporation acquired the building for under its subsidiary Straits Steamship Land.
In 2001–02, the building was acquired by a group of investors led by Terry Agnew for. In 2004, a naming rights request for the building by TD Securities was rejected by the City of Sydney council. Subsequently, Agnew took the council's decision to the Land and [Environment Court of New South Wales|Land and Environment Court], citing inconsistencies with the guidelines in place for selling naming rights to buildings.
In 2008, Stockland received the building and approximately, as part of a property exchange with Terry Agnew, who in turn acquired their Northpoint complex in North Sydney. In 2010–11, Stockland commissioned Harry Seidler & Associates, the building's original designer, to refurbish the lobby and forecourt. The new forecourt garden featured a variety of tropical plants including peace lilies, giant taro and lacy tree ferns. The refurbishment project won Australian Institute of Architects Commercial Architecture Award Commendation 2012.
In 2013, Charter Hall acquired the building from Stockland for. In 2024, Harry Seidler & Associates were once again commissioned to refurbish the lobby and forecourt of the building, featuring a new café.
Artworks
A porcelain mural by Lin Utzon is in the ground floor lobby - installed in 1989. The mural measures 12 by 15 metres and comprises over 7,000 tiles which were produced at the Royal Copenhagen Porcelain Factory.There was a second Lin Utzon sculpture "Capita 2" on the company executive floor. The last managing director of Capita did not like the executive floor's design so arranged for the whole Seidler -designed executive floor on Level 31 to be gutted. Some architects from the Seidler office saved the Utzon artwork from being destroyed. This Lin Utzon artwork featured at Museum of Sydney during a Harry Seidler exhibition in late 2014–15, and in 2016 was reassembled to Seidler office penthouse, Milsons Point. A sculpture by Charles O. Perry titled "30” Helix Mobius Mace" was also part of Capita's executive floor on level 31, but when the executive floor was gutted, the sculpture was moved to the building basement. The Perry sculpture was later relocated to the building's entry lobby as part of the ground floor enhancements of 2011.