Downing Centre
The Downing Centre is a major heritage-listed former department store and now courthouse complex in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It features state government courts, including the Local Court, the District Court, and a law library known as the Downing Centre Library. The Downing Centre forms part of the Department of Communities and Justice and houses court services and sheriffs offices.
The Downing Centre is located in the Sydney central business district, on Liverpool Street, between Elizabeth Street and Castlereagh Street. It sits opposite the south-west corner of Hyde Park and Museum railway station. A subway links the Downing Centre directly to Museum Station from an entrance on Castlereagh Street.
Originally called the Mark Foy's Piazza Store, the building was renamed as the Downing Centre in 1991 in honour of Reg Downing, a former NSW Attorney General and Minister for Justice. The building was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.
History
Mark Foy was a successful draper who was born and apprenticed in Ireland and arrived in Melbourne in 1858. He probably worked in established firms before going to the goldfields in 1859 and establishing his own shop in Collingwood where he prospered expanding into three shops by 1875 and six by 1880. In 1882, due to failing health, he passed the original store to his eldest son, Francis, withdrew his capital and brought in William Gibson as Francis' partner. He left with his wife for Europe, however, died en route in San Francisco in January 1884. Soon after Francis sold out to Gibson and moved to Sydney to establish a new business under his father's name, which would become the Mark Foy's department store chain.Francis Foy moved to Sydney from Melbourne after the death of his father in 1884 and leased premises in Oxford Street with his brother Mark Jr. Early in the twentieth century, they bought up the fifteen properties which occupied most of the block bounded by Liverpool, Castlereagh, Elizabeth and Goulburn Streets. The existing buildings on the first three streets were demolished in 1907.
Initially a two-storey building designed by Arthur Anderson of the architectural firm McCredie & Anderson, the Mark Foy's Emporium was built in 1908 in the Australian Interwar Stripped Classical architectural style as a retail emporium for Mark Foy's. It had Sydney's first escalator, the Escalier Hoquart, and first car delivery service. The inspiration for the building, though not its detail, seems to have been Le Bon Marché in Paris. Many contractors and suppliers were involved in the new store. The distinctive yellow faience brickwork outside was imported from Bermotoff in Yorkshire, the white glazed bricks from Shaw's Rigg in Glasgow.
Mark Foy's became a limited company in 1909 and the brothers Francis and Mark Jr. devoted more time to sport, horse-racing, motoring and, in the case of Mark, the Hydro Majestic Hotel at Medlow Bath. H.V. Foy, another brother, managed the firm after Francis’ full retirement in 1914.
Massive extensions and alterations were made to the store in 1927-1930, designed by Spain Cosh & Epslin Architects, in consultation with Ross & Rowe Architects, creating an eight-storey building. The display windows around the piazza and the upper-level ballroom were celebrated features of the renovated store. The design was originally planned to cover the whole block: a planned extension to the south to create a Goulburn Street frontage was not fully achieved before the Great Depression of the 1930s prevented further building, except for the Castlereagh Street entrance, associated with the Museum railway station.
In 1968 the Foy company was taken over by McDowell's, who were in turn absorbed by Waltons in 1972, but the store retained its name until Grace Bros leased it from the AMP in 1980 and closed the store in 1983. Already in the 1970s courts of justice had begun to use the upper floors and in 1983 a government committee recommended a multi-court complex, with 16 new court-rooms in the Foy building. The new complex, named after Reg Downing, a former state Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, was opened by the Premier, Nick Greiner, in 1991.
Modifications and dates
- 1916-1924 - Spain, Cosh & Dods various works - removing and relocating lift and escalators, changes to doors, shop windows and frontage
- 1924 - Ross & Rowe plans for multi-storey extension and additions - stripping out the interior with new structure consisting of four storeys and a roof terrace. Original portion formed the base and external character maintained and carried through to new levels. Over time, store diminished in size/footprint, letting out floors to tenants to cover costs.
- 1960s - Changes to Piazza and replacement of building parts with 'modern' elements. Vinyl tiles placed over travertine floor of main entry. Mail well with famous chandelier closed up to enable the First Floor to be used and separately leased. The chandelier was used in a Brisbane complex and has now been relocated over a new stair in the building.
- 1966 - Level 6 additions for offices. Additions resulted in altered parapet and replacement of terracotta decoration with concrete beams.
- 1968 - Foy Co. overtaken by McDowells, then Waltons. The store retained its name until 1980 when taken over by Grace Brothers.
- 1970s - Courts of justice occupied upper floors from the 1970s. Other than the structure, only a few internal elements remained at this time.
- 1983 - Retail function finally closed. The whole building had been owned by AMP Society for some years, with floors leased to various organisations and government departments, such as the Housing Commission through the 1970s and early 1980s. Government committee recommended that a multi-court complex, with 16 new courtrooms be accommodated in the Foy building. In 1981 the south wall was bricked up as a temporary measure with plans for the new complex following in 1985. Former Mark Foy's building adapted for use as courts.
- 1991 - Court complex opened and continues to operate as part of the District Court network. Significant Interwar additions and alterations to interior and exterior.
- 1993 - DA submitted to construct new 21 level court complex with two levels of judges' parking, ground and 18 levels over, completed in 1994.