Nahum Barnet


Nahum Barnet was an architect working in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, during the Victorian and Edwardian periods, best known for his extensive legacy of commercial buildings in Melbourne's CBD, as well as his last design, the Melbourne Synagogue.
Barnet was born in the Melbourne Hospital on Swanston Street, the son of newly arrived Isaac Barnet, a Polish-born pawnbroker, tobacconist, and later a noted jeweller. Isaac was an active member of Melbourne's Jewish community throughout his life, as well as civic affairs, becoming a Councillor in the City of Collingwood in 1879.
Nahum Barnet began practicing as an architect in 1879, and was an early advocate of red brick and terracotta, then gaining popularity in England, rather than the ubiquitous stucco or stone. By the late 1880s he had produced some major works, including Rosaville, an unusual and highly elaborate two storey terrace in Carlton, the Renaissance Revival style Her Majesty's Theatre, as well as the Moss White & Co Tobacco Warehouse and the Austral Building in Collins Street, amongst the first to introduce the red brick Queen Anne style to the city's streetscapes.
Barnet was active in Jewish life like his father; in 1882 he was elected secretary of the Anglo-Jewish Association, and was honorary architect to the Jewish Philanthropic Society, doing work at the Jewish almshouses. He was to develop an extensive Jewish clientele, designing many houses and a number of tobacco warehouses and factories, and his first major commission, Rosaville in Carlton, was for Abraham Harris, a prominent member of the Jewish Community.
Unlike some other boom era architects, he weathered the economic crash of the 1890s, and became one of the most prolific commercial architects in Melbourne in the Edwardian era after 1900. He designed at least 32 offices, shops, warehouses and theatres in the central city between 1900 and 1925, ending up with various of his designs near each other. For instance the 1891 Austral Building in Collins Street was a few doors up from his 1905 surgery for Dr Barrett at no 127, the 1913 YWCA was just around the corner in Russell Street, the 1913 Auditorium Building is half a block further down Collins Street, and Clyde House, also 1913, is across the street from that.
Notable works after 1900 include a series of designs that were variations on the local version of the Romanesque Revival, combined with elements of the Queen Anne, characterised by the use of red brick and arches, often with projecting bays; examples include Mason, Firth & McCutcheon Printers in Bank Place, Love & Lewis in Bourke Street, and the Auditorium Building, which included a concert hall at ground level. Barnet embellished some of his essays in this style with Art Nouveau details, relatively rare in Melbourne, including Alston's Corner, the Paton Building, though most decorative elements were flowing floral designs. The striking Young Women's Christian Association clubrooms in Russell Street was more eclectic, combining red brick, projecting squat turrets and a high stylised parapet. In this period he also designed in other styles, including the Arts & Crafts influenced Florida Mansions in St Kilda Road, an early block of flats, the Edwardian Baroque of the Empire Arcade and Wertheims, and stylised Gothic of Francis & Co. His last work was the Baroque Revival Melbourne Synagogue in South Yarra.
The claim that there "was not a street in the Melbourne central business district where a Barnet building could not be found" was coined by his friend Isaac Selby and reiterated in Barnet's obituary in The Argus in 1931. The obituary relates that when challenged with the street "Carpentaria Place", the reply was "You are wrong. You have overlooked the cabman's shelter." Barnet had designed this in 1898, and it still exists, though relocated to Yarra Park along Brunton Avenue some time in the interwar years.
In 1885 Barnet married Ada Rose Marks in the Great Synagogue, Sydney; they had four daughters and from the mid-1890s lived next door to his parents in Alma Road St Kilda. He died at home in St Kilda on 1 September 1931.

List of works

  • 1883 Rosaville, 46 Drummond Street, Carlton
  • 1886 Her Majesty's Theatre, 199-227 Exhibition Street, Melbourne
  • 1887 Working Mens College, 124 La Trobe Street, Melbourne
  • 1888 Fergus & Mitchell Warehouse, 28 Clarendon Street, Southbank
  • 1888 Moss White & Co Tobacco Warehouse, 217-219 A'Beckett Street, Melbourne
  • 1889 Liverpool, 36 Princes Street, St Kilda
  • 1891 Austral Building, 115-119 Collins Street, Melbourne
  • Voltaire & Racine, a three storey terrace pair, 73-75 Fitzroy Street, St Kilda
  • 1892 Rosenthal Aronson & Co, 275-277 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne
  • 1893 Clarkes Building, 275-281 Lonsdale Street, Melbourne
  • 1897 Heimath, Lansell Road, Toorak
  • 1898 Cabman's Shelter, Carpentaria Street, City
  • 1900 Bernard's Swiss Portrait Studio, 323-5 Bourke Street Melbourne
  • 1901 Wm Cameron Brothers Tobacco Warehouse, 435-447 Swanston Street, Melbourne
  • 1902 Chinese Mission Church, 119-125 Little Bourke Street
  • 1902 Melbourne Sports Depot, 55-57 Elizabeth Street
  • 1902 Clauscen's Furnishing Arcade, 194-196 Bourke Street Melbourne
  • 1903 St Kilda Synagogue, Charnwood Grove, St Kilda
  • 1903 Wertheim showrooms and offices, 294-296 Bourke Street
  • 1903 Alcock & Co, 155-157 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne
  • 1903 Mason, Firth & McCutcheon Printers, 11-19 Bank Place, Melbourne
  • 1904 Altson's Corner, ne corner of Collins and Elizabeth Streets, Melbourne
  • 1905 Paton Building, 115-117 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne
  • 1905 Empire Arcade, 290 Flinders Street, Melbourne
  • 1905 Dr Barrett's Chambers, 103 Collins Street Melbourne
  • 1905c House and surgery for Dr Barrett, 127 Collins Street
  • 1906 St Kilda Sea Baths, St Kilda beach
  • 1907 Armstrong House, 217-219 Queen Street, Melbourne
  • 1909 Wertheim Piano Factory, Bendigo Street Richmond
  • 1909 Aberdeen House, ne corner of Collins and King Streets, Melbourne
  • 1909 Barnet Glass Rubber Co., 289-299 Swanston Street, Melbourne
  • 1911 London Hotel, Elizabeth Street, Melbourne
  • 1911 The Kalazoic, 238 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne
  • 1911-12 Melba and Britannia Theatres, 283-289 Bourke Street, Melbourne
  • 1911c Zerchos College, 157 Collins Street, Melbourne
  • 1911c Norman Bros, 60-62 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne
  • 1912 Display Block, 313-315 Little Collins Street, Melbourne
  • 1912 Majestic Theatre, 172 Flinders Street Melbourne
  • 1913 Auditorium Building, 167-173 Collins Street, Melbourne
  • 1913 Francis & Co Chemist, 280-282 Bourke Street, Melbourne
  • 1913 Young Women's Christian Association, Russell Street, Melbourne
  • 1913 Connibere Grieve and Connibere,, 301-311 Flinders Lane, Melbourne
  • 1914 Elizabeth House, nw corner Elizabeth & Little Collins Streets, Melbourne
  • 1915 Clyde House, 182 Collins Street, Melbourne
  • 1916 Florida Mansions, 601 St Kilda Road, Melbourne
  • 1919 Cann's Department Store, 135-137 Swanston Street, corner Little Collins Streets. Four floors added 1935.
  • 1922 Swanston House, 163 Swanston Street, Melbourne
  • 1925 CML Building, 499 Dean Street, Albury, NSW
  • 1925 Lancashire House, 36-50 Flinders Lane, Melbourne
  • 1929 Melbourne Synagogue, Toorak Road, South Yarra.