Canberra Centre - Monaro Mall

Architecture Retail Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia

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1. Awning

Awning recreated to reference original design.

Dianna Snape 8595 px 5684 px 10 MB A3 print

2. Beauty Garden

An innovative exploration into mall layouts for small specialty stores.

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3. External awning & cladding

Awning design and stored facade mosaic tiles.

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4. Shop display detail close-up

Stainless steel joinery of shop front.

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5. Internal entry

Italian marble mosaic floor tiling reflecting coffer ceiling.

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6. Level one void & skylight

Dramatic void directing natural light through retail levels.

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7. Street frontage and entrance

Restaurants opening onto street to create a porous nature to the precinct and generate social gatherings.

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8. Specialty shop front

Stone portals define the entry into each specialty store.

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9. Beauty Garden - Ceiling

Ceiling detail to soften space below.

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10. Petrie Plaza Entry

A large open entry onto Petrie Plaza.

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11. Store display

Glass cabinets allow stores to feel open and welcoming.

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12. Ceiling detail - metal light shades

light shades above cafe seating helps define the space.

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13. Ceiling detail - inverted metal light shades

Inverted shades above circulation void drowns the eye down into the space below.

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14.

Display cabinets along shop frontage allows specialty stores to create unique presentations specific to their store.

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15. Spotted gum timber battens

Timber battens and Italian marble clad walls gives a sense of luxury in a confined circulation zone.

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16. Arched awnings with gold reflective soffits.

Awnings frame the outward facing restaurants.

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17. Beauty Garden

The Beauty Garden is a market-style section for small and temporary specialty stores.

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18. Elevations

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19. First Floor Plan

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20. Ground Floor Plan

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21. Section

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22. Diagram - Natural light through retail level

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Description

Monaro Mall, the oldest section of the Canberra Centre, has been renewed and repositioned as a luxury mall, re-establishing its position as an admired city landmark and retail destination.
Originally opened in 1963, it has been much loved and was significant in the development of Canberra. The mall had undergone many changes from its initial built form with little internally remaining. However although the scope of the project was significant, the existing building structure was intentionally retained and the facades of marble and mosaic tile carefully restored.

Celebrating the history of Monaro Mall, the approach to this project was to look back at the city’s post-war modernist influences to inform the new design, reinterpreting them in a contemporary, yet timeless manner. Most prominently, iconic arched awnings have been reinstated with reflective gold soffits and uplighting adding a new sense of luxury.
As the nature of retail continues to transform, there is a need to redefine the traditional shopping mall as a civic space, a destination that merges the commercial and the cultural. With iterative market testing and close client collaboration, a mix of retail typologies were explored. An important focus has been on experience, creating distinct precincts that can be uniquely branded and accommodate regular themed events.

Street focussed retail with consistent hamper signs and large format shopfront windows and doors with bronze frames form a cohesive streetscape that reactivates the external public realm. A new double height entry to Petrie Plaza with proportions of civic generosity has been carved out of the building. The internal layout has been reconfigured and the arcades have been straightened and aligned for more successful flow, vertical circulation and mid-block connections between Ainslie Mall, Petrie Plaza and Bunda Street.

Arcades are of two scales – the arcade on level one is wider with kiosks and dramatic voids and skylights, while the arcade on the ground floor is more intimate with a feature coffered ceiling. Stone portals and display cases that can be varied in dimension to suit tenant requirements provide visual uniformity and create focus around each open shopfront.
The Beauty Garden has been developed on a market typology, where small format tenancies can have short-term leases to encourage new businesses and allow for changing tenancy mixes as the precinct evolves. Modular stainless steel joinery was designed to make change easy and give coherency to the precinct.

With the challenge of urgency in timeframes, documentation was completed simultaneously with the construction and integration of regular changes responding to evolving retail positioning and market needs.

The project is a substantial investment in the city. While attentive to the importance of business viability in build cost vs rent acquired over the long term, the project makes a significant civic contribution, setting a new benchmark for quality and attention to detail, and demonstrating the potential for private leadership in heritage custodianship and city revitalisation.

Questions and Answers

How is the project unique?

Monaro Mall is the first fully enclosed, air-conditioned shopping mall in Australia, and is still a part of the primary retail precinct in Canberra. The redeveloped precinct has been reimagined as the beauty and lifestyle destination in Canberra, with its uniform shop frontages taking influence from existing luxury retail precincts such as the Queen Victoria Building and the Strand Arcade, both located in Sydney, Australia.

What key materials were used on the project?

• Modular stainless-steel joinery
• Restored façade mosaic tiles
• Iconic arched awnings with reflective gold soffits
• Italian marble mosaic floor tiling
• Bronze framed windows and doors
• Burnished stone portals to shopfronts
• Precast fibre-cement triangular ceiling panels with custom lighting
• Spotted gum timbre wall clad battens

What were the key challenges?

A building of this type includes the challenge of reconfiguring many years of modifications to the both structure and services, this required a consultant team who thoroughly knew the history of the building to come up with innovative solutions to keep surrounding parts of the building in operation while the project was under construction.

The existing mall was largely internally focussed without access to natural daylight, by uncovering existing skylights this gave us the opportunity to create large dramatic voids, influenced by Canberra’s brutalist history, which introduce light into the retail levels through all three levels.

In elevating the existing space to an appropriate standard for the clients vision of a destination retail emporium we look back at the city’s post-war modernist influences to inform the new design, reinterpreting them in a contemporary, yet timeless manner with luxury material and crafted detailing.

What was the brief?

To create a beauty and lifestyle destination within Canberra’s primary retail precinct that brings national and international brands to Canberra and adapt the existing building back to its heritage significance with the employment of luxury materials and detailing to elevate the architecture to suit.

Details

Project size 2400 m2
Completion date 2017
Building levels 2

Project team

Nikki Butlin Architect/ Interior Architect
Jeremy Mather Director
Inactive User 140922 Architectural Graduate
Stuart Davies Architectural Technician
Peter Howel Architectural Technician
Nicholas Woolley Architectural Technician
Rosy Thow Architect/ Interior Architect
Richard Ryan Project Leader/ Associate Director
Aaron Hughes Architectural Graduate
Ani Chepakova Interior Architect
Brendan Chan Architect
Italo Maranesi Architectural Graduate
Shane O'Brien Architect
Fernando Pino Architectural Technician
Suzanne Gaballa Senior Associate/ Architect
Patrick Roberts Architectural Graduate
Samantha Leist Interior Architect
Michael Tolhurst Senior Architect
Maria Lucas Interior Architect
Alexey Kostikov Interior Architect
Rebecca White Interior Architect
Daniel Abdel-Samad Interior Architect
Will Browne Interior Architect
Jake Powely-Baker Interior Architect
David Vyce Interior Architect
Tony Greenland Creative Consultant
Pascale Youf Creative Consultant
Universal Design Studio Concept Designers
Mather Architecture Project Architects
Seventh Wave Creative Consultancy
Seam Lighting Consultant
S4B Mechanical, Electrical and Fire consultants
BCA Certifiers Building certifiers
BLOC Construction firm
PDA Marble & Granite Marble and granite suppliers