Walk has opened on Bourke Street Mall, marking the precinct’s first new in over half a century. Designed by global studio for client Steadfast Capital, the project knits together what was originally eight separate buildings across a 3,600sqm site bounded by Bourke Street, Little Collins Street, The Causeway and Union Lane.
The development includes 6,295sqm of retail and InterContinental Hotel Group’s first Australian dual-branded hotels – a and comprising 452 rooms over nine levels above a three-level retail podium. New and offerings include a rooftop bar overlooking Bourke Street.
Buchan led the architecture and for the entire project, including both hotels. “Melbourne Walk is a celebration of the city’s rich and unique identity,” says Buchan Senior Associate Hayden Djakic. “The design enhances the cross-city pedestrian network and merges retail glamour with the gritty laneway culture of contemporary Melbourne.”
The site includes four -listed façades. Buchan’s design retains the sense of a ‘collection of buildings’ while consolidating the block. The heritage of Diamond House and the Public Benefit Bootery on Bourke Street, plus the Allans and York buildings on Little Collins Street, have been restored. New façades take cues from their historic neighbours, reinterpreting and geometry. Distinctive blade signs, a lost feature, have been reinstated.
Internally, new arcades and laneways allow natural light deep into the site. Union Lane remains true to its service-lane origins, providing canvas for street art. Food and beverage shopfronts on The Causeway support its revival as a foodie laneway.
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The dual hotels, entered from the arcade, each carry distinct identities. Holiday Inn uses warm, natural materials, textures and greenery for a calm, home-away-from-home feel welcoming families. Hotel Indigo creates a bespoke local experience, with interiors reflecting the site’s quirky historic retailers – Sidney Meyer’s haberdashery, E W Cole’s ’emporium of everything’ and James Hosie’s Turkish baths referenced through fabrics, rugs, glassware, terrazzo and monkey lamps. The material palette mixes Mondrian blue with ceppo tiles and highlights.
A striking spiral staircase anchors the four-level Hotel Indigo lobby and bar, overlooking a landscaped courtyard that opens the site’s heart to the sky and delivers light into the arcade below via lantern-like skylights.
A new nine-metre-high arcade connects Bourke Street to Little Collins Street, conceived in the tradition of the neighbouring Royal and Block Arcades. Gold-tinted skylights run the length of the double-height space, their faceted shape referencing Diamond House’s gemstone past. The glass-covered east-west cross lane offers a finer-grained, tactile experience anchored by brickwork and bluestone.
“Melbourne Walk will bring people back into the city to experience flagship retail,” says Djakic. “Add the 900 people staying in the hotels and it will breathe new life into Bourke Street Mall.”
Buchan
Photography
Peter Bennets
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