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AMP Square

Architecture of MelbourneOffice buildings completed in 1969Office buildings in MelbourneSkidmore, Owings & Merrill buildings
AMP Tower 2015
AMP Tower 2015

AMP Square (527–535 Bourke Street) is a skyscraper situated in Melbourne, Australia, located on the corner of Bourke and Williams Streets in the Melbourne CBD. Designed by US firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill with local firm Bates Smart McCutcheon, and completed in 1969, it was briefly the tallest in the city, and is noted for its use of solid sculpted forms bringing a sense of monumentality to tall buildings.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article AMP Square (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

AMP Square
Bourke Street, Melbourne Melbourne

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Wikipedia: AMP SquareContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -37.816055555556 ° E 144.95775 °
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Address

AMP Tower

Bourke Street 535
3000 Melbourne, Melbourne
Victoria, Australia
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AMP Tower 2015
AMP Tower 2015
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Nearby Places

140 William Street
140 William Street

140 William Street (formerly BHP House) is a 41-storey steel, concrete and glass building located in the eastern side of the central business district of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Constructed between 1969 and 1972, BHP House was designed by the architectural practice Yuncken Freeman alongside engineers Irwinconsult, with heavy influence of contemporary skyscrapers in Chicago, Illinois. The local architects sought technical advice from Bangladeshi-American structural engineer Fazlur Rahman Khan, of renowned American architectural firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, spending ten weeks at its Chicago office in 1968. At the time, BHP House was known to be the tallest steel-framed building and the first office building in Australia to use a “total energy concept” – the generation of its own electricity using BHP natural gas. The name BHP House came from the building being the national headquarters of BHP. BHP House has been included in the Victorian Heritage Register (Number H1699) for significance to the State of Victoria for following three reasons: Architectural – 140 William Street is one of the most noteworthy building designs by the Melbourne firm Yuncken Freeman. Technological – Its innovative structural application of steel and concrete, leading to open floor plates that are now a standard feature of high rise office buildings. Historical – The building signifies changes in Melbourne's CBD as it transformed into a major corporate centre.