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Height (m) Floors Year Purpose Address Notes 1 Wrest Point Casino hotel tower 73 m (240 ft) 19 1973 Hotel 410 Sandy Bay Road Designed by Sir Roy Burman Grounds and the tallest building in the state of Tasmania. 2 Royal Hobart Hospital K Block 68.5 m (225 ft) 10 2020 Hospital Campbell Street The tallest building within the Hobart CBD. 3 NAB House
The AMP Building, which the new tower was named, became Hobart's tallest building in 1968 until the construction of the Wrest Point Hotel Casino in 1973. In 2011, the primary tenant of the building changed to the National Australia Bank (NAB), and subsequently the building was renamed NAB House. Signage was also added, with the removal of the ...
With the exception of Wrest Point Casino in Sandy Bay, the Hobart CBD contains all of Tasmania’s tallest buildings, including 39 Murray Street, 188 Collins Street and the Trafalgar Building. The tallest building in the city centre is NAB House at 58 m (190 ft), however planning restrictions limit future developments to a height of 42 m (138 ft).
Historically, Dunkley's Point was a camping ground held by the semi-nomadic Mouheneener people, who held a permanent settlement at nearby Long Beach called kreewer. [2] [3] Norfolk Islander Thomas Chaffey constructed his residence on the point between 1808 and 1813, during the British colonisation of Tasmania, which became known as Chaffey's Point by the end of his life.
This page was last edited on 2 November 2019, at 16:16 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
A2 (Hobart GPO) X21 Brighton: Elizabeth St A3 X22, X23 New Norfolk Elizabeth St A3 (NAB House) 601 Shoreline Shopping Centre Elizabeth St A3 (NAB House) 615, X15, 616, X16 Tranmere: Elizabeth St A3 (NAB House) 624, 625 Clarendon Vale: Elizabeth St A3 (NAB House) 634, X34 Roches Beach: Elizabeth St A3 (NAB House) 635 Seven Mile Beach: Elizabeth St
National Bank House reaches 161 metres in height, and comprises 40 storeys of offices. At the time of its completion in 1978, it was the third-tallest building in Melbourne; the commercial building is as of 2024, the 62nd tallest in the city. [1]
This page was last edited on 2 November 2019, at 16:23 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.