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Murray Street, Perth

Coordinates: 31°57′08″S 115°51′28″E / 31.952326°S 115.857847°E / -31.952326; 115.857847
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Murray Street

People in a pedestrian mall between buildings
View along the pedestrian mall in the direction of Carillon City and Barrack Street
Map
General information
TypeRoad
Length2.8 km (1.7 mi)[1]
Major junctions
West end Thomas Street (State Routes 61 and 65)
 
East endVictoria Square
Location(s)
Major suburbsWest Perth, Perth
The Commonwealth Bank building (right) stands on the corner of Murray Street and Forrest Place

Murray Street is one of four main east-west roads within the Perth central business district (CBD).

History

The street, the central portion of which has become a pedestrian mall, was named after Sir George Murray, Secretary of State for War and the Colonies from 1828 to 1830.

It is the one main road in Perth that has an eastern ending at a church – the Roman Catholic St Mary's Cathedral; the other major churches in the CBD are on the sides of the city streets. The western end of Murray Street also once had a church with St Patrick's Roman Catholic Church sitting on Havelock Street opposite the end of Murray Street. Murray Street was extended to Outram Street in 1937 and St Patrick's was demolished. Murray Street was later extended further west to Thomas Street.

The intersections with the north-south running streets include Murray Street, where the Wentworth Hotel has been on the corner for over 100 years, though the earlier hotel at the location had a different name.

The mall was created later than the Hay Street mall[2] and its central section had no hotels whereas Wellington, Hay and St Georges Terrace have.

The number of historic arcades linking with the Hay Street mall is significant compared to other parts of the CBD.

The western and eastern ends of the street have had significant changes in land use compared to the central section.

Shops and malls

Corner of Murray and Elder Streets, Perth

The strip has many popular shops lining the street including flagship outlets for department stores such as Myer, David Jones, Woolworths and Target. Recent development along Murray Street has seen the addition of a number of both national and international retailers including – Nespresso, Swarovski, G-Star Raw, Quiksilver, General Pants Co., Aquilla, Industrie, Hurley, Pandora, Zara and many more.

East Precinct

The Murray Street East Precinct includes the heritage listed area between Pier Street and Victoria Square. Notable buildings/features within the heritage precinct include;

  • Young Australia League Building and House, a three storey rendered masonry and concrete building in the Inter-War Free Classical style (45 Murray Street) and adjacent two storey rendered and painted brick and iron roof house in the Federation Queen Anne style (55 Murray Street), has cultural heritage significance for the following reasons: the place has been associated with the activities of the Young Australia League from the time of purchase by the League in 1920/1921 and is associated with the founder of the Young Australia League, J.J. Simons, and with other prominent West Australians who were members of the organisation including State Premier Sir Walter James and prominent architect Lionel Boas whose architectural firm Oldham Boas was responsible for the design of the Young Australia League Building. It is also associated with the thousands of young people who took part in the programmes of the League; the Young Australia League Building is representative of the Young Australia League philosophy and a way of life based on the expression of Australian nationalism and has been associated with the development of youth organisations in Australia and overseas; the Young Australia League building is a rare example of the Inter-War Free Classical style enhanced by an unusual facade with a two-storey colonnade, semi-enclosed court and strong vertical detailing; the house, currently home to PHC Projects Management Consultants,[3] is a simple example of a two storey late nineteenth century residential building, is the only residential style building in the Murray Street East Precinct and a rare example of a substantial late nineteenth century house in central Perth; the house was the home of a prominent member of the Roman Catholic community, philanthropist, property investor and politician Timothy Quinlan who, together with his father-in-law, Daniel Connor, invested in significant land holdings in central Perth which became known as the Connor-Quinlan Estate; the place forms an important component of the Murray Street East Precinct, which extends from Pier Street to Victoria Square, and the Young Australia League Building defines the corner of Murray Street and Irwin Street.
  • Former Government Printing Office Building (78 Murray Street), now the Curtin Graduate School of Business.

Access

The Murray Street mall is directly connected to Perth railway station by an entry at the west end of the mall, and via Forrest Place to the original Perth railway station and the Museum of Western Australia. Parking garages are also located nearby.

Major intersections

LGALocation[1]kmmiDestinationsNotes
PerthSubiaco boundaryWest PerthSubiaco boundary00.0 Thomas Street (State Routes 61 and 65)Murray Street is one-way eastbound
PerthWest Perth0.210.13Outram StreetTraffic light controlled
0.450.28Colin StreetTraffic light controlled
0.650.40Havelock StreetTraffic light controlled
1.10.68George StreetTraffic light controlled; George Street is one-way northbound and has slip road to freeway ramp
PerthWest Perth boundary1.10.68 Mitchell Freeway (State Route 2)Freeway southbound entry ramp only; ramp also contains slip roads from George Street and Elder Street
Perth1.20.75Elder StreetTraffic light controlled; Elder Street is one-way southbound and has slip road to freeway ramp; Murray Street is two-way east of intersection
1.40.87Milligan StreetTraffic light controlled
1.91.2 William Street (State Route 53)Traffic light controlled
Murray Street Mall
PerthPerth2.31.4 Barrack Street (State Route 53)Traffic light controlled; Murray Street is two-way east of intersection
2.51.6Pier StreetTraffic light controlled; Pier Street south of intersection is one-way southbound
2.61.6Irwin StreetIrwin Street is one-way northbound; Murray Street becomes one-way east of intersection
2.81.7Victoria SquareTraffic circle: anticlockwise flow, circulating traffic gives way to entering traffic
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Murray Street". Google Maps. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  2. ^ Central Murray Street upgrading (1988) prepared by Central Murray Street Upgrading Study Group ; produced by Planning Department, City of Perth
  3. ^ "PHC Projects | Project Management Consultants". Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2013.

31°57′08″S 115°51′28″E / 31.952326°S 115.857847°E / -31.952326; 115.857847