Southern Cross Tower

161-metre (530 ft) skyscraper in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

37°48′46″S 144°58′13″E / 37.81278°S 144.97028°E / -37.81278; 144.97028Completed2004HeightRoof161 m (528 ft)Technical detailsFloor count39Design and constructionArchitect(s)Woods Bagot
North side of SX1

Southern Cross Tower, also known as 121 Exhibition Street, is a 161-metre (530 ft) skyscraper in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The tower was built in 2004 and comprises 39 levels of office accommodation. The complex is a twin tower. The SX1 (or East tower) delivers 76,700 square meters of space over 39 floors. The SX2 (or West Tower) provides 45,200 square metres and 22 levels. The tower was once the location of Melbourne's prestigious Southern Cross Hotel.[1]

History

Before development of Southern Cross, the Victorian Government was concerned because its key departments were scattered among more than 15 office buildings throughout the Melbourne central business district. It decided to consolidate financially and allow the bureaucracy closer access to Spring Street, giving it access to the Parliament and Treasury. A consortium of private bodies, including Multiplex and Babcock & Brown, suggested a skyscraper in the location of the old and derelict Southern Cross Hotel. A key condition of the Victorian government's involvement in the project was its demand that the building be a state-of-the-art, environmentally sustainable development.

Ownership

The building is 75 per cent owned by Multiplex Property Trust and 25 per cent owned by Multiplex Acumen Prime Property Fund. According to valuer Jones Lang Lasalle, the building's current market value is A$130 million and its major tenant is the Victorian State Government.[when?]

Tenants

SX1 (East Tower) is occupied by the Victorian Government's Department of Justice and Regulation (DJR), some branches of the Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions (DJPR)[2] and the State Revenue Office (SRO).[3]

SX2 (West Tower) is home to Australia Post[4] and the Energy and Water Ombudsman (Victoria) (EWOV).

Gallery

  • Southern Cross East Tower (SX1) from corner of Little Bourke Street and Exhibition Street
    Southern Cross East Tower (SX1) from corner of Little Bourke Street and Exhibition Street
  • Southern Cross West Tower (SX2)
    Southern Cross West Tower (SX2)

References

  1. ^ Driven by Steel: SX1 – SOUTHERN CROSS DEVELOPMENT
  2. ^ "Contact details". Department of Jobs Precincts and Regions. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Visit Our Customer Service Centre". State Revenue Office Victoria. Retrieved 6 September 2012.
  4. ^ "Australia Post HQ to change address in 2010". Australia Post. Archived from the original on 2 October 2009. Retrieved 6 September 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)

External links

  • Woods Bagot - Southern Cross, Melbourne
  • v
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Skyscrapers in Melbourne over 150 metres in height
Completed
Over 300 m
  • Australia 108 (316 m, 2020)
250–299 m
200–249 m
150–199 m
  • Empire Melbourne (198 m, 2017)
  • Collins House (190 m, 2018)
  • Abode318 (187 m, 2015)
  • 80 Collins South (187 m, 2019)
  • Sofitel Hotel (185 m, 1980)
  • ANZ Tower (185 m, 1978)
  • Nauru House (182 m, 1977)
  • LK Tower (178 m, 2019)
  • MY80 (173 m, 2014)
  • Melbourne Square Tower 2 (226 m, 2021)
  • Victoria Police Centre Tower 2 (171 m, 2020)
  • Upper West Side Tower 5 (170 m, 2016)
  • 385 Bourke Street (169 m, 1983)
  • Zen Apartments (168 m, 2012)
  • Platinum Tower One (167 m, 2016)
  • Avant (167 m, 2018)
  • Australian Stock Exchange Building (167 m, 1991)
  • Southbank Place (166 m, 2018)
  • Casselden Place (166 m, 1992)
  • 35 Spring Street (166 m, 2017)
  • The Fifth (166 m, 2017)
  • Ernst & Young Tower (165 m, 2005)
  • SX Stage 1 (163 m, 2005)
  • Royal Domain Tower (162 m, 2005)
  • ANZ World Headquarters (162 m, 1993)
  • National Bank House (161 m, 1978)
  • 2 Southbank Boulevard (161 m, 2005)
  • Verve 501 (159 m, 2006)
  • 477 Collins Street (158 m, 2019)
  • Upper West Side Tower 2 (156 m, 2014)
  • Shadow Play (153 m, 2018)
  • Southbank Central (153 m, 2017)
  • Optus Centre (153 m, 1975)
  • Crown Towers (152 m, 1997)
  • 140 William Street (152 m, 2005)
  • Urban Workshop Lonsdale (150 m, 2005)
Melbourne skyline in 2015
Under construction
200–249 m
Approved
Over 250 m
200–249 m
  • Queens Place South Tower (251 m, TBA)
  • Elysium (244 m, TBA)
150–199 m
Proposed
  • Buildings listed in order of height and with year of completion
  • Building data source: Skyscraper Center