- The Myer Centre, Brisbane
-
The Myer Centre is located between the Queen Street Mall and Elizabeth Street in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It is an nine-floor shopping complex which includes Queensland's largest Myer department store, and is open to the public seven days a week. The Myer Centre has the added benefit of being the hub for the Brisbane CBD. Most buses originate and end near or under the Myer Centre. The Myer Centre Car Park is also one of the largest car parks in the heart of the city with easy access to everything in the city.
Contents
Stores
The Myer Centre is home to approximately 170 stores[1] including:
- 4 Level Myer department store
- Coles Supermarket
- 2 Level Target
- ABC Shop
- Mind Games (a chess, board game, jigsaw and puzzle store)
- Australian Geographic shop
- Lowes Menswear
- Best and Less
- Newsagencies
- Pharmacies
- Food court (including Starbucks)
- Shanghai Noodle House
- Book shops, computer shops
- Electrical goods stores
- Razor shop
- Souvenir shops
- Birch Carroll & Coyle cinema complex
- Oxfam Shop
Layout
Due to the hilly landscape of the Brisbane CBD, The Myer Centre's floors are labelled differently to most shopping centres. Whereas many shopping centres label their floors purely by number (level 1, level 2, etc.) or it's vertical position (lower level, upper level, etc.), The Myer Centre is laid out in the following fashion (lowest level to highest):
- Level S (named after the former Sizzler restaurant): no longer open to the general public
- Level T (Lower Target level): Target
- Level A (Albert Street entrance): Queen Street bus station, Target, food court
- Level E (Elizabeth Street entrance): Coles Central, food court, specialty stores
- Level Q (Queen Street entrance): Myer, specialty stores
- Level 1 (first floor above any street level): Myer, Lincraft, specialty stores
- Level 2 (second floor above street levels): Myer, Lincraft, Best and Less, Medicare, Oxfam Shop
- Level 3 (third floor above street levels): Myer (accessed from within store only), Birch Carroll & Coyle cinemas
- Level 4 (fourth floor above street levels): Myer (accessed from within store only)
- Roof: Centre Management
History
A Myer store originally extended from Queen Street to Adelaide Street, from the early 1900s, before The Myer Centre shopping complex opened in April 1988 (just in time for Brisbane's World Expo '88). In November 1998 it was purchased by Gandel Retail Trust for $371 million, making it the second largest property transaction in Australia's history at that time.[2]
The construction project by the Remm Group Pty Ltd went for 18 months, and required excavation of 375,000 cubic metres of earth, to a depth of 22 metres (eight metres below the Brisbane River level), which was the largest urban excavation in Australia at that time.[2]
Previously located on the site was four historic buildings of the Hotel Carlton (1885), New York Hotel (1860), Newspaper House, from which the Brisbane Telegraph was first published, and the Barry and Roberts department store. Using facadism, the facades of those buildings have been retained and restored.[2]
The area where the cinemas now are was originally used as a fun park called 'Tops'. It was closed down and demolished in 2000, with the fun park parts sold off. The fun park comprised various small shops, an amusement centre, a 'swing ship', a 'dragon train' and a 'ferris wheel'. When the theme park was operating, screams of excitement and terror could be heard from the patrons of both the swing ship and the dragon train.
In the past, the centre's tenants included fairly substantial nightclubs. In the early 1990s, the basement area (subsequently occupied by Sizzler) hosted "The Funkyard", a nightspot with an emphasis on the "alternative" guitar rock of the era. The Funkyard hosted live gigs; for example, the U.S. band Destroy All Monsters played there, with Ron Asheton of the Stooges on guitar. Another former tenant of the centre which played host to live music was the "Metropolis" nightclub, adjacent to the bus tunnel on Level "A", near the place now occupied by glamour photography shop "Starshots". Irish "shoegaze" band My Bloody Valentine played at Metropolis in 1991, supported by Straitjacket Fits (from New Zealand) and the Underground Lovers.
Transport
Car
There are four levels of paid car parking available in the basement of the complex.
Bus
Queen Street Bus Station on the Albert Street level of the complex.
Train
The Myer Centre is also within easy walking distance of three train stations:
References
Coordinates: 27°28′12″S 153°01′30.75″E / 27.47°S 153.0252083°E
Categories:- Buildings and structures in Brisbane
- Shopping centres in Queensland
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