- Government House, Hobart
Infobox Historic building
name=Government House
caption=Government House as viewed from the Derwent River.
map_type=
latitude=-42.867567
longitude=147.333415
location_town=Hobart,Tasmania
location_country=Australia
architect=William Pordon Kay
client=Governor of Tasmania
engineer=
construction_start_date=1855
date_demolished=
cost=
structural_system=
style=neo-gothic
size=73 rooms on 15 hectaresGovernment House, Hobart is the home and official residence of the
Governor of Tasmania ,Australia .The palacial house is located on Lower Domain Road in theQueens Domain , near theRoyal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens , and is the official residence of the governor ofTasmania . There have been three Government Houses, all inHobart .In 1805, after two years in a tent at
Sullivans Cove , Governor Collins moved into the first Government House - a new wooden hut in Barrack Square. As local bricks gradually became available the hut was extended, but it was a primitive three-room home that let in the wind and rain.The second Government House was built in
1817 at the junction of Macquarie Street and what is now Elizabeth Street. It had 14 rooms on two storeys and had servants' quarters, a coach house and stables, but it was badly built - of brick, wood and stucco, with later extension of sandstone - and was demolished in1858 .Work eventually started in
1855 on a design by the Director of Public Works, William Porden Kay, on a hill on the 37 acre grounds that overlooks the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens and the Derwent estuary.Sandstone was quarried on site (the holes were made into ornamental pools), cedar and teak were recycled from an old ship and slate for the roof was imported fromWales . Furniture was imported fromLondon .Construction was completed in
1857 and on the 2 January1858 Sir Henry Fox Young became the first Governor to take up residence, moving to the capital from Government Cottage,Port Arthur, Tasmania .The House consists of 73 rooms some of which are Elizabethan and Jacobean revivalist styles. The finest of which are the Main Hall, The Dining Room, The Ante-Drawing Room, The Drawing Room, The French Room, The Ballroom, and the Conservatory. Apart from the conservatory, which was rebuilt to original designs in 1991, Government House remains as it was when it was first occupied. The House also feature ornate gardens
Tasmania's Government House is today regarded as one of the best Vice Regal residences in the
Commonwealth . Designed by colonial architect William Porden Kay, it is a fine example of an early Victorian country house in neo-Gothic style and is one of the largest of its type inAustralia . The scale, detail and finish of the entrance hall, grand corridor and state rooms together with their furniture are unequalled in Australia. Much of the furniture ordered especially for the house and shipped out from England is still in daily use. Outstanding exterior features of the house include exceptional stonework, individually carved sandstone chimney pots and bas-relief sculptures.Apart from being the venue of a busy round of annual receptions, dinners and other events, Government House has since 1990 had an annual open day, an initiative of the then Governor, General Sir
Phillip Bennett .ee also
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Government Houses of Australia
* Government Houses in the Commonwealth
*Governors of Tasmania External links
* [http://www.dpac.tas.gov.au/governor/ Government House Homepage]
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