The Mark (Sydney)

For other buildings of the same name, see The Mark.
Kent Road facade

The Mark is one of the three complexes of Central Park Development near Sydney Central Business District, which comprises residential, retail and commercial. The developer for the development is joint-venture of Frasers Property and Sekisu House Australia and was designed by Johnson Pilton Walker. The development was contracted to Watpac.[1] The entire Central Park project site covered 15 hectares on Broadway, Sydney. It is a redeveloped industrial site, with boundaries at O'Connor Street, Carlton Street, Broadway and Chippendale Way.The Central Park redevelopment delivered 1,426 apartments and total Gross Floor Area (GFA) of over 150,000 square metres, which GFA for the Mark is 24,000 square metres. The building was one of the stage two development of Central Park, which was started in September 2011 and was completed in August 2014. The building comprises two building groups: Mark One and Mark Two. Mark One is level 1-19, which primarily one and two bedroom floor plans. Mark Two is level 20-27, with two and three bedroom apartment units.

Heritage

Main entrance

The site formally was Carlton and United Breweries site in Chippendale. Heritage consultants Godden Mackay Logan was engaged to undertake the comprehensive site survey, analysis, archaeological investigation and documentation. Urbis, who is heritage architect was engaged to adaptively reuse of heritage structures in collaboration with the project architects. In the end, there are 33 items were identified as heritage items and have been retained. The heritage items. including the tiled arch at Kent Road, terraces and warehouses along Kensington Street, three hotels, the brewery yard buildings and brick stack and the administration building will be restored or adaptively reused.

Features

Sustainability Features

O'Connor Street facade

Awards

See also

References

  1. "One Central Park, and Park Lane and The Mark - Watpac Limited". www.watpac.com.au. Retrieved 2015-09-18.
  2. "Central Park, Technical paper" (PDF). ACAA. Retrieved September 25, 2015.

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.