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William Pitt (architect)




Winfield Building make up Melbourne's, and one of the world's, finest intact Victorian streetscapes. Also in this style are the Old Stock Exchange ( 1888 ) and Old Safe Deposit Building ( 1890 ).

Few of Pitt's theatres remain. His greatest, the Princess ( 1886 ) in the Second Empire style, in Spring Street has survived. Unique in its time in having a sliding roof it fell into disrepair and was nearly demolished. The theatre received a lavish renovation in the early 1990s .

The pinnacle of Pitt's career was the Federal Coffee Palace constructed on the south-west corner of King and Collins Streets in 1888 . This extraordinary building more than any other epitomised the speculative land boom which was 'Marvellous Melbourne' of the 1880s . A massive and outlandish building with references to numerous architectural styles it grew from the Temperance Movement of the day which also produced the equally large but somewhat more restrained Grand Hotel, now the Windsor Hotel , in Spring Street . The temperence movement fell out of favour in the 1890s and the Federal Coffee Palace became the Federal Hotel. The hotel was ultimately demolished in 1973 in an era when many Victorian buildings were lost in a wave of 'modernisation'.

Pitt continued to work into the twentieth century while also pursuing a political career. He was mayor of the City of Collingwood and also a member of the Victorian legislative council. Most notable of his later work was the Empire Works ( 1909 ) in inner suburban Richmond . This was later bought and expanded by Bryant and May to become the home of the iconic Redheads match.