Francis - Jones Morehen Thorp Pty Ltd

The Mint

The Mint
© John Gollings

THE MINT

FJMT

ARCHITECTS
FJMT: Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp, Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp

LOCATION
Sydney, Australia

ELECTRICAL / COMMUNICATIONS CONSULTANT
Steensen Varming

MECHANICAL / ENVIRONMENTAL CONSULTANT
Steensen Varming

HERITAGE ARCHITECTS
Clive Lucas, Stapleton & Partners Pty Ltd

QUANTITY SURVEYOR
Page Kirkland Partnership Pty Ltd

AREA
3381.0 m2

STRUCTURAL CONSULTANT
Taylor Thomson Whitting

ARCHAEOLOGY
Godden Mackay Logan

CONTRACTOR
St Hilliers

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp

HYDRAULIC CONSULTANT
Warren Smith & Partners

PROJECT YEAR
2009

PHOTOGRAPHS
John Gollings

ACOUSTIC CONSULTANT
Arup Acoustics

Text description provided by architect.

The Mint Project is the transformation of one of Sydney’s oldest and most precious historical sites on Macquarie Street into a new meaningful public place formed and characterised as much by the carefully inserted contemporary buildings as the conserved and adapted heritage structures.

The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings

IT IS A PROJECT THAT SEEKS TO SET A NEW AND IMPORTANT BENCHMARK FOR:

- Contemporary architectural design - Conservation and adaptive reuse of heritage buildings.- The integration of authentic contemporary architecture within sensitive heritage sites.- The creation of meaningful public open space and public places within heritage environments. - The integration of sustainable environmental design into sensitive heritage sites. - The integration and interpretation of archaeological remains

The vacant and almost ruinous Mint Coining Factory and associated buildings has been transformed into the campus-like headquarters of the Historic Houses Trust.

The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings

Contemporary architectural forms have been carefully inserted to accommodate a major public auditorium, exhibition areas, foyer and bar, while existing buildings have been adaptively reused to create a significant new resource centre for the public and new work environments for the staff.

These clearly defined public rooms and facilities are gathered around a central courtyard that is given new life and form as a significant public space of the city.

The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings

While the contemporary architectural forms have been carefully designed to form direct and clear relations with the existing buildings in terms of scale and proportion, they are uncompromisingly new.

They have sought to create a new architectural layer on the site designed in the innovative and ‘forward looking’ spirit that underpinned the original 1850’s constructions.

This ‘layered’ approach of placing new and old in a bold transforming relationship is apparent in the general organisation of the project and in design of the new courtyard.

The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings

The strict symmetry of Trickett’s original plan with central pavilion and identical wings has been transformed into an asymmetrical axis about a pair of related, pavilions of ‘opposite/dialectical’ character, new and old, light and heavy, stone and glass.

The outcome is a rich and complex assembly of form and spaces through which the layers and events of the site can be read and interpreted.

The Mint
© John Gollings


The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings
The Mint
© John Gollings


The Mint
Ground Floor Plan
The Mint
First Floor Plan
The Mint
Second Floor Plan
The Mint
Section


The Mint
Exploded Axo
The Mint
Sketch

Francis - Jones Morehen Thorp Pty Ltd
T +44 1865 520420
Francis - Jones Morehen Thorp Pty Ltd
Level 1, 8 St Aldate's, Oxford OX1 1BS, United Kingdom