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Brisbane Skytower | |
---|---|
General information | |
Status | Completed |
Type | Residential |
Location | 222 Margaret Street, Brisbane, Australia |
Coordinates | 27°28′18.16″S 153°01′43″E / 27.4717111°S 153.02861°E |
Construction started | 2012 |
Completed | 2019 |
Height | |
Roof | 269.6 m (885 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 90 |
Grounds | 5,600 square metres (60,000 sq ft)[2] |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Noel Robinson Architects / Nettletontribe[1] |
Developer | Billbergia Group and AMP Capital |
Structural engineer | ADG Engineers & Bonnacci Group[1] |
Civil engineer | Inertia[1] |
Quantity surveyor | GRC Quantity Surveyors[1] |
Main contractor | Hutchinson Builders |
Website | |
brisbaneskytower |
Brisbane Skytower is a 269.6-metre (885 ft) skyscraper at 222 Margaret Street in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. The 90-storey residential tower is Brisbane's tallest building, and the sixth tallest building in Australia.[3] It is also the largest residential building in the southern hemisphere.[4]
Brisbane Skytower is one of two buildings in the 111+222 development; the other being a 42-storey, five-star Westin hotel at 111 Mary Street which was sold in September 2015 to the Felicity Hotel Group and now known as Mary Lane.[5]
The residential tower includes 1,138 one, two and three-bedroom apartments as well as sub-penthouse and penthouse apartments. A recreation deck, on the 90th floor, features Australia's highest infinity-edge swimming pool.[6] An eight-level basement car park is included in the project, containing a total of 980 spaces.[7]
The project was developed by Billbergia and AMP Capital with US funds giant Invesco providing debt funding.
Two skyscrapers proposed for the site by the Billbergia Group and AMP Capital with heights of 270 and 131 metres (886 and 430 ft), were approved by Brisbane City Council in October 2014.
Hutchinson Builders were appointed to construct the project in early 2016.[8][9]
In 2017, residents were permitted to begin moving in, before the rest of the building was completed.[1]
The building is located in the south of the central business district close to the City Botanic Gardens. The site was the location for the cancelled Vision Brisbane project.