
The Design Hub, viewed from Swanston Street. Courtesy: Sean Godsell Architects.
RMIT’s Design Hub is being developed to support and expand the University’s position as an internationally renowned leader in design education and research. Construction of the 12,000m2 facility will also strengthen Victoria’s global reputation as a centre of design excellence and carve out a distinctive niche for Australian design in the global economy.
The Design Hub will provide facilities, accommodation and a collegial research base for RMIT’s diverse range of design initiatives, design research groups and postgraduate programs. Its research and education programs will be enriched by and developed in consultation with industry members and will be characterised by a work-integrated and industry-embedded focus.
Multi-disciplinary student teams working with industry and researchers and students working through placements in industry will use the Design Hub as a home base.This will provide the environment for the cross-pollination of ideas and expertise among a range of disciplines including textile and fashion design, architecture, industrial design, landscape architecture, interior design, urban design, engineering, fine art and creative media.
In bringing together a range of stakeholders from industry, government, community and education sectors, the Design Hub will:
RMIT Design groups who will be major contributors to the Design Hub are:
The Design Research Institute was established in 2007 and is distinguished by its “art and science fusion” design initiatives. Initial research will be undertaken in the areas of Rapid Manufacture, Urban Liveability, Customising Space, Intervention through Art and Geoplaced Knowledge.
The Global Cities Research Institute engages in research programs with on-the-ground impact, emphasising questions of resilience, security, sustainability, and adaptation for cities in the face of globalisation and global climate change.
Collectively these groups will provide the impetus and drive, along with the design related academic schools, for the formation of design research teams who will occupy the bulk of the Design Hub’s floor space.
The Design Hub will be located at the strategic north west corner of Victoria and Swanston Streets on the former Carlton United Brewery (CUB) site. The rest of the CUB site is to be developed by Grocon and will be transformed into a ‘mixed-use village’.
RMIT’s future epicentre of design will add further vibrancy to this part of Melbourne and architecturally, will be an engaging and innovative contrast to the classical, historic Shrine of Remembrance on St Kilda Road, which marks the other end of Melbourne’s civic axis. The Design Hub will have a highly visible presence from Swanston Street north of La Trobe Street.
The Design Hub will feature leading-edge facilities for design education, research and engagement with industry.
The building will also be distinguished by environmentally sustainable design features.
Features include:
Construction began in 2009 and a new Project Manager, Philip Flynn, was appointed to project manage the construction of the Design Hub and the Swanston Academic Building.
Much work has been undertaken on the excavation of earth in preparation for the construction of the two basement levels of the Design Hub.
RMIT University has appointed Watpac as the main contractor for the Design Hub. Construction work is set to begin in August, 2009.
February 2009
Tender documents were issued for the main contractor on the 26th February 2009.
The Design Hub has been granted planning approval. At a media conference on the future Design Hub site on the morning of Monday, 2 February, the Victorian Planning Minister, Justin Madden, announced that the planning permit has been approved. Read more.
The RMIT Design Hub project has been awarded $28.6 million in funding from the Federal Government’s Higher Education Endowment Fund (HEEF).
This 2009 funding round focuses on capital expenditure and strengthening research facilities in Australian universities.
The Design Hub is one of 11 approved projects, the funding of which is a part of a $4.7 billion nation-building infrastructure package.
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Tender for main contractor goes out |
Late February 2009 |
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Construction starts |
July 2009 |
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Scheduled for completion |
May 2011 |
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Architects |
Sean Godsell and Peddle Thorp Architects in association |
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RMIT Project Manager | |
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Manager, Client Relations | |
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External project manager | |
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Services consultant | |
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Structural engineer | |
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Building surveyor | |
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Quantity surveyor | |
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Main contractor |
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Watpac secures $62 million project
Brisbane-based construction company Watpac has been contracted to build a $62 million University Design Hub at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT). |
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RMIT names Design Hub contractor RMIT News, 6 July, 2009 RMIT University has appointed Watpc Construction (Vic) as the contractor for its innovative Design Hub, set to become one of Melbourne’s iconic buildings. |
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A technological university’s new-age marvel: Melbourne’s RMIT University’s new addition to the CBD Melbourne Living magazine, March 2009 RMIT University is renowned for being one of Australia’s top research institutions. Now, the technology-based university hopes to create a new landmark for Melbourne with its $56 million Design Hub development. |
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Design Hub wins planning approval RMIT News, Wednesday, 4 February, 2009 RMIT University’s $59 million Design Hub has been granted planning approval, with construction set to begin by May. |
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RMIT building to follow the sun (PDF, 2.47MB) MX, Tuesday, 3 February, 2009 The former Carlton United Brewery site in Swanston Street is set to be transformed into an environmentally sustainable Design Hub for RMIT University. |
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State gets a $1.9 bn kick-along The Age, Sunday, 13 December, 2008 Victoria has secured $1.9 billion for nine major road and rail projects, and three new facilities at Melbourne's universities, under a stimulus package designed to kick-start growth |
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$580 million fast-tracked into Australian universities The Minister for Education, Julia Gillard, and Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research, Senator Kim Carr today announced $580 million would be fast-tracked into universities through the Education Investment Fund. Web Newswire, New Delhi, India, Friday, 12 December, 2008 |
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Millions view innovation, RMIT-style RMIT Openline, Wednesday, 10 September, 2008 More than 210 million TV viewers across China and south-east Asia have watched a news segment on RMIT University’s innovative Design Hub. |
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RMIT's eco-friendly campus unveiled The Australian, 2 July RMIT's new $56 million Design Hub building in Melbourne will incorporate evironmentally responsible design with an outer skin of 16,000 sand blasted glass cells, some of which will be photovoltaic solar power collectors to help shade and power the building. |
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Landmark building to house design excellence Openline, Wednesday, 2 July RMIT University today unveiled plans for its innovative Design Hub, set to become a major landmark in the Melbourne CBD. |
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Design school promises to shine light on city The Age, Wednesday, 2 July Just as our skin reacts with the environment around us communicating moods, regulating heat and storing energy - a building planned for RMIT University will use a shimmering jacket of glass cells to join the elements with insensate bricks and mortar. |
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The Age, Wednesday, 23 April 2008 A visitor to Melbourne craving a speedy education on the city’s architectural history could probably not do better than a walking tour of RMIT University’s vast property portfolio, which dominates the central business district along Swanston Street. |
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Architects appointed for landmark project Openline, Tuesday, 13 March 2007 RMIT University has appointed Sean Godsell Architects in association with PeddleThorp Architects to design and construct the landmark Design Hub building on the former CUB site. |
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RMIT Design Hub to be city, industry landmark Openline, Friday, 10 November 2006 RMIT University will deepen its engagement with industry with the construction of a landmark building to house a new Design Hub. |