Category:Chief Secretary’s Building, Sydney

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<nowiki>stavba glavnega sekretarja; Chief Secretary's Building; 布政司洋樓; Bangunan Ketua Setiausaha; Gebäude in Australien; Heritage-listed government building in Sydney, Australia</nowiki>
Chief Secretary's Building 
Heritage-listed government building in Sydney, Australia
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Instance of
LocationNew South Wales, AUS
Owned by
Heritage designation
  • Heritage Act — State Heritage Register (766)
Map33° 51′ 48.6″ S, 151° 12′ 43.2″ E
Authority file
Wikidata Q5096917
NSW Heritage database ID: 5045423
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English: Chief Secretary's building (originally the Colonial Secretary's building) is a heritage-listed state government administrative building of the Victorian Free Classical architectural style located at 121 Macquarie Street, 65 Bridge Street, and at 44-50 Phillip Street in the Sydney central business district of New South Wales, Australia. The ornate five-storey public building was designed by Colonial ArchitectJames Barnet and built in two stages, the first stages being levels one to four completed between 1873 and 1881, with Walter Liberty Vernon completing the second stage between 1894 and 1896 when the mansard at level five and the dome were added. The sandstone building was the seat of colonial administration, has been used continuously by the Government of New South Wales, and even today holds the office of the Governor of New South Wales. Its main occupant is the Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales; several of the larger rooms are now courtrooms.