The AMP Square comprises two buildings and a plaza between, the AMP Tower, the L-shaped St James Building wrapping around two sides and defining the St James Plaza between. It was regarded as a "significant Melbourne island site... [known] to be the red, pre-cast
brutalist building" by Andrew Norbury, of architecture firm Metier3,
The Tower The AMP Tower is located on the North-Eastern corner of the AMP Square site sitting on the William Street-Bourke Street intersection. This location places it in a precinct of significant post-war commercial office skyscrapers from the same era which includes
140 William Street opposite and the adjoining Estates House at 114-128 William Street, both by
Yuncken Freeman. This collection has been described as a heritage precinct at the end of Bourke Street: though it does not have an office designation as such., all three are now heritage listed. The collection of Modernist towers was once even larger, with the 1958 Shell Corner, also by SOM, once occupying the north west corner of the intersection (dem 1990). The AMP Tower is clearly inspired by the New York
CBS Building completed in 1965 and designed by
Eero Saarinen, a Finnish-American architect and industrial designer, for whom Edward Bassett had previously worked. The AMP Tower also has similarities in expression with the Bank of America (now
555 California Street) in San Francisco, designed by the local office of SOM. Taking the minimalist sculptural approach to the early modernist design of large scale commercial projects, the twenty six-storey AMP Tower is constructed of a concrete encased structure of steel-framework. The tower features chamfered vertical ribs of pre-cast panels of reconstructed polished brown granite, also used for the spandrel panels between the brown tinted glass windows.
St James Building and Plaza The six storey, low-rise L-shaped St James Building frames the plaza on the southern and western edges. The public plaza is an expression of the plot ratio system, with open space provided in return for greater height. The St James Building façades area also defined by ribs, clad in the same polished re-constructed brown granite as the AMP Tower, but which angle both out and to one side at 45 degrees, ending as the supports for with arcades surrounding the plaza. Much of this sculptural quality was lost in the 2013 redevelopment, with the infilling of the arcade to create larger retail spaces, and moving the windows between the ribs of the St James Building forward.
The Sculpture The “russet tones and muscular masonry forms” Meadmore, who had begun his career in Melbourne and relocated to New York in 1963, was commissioned in 1968 by the
Australian Mutual Provident Society for the St James Plaza as a foil to the angular lines of the architecture. The original Plaza was kept almost bare in a deliberate attempt to maintain the minimalist styling, with the arcades hidden from sight by the deep recess of the protruding, angled colonnades of the St James Building. The plaza redevelopment of 2013 saw the sculpture removed, and relocated to the
TarraWarra Museum of Art in
Healesville. ==Legacy==