The Custom House Hotel is a two storeyed brick building on the corner of Wharf and Richmond Streets, Maryborough. A two-storeyed residential wing extends from the rear of the hotel. The building has a rectangular plan, extending further along the Wharf Street elevation, where a sympathetic later extension is found. The corner of the building is truncated and this is expressed on the
hipped corrugated iron roof. Two-storeyed
verandahs line the two principal
facades of the building, though the corner of the first floor has been infilled. The verandahs, which are supported on square timber posts, feature a cast iron balustrade and
frieze, though this has been replaced with different cast iron panels in some parts. Horizontal timber louvre blades to the second floor verandah survive on the Richmond Street elevation. The public bar is entered via a door in the truncated corner of the building. This rendered concrete section has been infilled under the verandah, and has a cantilevered
awning, and a series of nine hopper windows on each facade. The original wall of the building is evident within the public bar, though large holes have been cut away from it. Access to the dining and accommodation rooms is through a double panel door flanked by a tripartite window arrangement surrounded by particularly fine joinery and
sidelights. Over the door and windows are large glazed panels with signage, "CUSTOM HOUSE HOTEL" written. The entrance and windows are separated by moulded
pilasters. Further along Wharf Street are many window openings of two generations, those closest to the corner of the Richmond Street have replacement
arctic glass hoppers, whilst the remaining are multipane vertical
sashes with deep
reveals. The entrance hall, through the opening in Wharf Street, features a
pressed metal ceiling and
cornice, and remnants of an early wall paper strip above the
dado rail. The unpainted timber stair has an open welled three-quarter turn stairway, with turned
balusters and square
newels surmounted by
acorn finials. From the entrance hall is access to the former dining and billiard rooms which have been substantially altered with a
suspended ceiling and recent brick archways, though a
chimney piece survives. The first floor remains substantially intact, with a central plaster walled corridor featuring timber and plaster archways, timber
skirtings and a beaded board ceiling. The accommodation rooms, accessed from the corridor, remain substantially intact with early furniture and fittings, including corner sinks fitted into small timber boarded cabinets. Entrance to the front verandah from the rooms facing the front is via
french doors featuring fine margin paned glazing. A wide rear verandah ensures that all rooms have access to external space. == Heritage listing ==