Stanhill Apartments 34 Queens Road, South Melbourne, Victoria; designed in 1943, built 1947-1950 The name Stanhill was first coined by Romberg as a combination of the names of the two brothers Stanley and Hilel Korman. It is a strong building with a powerful
silhouette that responds positively to its urban context — multi-storied urban housing which is both eligible as dwelling and as modernist monument. The idea of a penthouse on the roof of the tall building was put forward at this time. The building was initially arranged in four vertical stacks containing 4, 5, 6 and 8 flats; the genesis of the present building. However, the scheme of the building has been changed three times due to the changes of local building regulations. The building was awarded the 2025
Maggie Edmond Enduring Architecture Award by the Victorian Chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects, 75 years after construction.
Newburn Flats 30 Queens Road, South Melbourne, 1939-41 The 26-year-old Romberg had been in
Melbourne for little more than a year when he embarked on Newburn project. It was his first reinforced concrete multi—storey residential building. There are four storeys of twenty-four flats, with the living spaces on the sunny north side, each with an angled window bay and balcony so as to obtain a view towards Queens Road and park beyond. Stair towers at each end connect with access balconies on the south side. Romberg used the technology he was familiar with from his time in Salvisberg's office,
reinforced concrete.
Picken Court, Ormond College College Crescent, Parkville, 1959 Picken Court is designed to be a student and staff facility comprising three
octagonal building linked together at each of their three storeys by semi-enclosed bridges. Each had a radial plan with a light and
ventilation shaft at its centre, a ring of toilets, laundries and other utilities, a passageway and students’ rooms, and common study areas around the perimeter. Picken Court was a rare fusion of a 19th-century form and contemporary ideas that elucidated the common theoretical bonds between the two.
ETA Foods Factory 254 Ballarat Road, Braybrook, 1957
ETA factory was designed for a client, Nut Foods, for the iricution if their ETA brand margarine. With its elegant, extremely long curtain wall presenting as the public façade, it was one of the most distinguished industrial buildings of the post-war period. At ETA, of interest is the handling of the curtain wall fronting Ballarat Road with its alternating bands of clear and black glass, tubular steel diagonal members (originally picked out in gold matte paint) and classical
colonnade implied in the regular rhythm of expressed
structural steel
columns. Abandoned for many years, only part of the curtain wall facade and the entry courtyard area was retained when the majority of the factory space was replaced by a ‘big box’ retail building and carpark. Despite these changes, it is still considered one of the best post-war factories built in Victoria.
List of works •
Newburn Flats, 30 Queens Road, South Melbourne, 1939 •
Yarrabee Flats, South Yarra, Victoria, 1940 • Glenunga Flats, Armadale, Victoria, 1940 • Romberg House, Eaglemont, Victoria, 1941 • St Quentin, Ellery House, Upwey, Victoria, 1941 • Miller-Short House, Upper Mast Road, Upwey, 1947 • Hilstan Flats, corner Nepean Highway and Marriage Road, Brighton, Victoria, 1947 (demolished) • Stanhill Apartments, 34 Queens Road, South Melbourne, designed 1943, built 1947—1950 • Yarralands Flats, Hawthorn, Victoria, 1951 • Lutheran Church Hall, South Melbourne, Victoria, 1953 (demolished) •
Sacred Heart Girls' College building, Oakleigh, Victoria, 1954 • Harris Flats, Barkers Road, Hawthorn, 1955 • Bruck House, Bruck Mills, Wangaratta, Victoria, 1955 • ICI Staff Recreation Centre, Deer Park, Victoria, 1955 (demolished) • ETA Foods Factory, 254 Ballarat Road, Braybrook, 1957 • CSIRO: Division of Protein Chemistry, Parkville, Victoria, 1958 • Picken Court, Ormond College, Parkville, 1959 • Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, Canberra, 1960 • St George's Anglican, East Ivanhoe, 1962 •
MacFarland Library, and School of Microbiology of
University of Melbourne, 1962 •
Luther College, Croydon, 1963 • School of Architecture,
University of Newcastle, New South Wales, 1968 • Newcastle City Council Offices, King Street,
Newcastle, New South Wales, designed 1970, built 1972—1977 (with Wilson and Suters) • Aboriginal Keeping Place, (now the Bangerang Cultural Centre), Shepparton, 1982 ==Awards and recognition==