The
Sisters of Charity were the first Order of Nuns to be established in Australia with their convent being founded at
Parramatta in 1838. In the late 1890s the Sisters of Charity were seeking to found an order in the
Blue Mountains to provide a place of respite for exhausted nuns "where they might find fresh vigour for God's work". It was also noted that there was no Catholic school in or near Katoomba, hence there was an opportunity for the nuns to regain their health and energy while conducting their appointed work. The Sisters rented a small cottage close to the Catholic Church and Presbytery in Katoomba and moved in in 1900. A new college called Mount St Mary's opened on the main Street of Katoomba in 1901, and in 1903 Mother Mary Eulalia was appointed Rectress of the college. The Mount St Mary's premises in town eventually proved inadequate for the rapidly increasing student base, so, in 1907, it was decided to purchase substantial acreage to the north of the railway station on which to build a brand new boarding house for girls and convent accommodation for the Sisters. Bridget McGuigan, Julia O'Connor and Helena Bourke of the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity (but denominated on the title deeds as spinsters) purchased the subject site (Lots 26–35) from Frank Grimley (The Grimley Subdivision) on 10 June 1907. The site included the cottage known as "
The Rocks" (designed by
Varney Parkes for John Fletcher M.A.) which was located in the south west corner of the site. The cottage and the lands the Sisters were to purchase are associated with Fletcher who had established a boarding college for boys in the mid 1880s called Katoomba College (later known as the Priory and then The Royal Palace) which was located on the opposite side of the road to where St Mary's now stands. Fletcher had purchased additional lands (future St Mary's lands) presumably to provide land for sporting activities, however, the depression of the 1890s led to the closure of his college and the sale of Lots 26–35 to Frank Grimley. When the Sisters made their purchase the land had largely been cleared and was characterised by open paddock with the exception of a number of mature eucalypts and "The Rocks". The following year on 24 June 1908, an additional were purchased from Frank Grimley adding orchards and vegetable gardens to an already spacious landscape. The land on which St Mary's College and Convent were to stand was first described in 1814 by George William Evans, Surveyor. The land purchased by the Sisters is associated with John Fletcher M.A. The foundation stone for the college and convent was laid by Cardinal Moran on 12 April 1909. At the foundation ceremony Cardinal Moran proposed that the college would be a monument to the district and further noted that "It would be difficult to find, in the many beautiful spots which Australia presents, anything which nature has lavished such an abundance of beautiful sights as the surroundings of Katoomba". The local community were encouraged to take a personal interest in the college which "not only will be an ornament to the town, but a living monument to that higher and better education without which no community could be considered progressive." The building of Mount St Mary's Ladies' College, Katoomba, was completed with remarkable speed with boarding pupils being accepted by February, 1910. The original building was three floor levels, constructed of rendered brick with painted corrugated iron roof sheeting, and featuring decorative stucco, a tower housing the main staircase, and recessed colonnaded balconies at the first and second floor levels. Also included were small wings on both the eastern and western sides, as well as a Chapel on the western side. The building was designed by the architectural firm Nangle and Nurzey. The Architect James Nangle was responsible for the design of a number of projects for the Catholic Church, including the Sacred Heart Church,
Darlinghurst, St Columba's Seminary,
Springwood, and
St Mary's Cathedral Girls School. With the establishment of the college the grounds were gradually developed to form a landscape complementary to the style and character of the building. This included low stone garden walls forming a series of informal grassed and cultivated terraces where ornamental trees and shrubs were placed. Linking these terraces were a series of paths and steps. Urns, a fountain, grotto and gazebo (thought to have come from the demolished "Royal Palace" across the road) were added. By the 1940s the landscape around the college was well established with a mixture of exotic and native species. The exotic plantings to the south and the open pasture like qualities to the north were designed to ensure that the building dominated the site and its surrounds. The original prospectus for the college highlighted the Sisters' progressive educational philosophy, curriculum, the therapeutic benefits of the location and the grandeur of the college. The college included an infant school and kindergarten, a middle school and the college which provided University classes to prepare students for entry to Arts, Science, Medicine, and Law or Teaching Training. The college prospered as an educational establishment through all the economic, political and social permutations of two World Wars. In 1923 the college sold a series of subdivided blocks including its tennis courts, which were purchased by Katoomba Council. Also sold at this time was the cottage "The Rocks" which had been relocated to the north east corner of the property. In 1926 Mount St Mary's celebrated its silver jubilee and in commemoration a grotto was built in the front garden of the convent, housing a Carrara marble statue of
Our Lady of Lourdes. The eight-foot cross on the roof of the tower was illuminated in 1938, and was widely visible. When Australia and the Allies declared war on Japan on 9 December 1941, there were fears for those living and working in close proximity to
Sydney Harbour. St Vincent's Convent, which was near warships in the harbour, transferred the novices, postulants and the boarders temporarily to Katoomba. In 1957, when devastating bushfires gutted much of the township of
Leura, the college temporarily housed some of the Sisters and juniors from the Little Company of Mary, Leura, and other members of the Mountains community left homeless by the fires. Apart from the perceived dangers of city living, the War years drew parents' attention to the safety of the Mountains and led to an increase in enrolments at the college. Works commenced in 1946 on a four-storey extension to the original building to accommodate the increased demand. In 1965 Mount St Mary's became a regional girls' school catering for forms 1–4 and, with the closing of St Bernard's College, Katoomba, St Mary's became "co-educational". By 1973 the operation of the school appeared to be non viable and the Sisters withdrew from the education ministry at Mount St Mary's. The Archdiocese of
Sydney took over at the end of 1973, but, as a result of declining enrolments (180 students) the school was finally closed down in 1974. The Sisters of Charity entered into an agreement with the Archdiocese whereby the premises would be used as centre for religious teaching and training purposes. In January 1978 the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity in Australia offered the property to the Archdiocese of Sydney as a gift, ending their ownership of the Mount St Mary's property. The Archdiocese continued to use the premises as an educational and religious retreat centre until 1984, when a fire order was placed on the building by the Board of Fire Commissioners, and the building was closed down. As the cost of bringing the building up to standard was considered prohibitive, the Church sold the college and land for $425,000. In 1985 the property was purchased by John Patterson, Pamela Ruth Patterson and Liborio Donivito with the intention of transforming Mount St Mary's into a tourist attracting "Creativity Centre" housing, 30 craft areas, shops studios, galleries, performance and teaching areas. Work began in late 1985 to restore the site. The Renaissance Centre was opened by the
Premier of New South Wales,
Barrie Unsworth, on 29 March 1987. The property was sold to Crestown Pty Ltd in December, 1992. Since then tenants began to vacate the Renaissance Centre, which became privately owned and occupied. == Description ==