North Hobart Post Office is at 412–414 Elizabeth Street, corners Swan Street and Elphinstone Road, North Hobart, comprising the whole of LPI 1 233925. A very fine one-storey Edwardian post office building of brick and stucco with panel of rough cast over entrance. The roof is slate, and a
hipped gable with large ridge vents. The building has a central entrance with steps, of faintly Romanesque styling, small side windows, and rusticated stone
foundation. North Hobart Post Office is centrally located on a square site bound by Elizabeth and Swan Streets with Elphinstone Road. The site drops significantly away to the northeast corner and has been cut to form a steep L-shaped embankment along the south and west site boundaries and a flat asphalted area for carparking. A small redbrick toilet block is located in the southwest corner of the site. Photographic records indicate that for a long time the site had an Art-Nouveau patterned timber fence around the site but by 1987 it had been replaced by a low rendered
retaining wall with a steel pipe top rail. The main building frontage addresses Elizabeth Street to the east with the entry steps splayed either side of an arched opening flanked by two brick
piers and a "scooped"
brickwork wall. The building sits on rough-cut rusticated stone base with brick entry piers and walling above that. The entry piers are smooth rendered to the street with exposed brick reveals. A plate stone courseline runs around the building, topped by a continuous drip moulding. Above this, on the entrance side, is compressed entry arch with three accentuated
voussoirs and a plain
architrave supported on two ionic colonnettes. It has a curved drip moulding that repeats the lower course line profile and returns to the side front walls, terminating in the form of a coil. Two narrow windows are placed on either side of the entry
porch, framed with smooth-dressed stone quoining. The panel above the arch contains the words "POST OFFICE" in flexed lettering and that is framed with a moulded
cornice that turns upward to a point at the centre in two curved sections. Above that is a set of five stuccoed piers, all square in plan, with single-course brick mortarboard toppings, bracketed by a single brick on each side. This is juxtaposed against the roof, a symmetrical structure with slates and hipped gables at the north and south ends, each with a vented half-timbered gablet and textured stucco
spandrels. The lantern vents are unusual in detail, having two
plinths with battered sides and inward-tapering corners, and vent-cylinders with concave-pointed tops and faceted sides. The
eaves are boxed with a regularly spaced set of
quadrant brackets over a
frieze in textured stucco. The sidewalls, like the front, were originally exposed red face brickwork with a single flat plate course and drip-moulding running across each at floor level. The north has a central paired window with segmental arch triple-light fan and paired double-hung sash below. The lower panes of each window are clear-glazed with the upper panel subdivided by six-pane lights. This form is repeated in two flanking
sashes, though these are flat-headed and have no fan. All three are quoined with dressed stone (now overpainted), and the centre window arch has an accentuated central
keystone and ear mouldings at either end. In plan form, the post office consists of a series of rooms or spaces arranged into the following functions. The post office component comprises the entry
portico, post boxes and public retail area, which has since been reconfigured and enlarged, flanked at the rear by an L-shaped mail sorting room. Beyond this, the area formerly used as a residence, has been refurbished for staff usage including a toilet area, store and a lunchroom. The side entry vestibule, now a store, and strong room adjacent, is intact, with entries to the former residence (west) and post office (east). Subsequent additions to the southwest corner of the building comprise a post office box corridor, with a covered ramp leading up to the mailroom counter window. The carpark is located directly to the south.
Condition and integrity Typologically, the original design for the North Hobart Post Office combined a postmaster's residence with a public entry, postal hall and sorting room. Externally, the building's ability to demonstrate the original architectural conception, materials and detail is very good. Exceptions include the overpainted brick and stonework, the addition of the glazed post office box lobby on the southwest corner and minor alterations to windows and doors at the rear of the building. The roof also has a high degree of integrity with regard to its hipped gabled form, ridge vents, and chimney placements, but is in poor condition (see further comments below). The current high contrast "heritage" paint scheme, however, is considered to have impacted on the building's original presentation as a facebrick and dressed stone structure, and arguably masks its aesthetic accomplishment. Internally, as commented above, the plan form of the building although altered, demonstrates the original key aspects relating to the postal hall and postmaster's residence. The cumulative effect of the reorientation and enlargement of the public space, however, in addition to the refurbishment of the rear residence for staff use, has diminished the legibility of the original usage but to a lesser degree, the fabric and finishes. For instance, the basic planning of the residence and postal functions is legible in the existing building entry, postal hall, side residential entry and strong room which also retain much of their original detail and decorative richness. This includes the presentation of windows and doors, fireplaces, pressed metal ceilings, cornices,
ceiling roses and decorative wall vents. The post office appears to be in a relatively sound condition with the exception of the slates and flashings which are in poor condition, particularly over the northwest rear section of the building. The roof space and sub-floor areas were not inspected. == Heritage listing ==