head office on
King William Street, Adelaide, completed in 1943 During the 26-year era of
Liberal premier
Thomas Playford (November 1938 – March 1965), the bank was a key tool of his vision for the state's rapid economic and industrial development. Playford used both the Savings Bank and the State Bank to finance the
Electricity Trust of South Australia and the
South Australian Housing Trust. The two state-owned banks complemented each other. The savings bank was for the people to deposit their savings and for others to borrow money for mortgages on fair terms, while the state bank was used for larger projects. During this period the bank took on many new customers, especially migrants brought out to South Australia under
assisted migration schemes.
Head office building The architects Eric McMichael and Alfred Charles Harris, in their practice E.H. McMichael and Harris, designed the new Savings Bank building at 97
King William Street in 1938. However, owing to shortages of both labour and materials during
World War II, it took five years to be completed. It was their largest-ever commission, and at the time became the city's tallest building. McMichael was responsible for the design, after trustees and executives of the bank had visited
Sydney and
Melbourne to inspect the most modern buildings in those cities. The style is mainly
Art Deco, with some
Classical elements. Significant to the Art Deco style are the motifs depicting South Australian agriculture, along with the use of
parallel lines, the polished
granite base and the monumental entrance. The building was listed on the
South Australian Heritage Register on 11 September 1986. ==1970s–1984: lead-up to the merger==