The hall was built by the
Hibernian-Australasian Catholic Benefit Society, formed in 1885, for the local Irish Catholic community, and called Hibernian Hall. The architects were Tappin, Gilbert & Dennehy, and the contractors were O'Dea & Kennedy, and it opened to great fanfare in November 1887. There was a meeting room and offices downstairs, and a large hall upstairs, complete with gallery, and the facade features a high rusticated base, and giant order Corinthian columns above, all executed in fine stone. The Society ran into difficulties and had to sell in 1903, and by 1907 it was known as the Guild Hall, used for art exhibitions, a cinema and as a wrestling venue. and became a commune to support wharf workers during the
1917 General Strike. It was purchased Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (now RMIT University) in 1957. In 1959 the hall was named after the Storey family; Sir John Storey (Senior), who left a large bequest to RMIT in order to found the John Storey Junior Memorial Scholarships in memory of his son, and John Storey (Junior), who founded the
RMIT Student Union in 1944, and whose studies were cut short in 1947 when he died of leukaemia at age 22. A major refurbishment of the hall, and a large addition to the south was completed in 1996 to the design of
Ashton Raggatt McDougall. The ground level of the original hall houses the RMIT First Site Gallery, which is operated by the
RMIT Union, and has a focus on
new media, as well as a cafe named re:vault. ==Architecture==