Early meetings took place at the
Court House and at a temporary reading room at the
Boys' School in Murray Street. A site for a Mechanics Institute building in Howick Street (later Hay Street) was gifted by the government and surveyed in August 1851. The land was vested in trustees, and managed by a committee appointed by its members. The corner stone for the new building was laid by
Governor Fitzgerald on 25 May 1852. Moves to establish a permanent museum in the city during the 1880s saw the institute's specimen collections move to premises at the recently closed
Perth Gaol in 1892. These collections laid the foundations of what became the
Western Australian Museum. In 1899 the original building was replaced by spacious two storey premises on the same site, which included a concert hall with seating for 400 people and a lodge room with accommodation for another 200. The building's architect was William G. Wolf, who also designed
His Majesty's Theatre and Hotel in Hay Street. The foundation stone for the new building was laid by the
Premier Sir John Forrest on 20 June 1898. The premier was a former Institute president.
The West Australian described the building: At the time of its opening in 1899, the library contained 6,000 volumes and membership was 389. The cost of the building was
£10,721, equivalent to in . ==Perth Literary Institute==