Lendlease to start work on $200 million office tower in Melbourne's Batman's Hill

Lendlease to start work on $200 million office tower in Melbourne's Batman's Hill
Jonathan ChancellorMarch 9, 2016

Property group Lendlease is expected to start construction of a 25,000-square-metre tower in Melbourne, part of a $2 billion mixed-use scheme, after winning planning approval for its first commercial tower.

Planning Minister Richard Wynne has approved the first $200 million 11-level tower at 695 Collins Street, noting the public space created by the design of a sky-park. 

Lendlease has secured pre-commitment from engineering company Arup, who will take out three floors in the building, to be known as One Melbourne Quarter. 

It is the first of seven commercial and residential buildings planned for the 2.5-hectare site running between Collins and Flinders streets at the edge of the old city grid, linking it to Docklands.

Lendlease calls the project Melbourne Quarter. 

Alongside the Collins Street extension into Docklands, Lendlease will build, in stages, a deck over Wurundjeri Way, to hold different elements of the project together.   

The tower, designed by Denton Corker Marshall will sit next to a $2.5 billion project in Collins Square that property magnate Lang Walker is still building and trying to sell.

The Batman's Hill development will include more than 110,000 sqm NLA office space, 1,693 apartments and retail space, according to the Lendlease website.

 

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.

Editor's Picks

Above Zero to launch Glyndon in Camberwell
Sunkin takes luxury to new heights at Highett Common
The K2K Plan to transform Kensington and Anzac Parade corridor
Bathla launches Hillview Terrace, North Kellyville townhouse development
“A lifestyle destination rather than a holiday destination” Why the Gold Coast is now more boom than bust