Torrens Building, Adelaide listed for State Government selloff
The Torrens Building, one of Adelaide's most notable surviving purpose-built Government office buildings, has been listed for sale.
Completed in 1881, it was the largest public building of its period and one of the largest buildings in the city.
It was used continuously for Government Offices for over a century, with notable occupants including the Registrar-General.
The building is regarded as the best remaining example of Renaissance Palladian style architecture in Adelaide, set on the eastern side of Victoria Square.
It is among a raft of buildings the State Government has signalled will be put up for sale.
The InDaily website noted others included “the State Administration Centre, Education Building, Wakefield House, Torrens Building, 12 Victoria Place, vacant land known as Hemmings Place and 24 Flinders Street”.
A boom in land speculation and a haphazard grant system resulted in the loss of over 75% of the 40,000 land grants issued in the colony of South Australia in the early 1800s so to resolve the deficiencies of the common law and deeds registration system, Robert Torrens, a member of the colony's House of Assembly, proposed a new title system in 1858, and it was quickly adopted.
The Torrens title system was based on a central registry of all the land in the jurisdiction of South Australia, embodied in the Real Property Act 1886 (SA).