1) Aerial building view showing rooftop solar array with cityscape in background 
2) empty bluestone laneway
3) redbrick building facade with

Younghusband Woolstore

+ Add to Itinerary

Presented by: Woods Bagot + Built

Description

Steeped in more than 120 years of history, the Younghusband Woolstore is a rare, enduring example of Victoria's industrial agrarian trade. The project comprises a series of large-scale industrial red-brick buildings, built over a period of 60 years from 1901, spanning two blocks and connected by a bluestone laneway.

The first building was commissioned by wool seller R. Goldsbrough Row and Co., and the site was later acquired by broker Younghusband and Co, which operated the facility until 1970. Today, the Younghusband ghost signage is still plastered across the face of the red brick building, the decommissioned bale lifts and pastoral paraphernalia documenting a life of uses long eclipsed.

In recent years, the former store has been used as a home for small creative companies and a costume store for the Australian Ballet. For decades, the wool store provided affordable studio spaces that gave grassroots artistic enterprises a toehold in a characterful inner-city location.

Today, the building has been revived by a consortium including Irongate, Built, and CDPQ — a joint venture breathing life into the rich heritage form as a mixed-use, industrial village. The building has been deemed of historical and aesthetic significance at a high metropolitan level, and through adaptive reuse, the buildings have been restored and revived by architects Woods Bagot. Stage one was completed mid-2024, which celebrates the characterful personality and patina of the brick building, creating a unique workspace for cultivating curiosity, community and creativity.

What's On

On Friday, join a guided tour through the Younghusband building with commentary from Woods Bagot’s project architects and interior designers and project developer and contractor Built as they discuss the sympathetic approach to reinvigorating this historic city asset. The tour will be followed by a Q+A session with the opportunity to ask questions about the complexities of working on an adaptive reuse project and approach to reviving heritage assets for a second life.

On Saturday, explore the site in your own time. Representatives from Woods Bagot and Built will be on site with information and to answer questions.

In Collaboration With:

  • Jono Cottee—Development Director, Built Capital

    Jono has over 18 years’ property industry experience specialising in property development, design, delivery, and leasing. He is a trained architect and designer, and leads Built’s development business, responsible for managing the end-to-end development pipeline. Jono sits on the Property Council of Australia’s Commercial Office and Cities Committee.

  • Wei Kiat Goh—Senior Associate, Woods Bagot

    Wei Kiat is an experienced architect with a demonstrated history working on major projects across a variety of sectors. He is experienced in leading project teams across all phases, from design through to construction. Wei Kiat was also the project leader on the Younghusband Woolstore redevelopment.

  • Naz Mofakhami—Associate, Woods Bagot

    Naz is a versatile project architect with a decade of experience across drafting, conceptual design, schematic design, building modelling, documentation and construction administration. Naz was also a critical member of the Younghusband project team, transforming 17,000 square metres of industrial warehouse into A-grade commercial tenancies.

Images: (1) Aerial view of Younghusband with view to CBD. Photo: Nose to Tail. (2) Bluestone entryway from Elizabeth Street. Photo: Nose to Tail. (3) Younghusband facade from Elizabeth Street. Photo: Nose to Tail. (4) View from rail line. Photo: Trevor Mein. (5) Younghusband Woolstore. Photo: Trevor Mein.

Important Details

Tour/event summary information

Friday 25 July
Presentation + tour 11am
Running for 90 minutes for up to 100 people
Bookings required

Saturday 26 July
Open access 10am—2pm
No bookings required

Bookings

This program includes both open access and pre-booked components. Where bookings are required—a $7 booking fee applies

First release tickets: 12pm Wednesday 2 July
Second release tickets: 10am Saturday 5 July

Book

Meeting Point

Meet in the Town Square - walk down the bluestone laneway from Elizabeth Street.

Accessibility

Fully wheelchair accessible, Accessible bathroom, Accessible parking nearby, Elevator access

Stay in the loop