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Australia Hall

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Location
  
Destroyed
  
December 1998

Address
  
Pembroke, Malta

Material
  
Completed
  
November 1915

Owner
  
A. H. Development Ltd

Opened
  
22 January 1916

Client
  
Australian Red Cross

Australia Hall

Status
  
Ruins (façade is intact)

Type
  
Entertainment hall (including a theatre and cinema), with 6,000 sq m gardens

Similar
  
Fort Pembroke, Madliena Tower, Mediterraneo Marine Park, Argotti Botanical Gardens, Manoel Theatre

Australia Hall is a former entertainment hall in Pembroke, Malta, which was built by the Australian Branch of the British Red Cross Society in 1915. The building burnt down in 1998, and only its roofless shell remains today.

Contents

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History

Australia Hall was built by the Australian Branch of the British Red Cross Society as an entertainment venue for wounded soldiers of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps who were being treated in Malta during World War I. The hall was built in November 1915, and was officially opened on 22 January 1916 by Governor Paul Methuen. The hall could accommodate up to 2000 people, and it was used as a theatre, and also included a library. The building was subsequently used by the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes, and it also served as a cinema after 1921.

In 1978, the British military vacated Pembroke, and the hall became property of the Government of Malta. A year later, the building was transferred to the Malta Labour Party in exchange for some property in Marsa.

In 1996, the hall was listed as a Grade 2 National Monument by the Malta Environment and Planning Authority. The building burnt down in December 1998, possibly in an arson attack. The fire destroyed the hall's roof and interior, but its roofless masonry shell is still intact, although it has been vandalized and its walls are covered in graffiti.

In 2010, the Labour Party was taken to court since it did not keep the hall in good condition, as was agreed upon in the 1979 contract. The charges were dropped in October 2013, when the Labour Party was in government. In 2014, the Labour Party sold the hall and some surrounding land to A. H. Development Ltd for a sum of €582,343. This amount was described as "grossly far off the current market price" by property agents, and the sale of the building has been described as controversial. This has resulted in a court case, with the Labour Party appealing that it is exempt from paying the tax on the sale. It is estimated that the Australia Hall together with the surrounding gardens are actually worth €5.5 million.

In 2016, Australian High Commissioner Jane Lambert called for Australia Hall's restoration, and she is in contact with the building's owners, discussing possibilities for how to develop the site.

References

Australia Hall Wikipedia


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