Warringah Shire Hall
| Warringah Shire Hall | |
|---|---|
Warringah Shire Council 'Sanivans' outside the Shire Hall, 1954. Note the Mackellar County Council offices to the left. | |
| General information | |
| Type | Government town hall |
| Architectural style | Inter-war Stripped Classical |
| Location | 734 Pittwater Road, Brookvale, New South Wales, Australia |
| Completed | 1923 |
| Client | Warringah Shire Council |
| Design and construction | |
| Architects | Frederick Trenchard Smith Samuel Maisey |
| Architecture firm | Trenchard Smith & Maisey (1923–1928) |
| Main contractor | H. E. Jackson (1923) |
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The Warringah Shire Hall was an Australian municipal town hall located on Pittwater Road opposite Robert Street in Brookvale, a suburb of the Northern Beaches of Sydney, New South Wales. Initially built in 1910 as a Federation bungalow, the complex was expanded with the addition of "Shire Hall" in 1912, the final form was completed in 1923 with the addition of a second floor to a design by Trenchard Smith and Maisey. The Shire Hall was the seat of Warringah Council from 1910 to 1973, when the council moved to a new purpose-built Civic Centre on further down Pittwater Road in Dee Why. The Shire Hall survived amid uncertainty over its future but was eventually sold and demolished in 1978.