Agile
Corporate or creative? Elegant or edgy? The T&G Building blends one premium location with the rare versatility of two distinctly different entrances.
Discerning and refined, the Collins Street entrance delivers a classic corporate entry experience alongside Melbourne's premier luxury retail brands.
While a more vibrant pedestrian entrance with double-height glazing connects perfectly to the urban surrounds of nearby Flinders Lane.
The T&G Building is more than just a workplace. With imaginative shared spaces, an abundance of meeting areas, carefully managed amenities and bespoke club-style concierge services; it’s a perfectly curated business community for your entire team.
Every imaginable business amenity is waiting for you.
Access dedicated concierge services seamlessly through best-in-class digital integration.
The T&G Building reimagines workplace excellence through a connected community focused on health, wellbeing, and unprecedented convenience.
Healthy lifestyles are actively encouraged with outstanding end-of-trip facilities including 16 showers and 194 bicycle racks.
Every detail has been thoughtfully considered to heighten the health, happiness and overall wellness of the T&G community.
Circa 1928, the T&G Building was the most prominent interwar office address in Melbourne – a place where Victorian business and commerce flourished, stamping its mark on the corporate landscape of the day.
It was originally home to Temperance & General, a Victorian-based life insurance company that became renowned for its prestigious offices across Australia during the first half of the 20th Century, before amalgamating with National Mutual in 1983.
A fine example of Neo-Renaissance architecture, the T&G Building was once described as ‘Melbourne’s most beautiful building’. It originally featured two towers with one standing 78m to its flagstaff, giving it some claim as Australia’s tallest building (albeit for a short period).
The site was expanded in 1938 with additional work completed in the 1960s to extend along Russell Street to the corner of Flinders Lane.
In the early 1990s the facade was carefully restored during an extensive internal reconfiguration that included the addition of a Post Modern central atrium. Together with the adjoining Richard Allen Building it remains one of Melbourne’s most significant business addresses.
Today, the next chapter in the T&G Building’s rich history is ready to be told…