Morphett Street, Adelaide


Morphett Street is a main street in the west of the city centre of Adelaide, South Australia, parallel to King William Street and numbered from north to south. At its northern end it is part of the West End of Adelaide, a thriving cultural and entertainment precinct, with the Lion Arts Centre on the south-western corner of its junction with North Terrace.

Location

The street runs from south to north between South Terrace and North Terrace, and passes around and through two of the five squares in the Adelaide city centre, Light Square and Whitmore Square. At Hindley Street it transforms into the start of the bridge which crosses North Terrace, the railway yards and the River Torrens.

History

Morphett Street was named after Sir John Morphett, a prominent pioneer, whose votes at a meeting on 10 February 1837,, played an important role in confirming the site of Adelaide.
A small brewery known as Morphett Street Brewery operated on a premises near the northern end from 1859 to about 1873.
The southern half of Morphett Street, between Grote Street and South Terrace, was originally named Brown Street after John Brown, the first Immigration Officer of South Australia. Brown Street was subsumed into the expanded Morphett Street in August 1967. The Brown Street Memorial in Whitmore Square maintains the commemoration of John Brown.
From the late 1990s, a revitalisation of the "West End" of Adelaide was undertaken, which included the conversions of several old buildings and the new University of South Australia's West End campus. The Mercury Cinema opened at no. 13 and the design studio JamFactory moved to a new purpose-built building at no. 19 in 1992.

Notable buildings

, now known as Trinity City, is on the north-eastern corner with North Terrace. The Lions Art Centre is on the other side of the bridge, on the north-western corner, next door to the Mercury Cinema and JamFactory. Many of the older buildings to the south of Light Square have been

Southern and northern continuations

Morphett Street continues north of North Terrace as Montefiore Road, and south of South Terrace as Sir Lewis Cowen Avenue. Montefiore Road and Hill were named after Jacob Barrow Montefiore, a Colonising Commissioner who was a cousin of the British philanthropist, Moses Montefiore. Lewis Cohen served on the Adelaide City Council for 30 years, including several terms as Mayor and Lord Mayor.