Railway Hotel, Perth


The Railway Hotel on Barrack Street, Perth was a hotel that operated from 1844 until the late 1900s.
Built in stages, the hotel originally opened around 1844 as the Commercial Hotel, "an unpretentious two storey building with a shingle roof". In 1879, the Commercial Hotel was relicensed, renovated, refitted and redecorated by its new licensee C. O. Speight, and reopened as Speight’s Railway Hotel. In 1897, a large dining room and a “well-lighted” billiard room were added and the façade was improved and flanked with a three storey tower. In 1906 the hotel was almost entirely rebuilt into an imposing three storey structure, designed by architects Porter and Thomas and built at a cost of nearly £5000; its Federation Free Classical style with circular columns, deep-set verandahs, classical motifs, arches, pediments, pilasters, and a highly decorated parapet is the elevation seen today.  
In 1992, Joe Scaffidi, a property developer and husband of Lisa Scaffidi demolished the hotel and much of the façade of the historic Railway Hotel in contravention of a permit which required that the façade had to be retained. He became the first person to be prosecuted under the Heritage Act and was ordered to rebuild the façade, but made no attempt to integrate the now freestanding structure into his multi-storey development. It remains one of Perth's most egregious examples of facadism.