Which notable australian lives at kirribilli house




















Morrison is not the first prime minister to shun The Lodge as a full-time home. From the beginning, the home at 5 Adelaide Avenue in Deakin was never intended to be a permanent residence for the prime minister, says architect David Hobbes of Philip Leeson Architects. It was designed by architectural firm Oakley and Parkes, which was given the task of designing homes for senior public servants.

The architectural design is a typical s mix of Georgian and Mediterranean styles, says Hobbes. Lots of dark wood panelling, traditional dark furnishings. It sits behind a protruding yet understated barrier that masks its position from the world; the only telltale sign for those unbeknownst to its location is a police car that is stationed outside when the Prime Minister is in town.

Despite its unassuming nature, agents say if it were to be put up for sale, it would sell for millions and could be a sales record for the capital. Elizabeth Chifley was nursing her ailing mother and refused to leave Bathurst for The Lodge except to host events linked to her husband's role. Joseph and Enid Lyons kept their main residence in Tasmania, although they lived in Canberra with six of their 11 children.

Depression-era Labor prime minister James Scullin was the first to spurn The Lodge in , never moving into the newly built home and calling it a "wicked waste of money". ANU historian Professor Nicholas Brown says prime ministers have made The Lodge their second home to avoid disrupting their families, to stay close to their electorates and sometimes out of uncertainty about the length of their tenure.

Joseph and Enid Lyons gathered on the lawn at The Lodge. The family maintained a home in Tasmania as well. Credit: National Library of Australia. The decision of prime ministers to live in The Lodge at times reflected their view of Canberra's role in federal government, Brown says. They also shunned or accepted the building depending on whether they wanted to be identified with the city's public service and cultural institutions.

Some of The Lodge's most committed residents also embraced the city as the centre of federal political life and government. Gough Whitlam, the only prime minister raised in the national capital, was linked to its galleries and museums. Credit: Fairfax Media. Gough and Margaret Whitlam liked its familiarity and old-fashioned character but found it inefficient, particularly as its kitchen was unsuited for large-scale entertaining.

Labor's Ben Chifley hated the house and chose to stay at Canberra's Hotel Kurrajong while prime minister. Earlier this year, Tamie Fraser admitted she wasn't very fond of The Lodge when she and her husband lived there, and said it was past its use-by date. Mrs Fraser later became a champion for the home in establishing the Australiana Fund to furnish it with art, and opening it to fundraising events.

The square-metre home is considered comfortable and grand by the standards of many Australians. Too small to host large events or to accommodate foreign guests, and now constrained by heritage status, The Lodge is almost exclusively a family home compared to No.

Australia's prime ministerial house, set on a 1. The Lodge hosted charities for fundraising events three times from until Malcolm Turnbull's political demise. Credit: Graham Tidy. A debate about building a replacement stretches back decades. The house is said to have been intended as a stopgap until a more permanent, suitable one could be built. Past governments crept towards building a new Lodge, only to defer the idea.

Powell says the National Capital Development Commission's efforts to select a site in the s were followed by an underwhelming response from leaders. We're in a time when it's certainly not too fashionable to be associated closely with Canberra. That would have quite rightly been seen as prime ministerial self-indulgence," he says.

The new Parliament House has cancelled the need for extra room in The Lodge for official functions. I don't know why people criticise it and keep calling for a new residence. You don't need a new residence. Julia Gillard in the drawing room of The Lodge, Credit: Alex Ellinghausen.

The decision of recent prime ministers not to live primarily in Canberra doesn't reflect on the city or its status as the national capital, but rather has been a personal choice, Hawke says. On their arrival, they were met by a team of federal police, with passers-by kept at a distance. However, the family will still maintain as far as possible their Sutherland Shire connections, including the girls continuing to attend the same independent school.

Security reasons were cited for the move, which was planned for the school holidays but was brought forward for reasons that are unknown. Maintaining security at the family home would require a lot of resources and neighbours would also be impacted.



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