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Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters

  • 650253
  • East Street and Wickham Street, Fortitude Valley

General

Classification
State Heritage
Register status
Entered
Date entered
25 September 2020
Type
Defence: Air raid shelter
Theme
7.6 Maintaining order: Defending the country
Builder
Brisbane City Council
Designer
Costello, F.G.
Construction period
1942, Four air raid shelters
Historical period
1939–1945 World War II
Style
Modernism

Location

Address
East Street and Wickham Street, Fortitude Valley
LGA
Brisbane City Council
Coordinates
-27.454647, 153.037085

Map

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Significance

Criterion AThe place is important in demonstrating the evolution or pattern of Queensland’s history.

The Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters, designed and constructed by the Brisbane City Council in early 1942, are important in demonstrating the impact of Japan’s entry into World War II (WWII) on Queensland’s civilian population, and the urgent Air Raid Precaution (ARP) measures undertaken in Brisbane during 1941-42. They are a product of the Protection of Persons and Property Order No.1, gazetted in December 1941, which ordered Queensland’s local authorities to construct public air raid shelters.

Criterion BThe place demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of Queensland’s cultural heritage.

Although hundreds of public and private air raid shelters were constructed during WWII in Queensland, they are now rare. In 2020, 27 public surface air raid shelters constructed by Queensland local governments are known to exist.

Criterion DThe place is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of a particular class of cultural places.

The Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters are important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of the reusable ‘park shelter’ public surface air raid shelters built during WWII by the Brisbane City Council. Characteristics of this design include its: siting in an area with a large concentration of civilians, solid construction and dimensions, reinforced concrete floor, four central concrete columns, and a flat rectangular concrete roof.

Criterion FThe place is important in demonstrating a high degree of creative or technical achievement at a particular period.

The Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters are durable examples of innovative design and use of concrete technology during WWII. The shelters demonstrate the secondary uses that were a key part of the original design intent.

Criterion HThe place has a special association with the life or work of a particular person, group or organisation of importance in Queensland’s history.

The Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters, the largest surviving group of public air raid shelters in Queensland, are important as examples of the wartime work of the City Architect's Office, which over time has made a substantial contribution to the built environment of Brisbane, and particularly the work of Frank Gibson Costello (1903-87), City Architect between 1941 and 1952.

History

Four air raid shelters stand near the corner of East Street and Wickham Street, in Fortitude Valley, Brisbane, which is part of the traditional land of the Turrbal and Jagera peoples.[1] Each shelter consists of a concrete floor, four central concrete columns, and a flat double-cantilever concrete roof. Constructed by the Brisbane City Council during early 1942, in the midst of World War II (WWII), these structures are among 20 surviving examples of public surface air raid shelters designed for post-war use as either park shelters or bus stops – after the removal of their brick or concrete walls. There are 27 public surface air raid shelters of all types, built by local governments, remaining in Queensland. The shelters in Fortitude Valley, the largest surviving group of public air raid shelters in Queensland, are important in demonstrating the impact of Japan’s entry into the war on Queensland’s civilian population. They were once arranged around the perimeter of a children’s playground established in 1922.

Although WWII started in September 1939, Australia was under little threat of air attack until late 1941.[2] On 8 December 1941, the United States of America entered the war, following the previous day’s bombing of the American fleet at Pearl Harbour by Japanese carrier-borne aircraft. Simultaneously, Japanese forces launched assaults on Thailand, the Philippines and the British colony of Malaya. The sudden fall of Singapore on 15 February 1942 and the rapid Japanese advance through the islands of the Netherlands East Indies (NEI) raised fears of air attacks on Australia. The first Japanese air raid on Darwin occurred on 19 February 1942; and Broome, in Western Australia, was attacked on 3 March 1942. Japanese air raids on other targets in Australia seemed likely, and an invasion of Australia was also feared.[3]

As a result of the growing fear of Japanese air raids, the Queensland Government issued the Protection of Persons and Property Order No.1, gazetted 23 December 1941, which ordered the Brisbane City Council (BCC), and other local authorities near the coast, to build air raid shelters. The BCC was ordered to construct 200 public surface shelters in the city area. Order No.1 also required the owners of any building in the coastal areas, where over 30 people would normally be present at any one time (such as hotels), to build shelters within, or adjacent to, the building. Queensland Railways (QR) also instituted a shelter-building program at its railway stations.[4] All Queensland coastal state schools were closed in late January 1942, and although most reopened on 2 March 1942, student attendance was optional until the war ended. A policy of voluntary evacuation of women and children from Queensland coastal areas was also implemented on 27 January 1942.[5] 

Order No.1 was applied state-wide, and another 24 local authorities in Queensland's coastal areas were ordered to produce surface or trench shelters for the public, to be built according to the Air Raid Shelter Code laid down in the Second Schedule of Order No.1. Initially, 19 of these local authorities were expected to construct a total of 133 surface shelters able to withstand the blast of a 500-pound bomb bursting 50 feet away. A surface shelter was a self-contained external structure with the floor surface at or above ground level. Five local authorities were ordered to dig trenches. Standard designs for brick and concrete surface shelters, and for trench shelters, were sent to local authorities by the Architectural Branch of the Queensland Department of Public Works (DPW).[6]

The number of shelters to be built, and the number of local authorities required to build them, was increased in January 1942. By 26 January, 26 local authorities outside Brisbane were expected to build 143 surface air raid shelters, with Tully and Redcliffe constructing trenches and Ipswich building a combination of surface shelters and trenches.[7] Ultimately, those local authorities outside Brisbane which had work funded by the DPW, built 133 shelters – 126 surface shelters, and seven underground.[8]

Brisbane was a prime target with a large civilian population. After the first US forces arrived in Brisbane in the Pensacola Convoy on 22 December 1941, the city became a major supply base and staging point for the war in the South West Pacific, and the largest US naval base in continental Australia.[9] In January 1942 Brisbane became Base Section 3 of the United States Army Forces in Australia (USAFIA), headquartered in Somerville House [QHR 600305], South Brisbane. After General Douglas MacArthur, Supreme Commander, South West Pacific Area (SWPA), arrived in Brisbane in July 1942, the city also hosted his General Headquarters in the AMP building at the corner of Queen and Edward Streets [QHR 600147]. General Sir Thomas Blamey, Commander Allied Land Forces, had his Advanced Land Headquarters at the University of Queensland, St Lucia [QHR 601025]. Queensland played a major role in the build-up of troops and supplies for the joint US-Australian counter-offensive in New Guinea, which occurred after the Japanese advance was checked at Milne Bay and on the Kokoda track (August-September 1942).[10]

The BCC took responsibility for certain Air Raid Precautions (ARP) activities in Brisbane, including establishing a control headquarters for Essential and Emergency Services, known as BESOR, which communicated with the police ARP control centre in the basement of the Roma Street Police Station, on the corner of Roma and Ann Streets. The latter controlled the ARP wardens. The BCC managed rescue and demolition; installed and maintained the electrically-operated air raid sirens (operated by the Police); equipped first aid sheds; and constructed public air raid shelters while supervising the building of private air raid shelters. Above-ground salt water pipes were also laid along city streets to aid in firefighting.[11]

The BCC constructed 235 surface air raid shelters, with seating, temporary lighting, and lavatory accommodation; the building programme being 90% complete by June 1942. In addition, 9,950ft (3km) of trenches were constructed in public parks, including 8,400ft (2.6km) of slit trenches; plus covered trenches (either concrete-lined or formed with large reinforced concrete pipes) in the Botanic Gardens (1050ft or 320m) and Victoria Park (500ft or 150m). In addition to the public shelters, the BCC also constructed shelters for leased wharves and council properties, including at the Stanley Wharf, Circular Quay Wharves 2, 3 and 4, Norman Wharf, and Musgrave Wharf. Shelters were built on Cairns Street and under the Story Bridge (between Rotherham and Baildon Streets), for Kangaroo Point shipbuilding workers, and five shelters (including three pillboxes and two concrete pipe shelters) were constructed on behalf of the Bridge Board, Bureau of Industry, at the Howard Smith Wharves [QHR 601781].[12]

By mid-1942, of the BCC’s 235 public surface shelters, 177 were listed as ‘pillbox’ (which included 21 ‘special’, or site specific, pillboxes); plus 14  were listed as ‘bus stop’, and 44 as ‘park shelter’. The latter two designs were intended to be reused for other purposes after the war, through the removal of either three walls (bus stop), or four walls (park shelter), and leaving the concrete slab roof, floor slab and support columns or piers.[13]

The designer of the reusable air raid shelters was Frank Gibson Costello (1903-87), who was a head teacher in architectural design and lecturer in town planning at Sydney Technical College, prior to his role as the BCC’s City Architect between 1941 and 1952. His variants of the standard pillbox were designed to provide a post-war utility for at least part of the Council's shelter building programme. Costello later worked for the Queensland Department of Public Works, 1958-69, while also teaching at the Central Technical College (later the Queensland Institute of Technology) from 1959-1975.[14]

In an address delivered to the Constitutional Club in Brisbane 26 February 1942, Costello noted that if ‘the emergency for their use does not arise ... (unused shelters) ... are still there in brick and concrete, in many cases having no further value and being a possible source of nuisance’. He added that ‘I can assure you that wherever it is possible, without sacrificing the primary requirements of shelter from air attack, I have endeavoured in our Council buildings to so plan the shelters that they will fit into schemes of improvement which we hope will proceed immediately after the war’.[15]

The City Architect’s Office’s building projects after the war would include the Brisbane City Council Carpark on Wickham Terrace [QHR 601511]; libraries at Annerley, Chermside, and Toowong [QHR 602011]; the Toowong Swimming Pool, and the Centenary Swimming Pool (1959) [QHR 601240] in Spring Hill – which were all designed by James Birrell, City Architect from 1955 to 1961.[16]

Costello's work was characterised by the use of an architectural language inspired by the modern movement in architecture. This movement pursued the rational use of modern materials and principles of functionalist planning and established a visual aesthetic largely inspired by the machine. It was part of an architecture employing the language of vertical and horizontal volumes and planes, floating flat roofs, masses set against voids and monumentality. Though modest in scale and form, the design of the shelters is characteristic of work in this idiom. The reusable shelters were often sited under fig trees, to aid in camouflage – but there were only palm trees near the shelters at the corner of East Street and Wickham Street during WWII.[17]

The first of Costello's reusable designs was a shelter with double-cantilevered roof slab – called a park shelter. In a BCC Department of Works list (undated) of the shelters constructed by the BCC, these were labelled as ‘cantilever’.[18] They had four central columns supporting the roof slab, which allowed for the removal of the four blast walls after the war. There was also an entrance at each end of the shelter, where an internal wall formed an entry passage – on alternate sides of the shelter. If the walls were made of concrete, the shelter’s dimensions were 40ft (12.2m) long, 12ft 6 inches (3.8m) wide and 8ft 6 inches (2.6m) high, while if the walls were made of brick, the dimensions were 40ft 9 inches (12.4m) long by 13ft 3 inches (4m) wide, by 8ft 6 inches (2.6m) high. The difference was due to the fact that, while the concrete walls finished at the soffit (underside of the roof) of the roof slab, flush with the fascia (edge of the roof), the brick walls finished in line with the top of the roof slab, while covering the fascia. The Second Schedule of Order No.1 had set a minimum wall thickness for air raid shelters of 18 inches (457mm) for stone, 13.5 inches (343mm) for brick, with 12 inches (305mm) for concrete. The roof slab was intended to have at least 4 inches (102mm) of concrete.[19]

Costello’s second reusable design was a bus stop shelter, with a single-cantilevered roof slab. These were designed so that three walls (brick or concrete) could be removed after the war, leaving a back wall and five brick piers at the front. Again, there were entrances at each end. A third design, a variant of the second, was built with a stone rear wall, three removable brick walls and six stone piers at the front. Only two of the latter appear to have been built – referred to in the BCC Department of Works list as ‘bus (stone)’.[20]

Numerous air raid shelters were built in Fortitude Valley, including five near the corner of Wickham Street and East Street. The latter group included one pillbox shelter (southeast of the other four, at a right angle to East Street), and four park shelters, each designed to hold 70 people, and all with concrete walls.[21] These five shelters were completed by mid-1942. They were built around the perimeter of a children’s playground, established by the BCC in 1922, and managed by the Queensland Playground Association (formed 1913). The Queensland Playground Association also managed other parks in working class suburbs of inner Brisbane, including the Neal Macrossan Playground in Paddington, 1918 [QHR 601787], and the Bedford Playground in Spring Hill, 1927 [QHR 601786]. The public air raid shelters were never needed, as no Japanese air raids were conducted on Brisbane.[22]

Most of the Brisbane structures built for the war were removed at the end of WWII. The saltwater mains, slit trenches, and sirens disappeared, as did the many standard pillboxes that had stood in the middle of the streets of the Central Business District. Of the 235 public surface air raid shelters built by the BCC, 21 survive in 2020 and are still owned by the BCC: one, a special pillbox (of 21 built), survives on Queens Wharf Road [QHR 600135], while 20 are Costello’s reusable shelters (of the 58 built). The removal of their blast walls, as planned, gave them a renewed purpose. The worker's shelters at the Story Bridge Hotel and Howard Smith Wharves also still exist.[23]

Of the 20 surviving reusable public surface air raid shelters, 17 are of the park shelter design. Most of the surviving park shelters had concrete blast walls, while only a couple used brick.[24] Two examples of the bus stop design survive, at Newmarket and Newstead; plus one example of the bus (stone) variant survives on Turbot Street, at King Edward Park.

The walls of the four park shelters at the corner of Wickham and East streets were removed according to plan after WWII, while the nearby pillbox shelter was demolished. A BCC carpark was built on the playground site in 1959, and later photographs show cars parked under the former air raid shelters. The northwest half of the carpark was redeveloped in the 1990s, and in 2020 three of the shelters are used as cover for parked motorcycles and scooters. All the shelters are in a narrow park, and are surrounded by later gardens or paving. The mature trees near the shelters, apart from a palm tree between the central and northern shelters on East Street, post-date 1981.[25]   

Description

The Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters (the shelters) are four rectangular, reinforced concrete structures in Fortitude Valley, Brisbane. Three shelters are located on the northeast side of East Street, between Ann Street and Wickham Street; while one is around the corner on the southeast side of Wickham Street. In 2020 the three northernmost shelters are used as cover for parked motorcycles and scooters. They are surrounded by park landscaping, paving, and other park infrastructure and mature trees (not of state cultural heritage significance).

The shelters (1942):

Each shelter comprises a floor slab, and a double-cantilevered roof slab supported by four concrete columns, orientated with their long sides parallel to the street. The roof slabs are about 12.2m long, and 3.8m wide, while the floor slabs are about 4.5m wide, and project beyond the roof slabs. The four central columns of each shelter are about 270mm by 465mm. The former location of removed walls, including the internal walls which formed entrance passages at either end of the shelters, on alternate sides, are noticeable on the floor slabs; and are often covered in a later cement render, or are indicated in brick payers (Southern Shelter, East Street only).[1] The underside of the soffit is stepped twice near the fascia on each side of each roof slab. There are also lighter markings on the underside of each roof slab, providing evidence of the entrance wall locations; plus indications of either former cable routes to interior lighting fixtures, or interior partitions.

Features also of state-level cultural heritage significance include:

  • The shelters’ accessible location and spatial arrangement, visible from the street and with a line of sight between the shelters
  • Original concrete components, including original 1942 floor slab, central columns and roof slab
  • Off form construction and finish
  • Evidence of wall and entrance locations on floor slab and underside of roof slab
  • Probable evidence (lighter areas on underside of the roof slab) of either interior partitions, or cabling and lighting fixtures

Features not of state-level cultural heritage significance are:

  • Post-World War II re-surfacing of the floor slabs, either with concrete or brick, or any painted parking lines
  • Post-war paths and paving, gardens, garden edging, trees or plantings beyond the floor slabs but within the cultural heritage boundaries
  • Other modern park infrastructure beyond the floor slabs but within the cultural heritage boundaries, including seating, lighting, rubbish bins and signage
  • Modern walls and steps near or between the shelters and within the cultural heritage boundaries

References

[1] Public Map, Department of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Partnerships, https://culturalheritage.datsip.qld.gov.au/achris/public/public-registry/home (accessed 25 June 2020).
[2] In September 1939, the Queensland Premier's Department, as the agency responsible for co-ordinating civil defence works in the state, began implementing home security policies. Air Raid Protection Committees, usually consisting of the local mayor, inspector of police and government medical officer, formed in centres along the Queensland coast. As the threat of war with Japan increased, construction of public air raid shelters was planned in main centres considered vulnerable to air attack (QHR 602743, ‘Babinda Air Raid Shelter’). These home security policies were outlined in the Commonwealth War Book, which was prepared before the outbreak of war and outlined measures to be taken by authorities in wartime (‘Why we have a “War Book”’ Sunday Mail, 23 July 1939, p.6).
[3] QHR 650229, ‘Sarina Air Raid Shelter (former)’. Japan briefly considered invading Australia (an idea promoted by the Imperial Japanese Navy, but rejected by the Japanese Army due to a lack of resources) before shelving that option in March 1942, in favour of isolating Australia from the United States by capturing Port Moresby, and later Fiji, New Caledonia and the Samoan Islands. (G Brown and D Anderson, ‘Invasion 1942? Australia and the Japanese threat’, Background Paper Number 6 1992, Department of the Parliamentary Library, 29 April 1992).
[4] Queensland Government Gazette, 23 December 1941, in Queensland State Archives item 269093, (series 6874, Public Works Department correspondence), ‘Correspondence - local authorities - air raid shelters, civil defence, steel helmets’, 1942-6. The Queensland Premier acted with powers conferred by Regulation 35a, an amendment to the National Security (General) Regulations of the National Security Act 1939-1940. Regulation 35a, notified in the Commonwealth Government Gazette on 11 December 1941 (as Statutory Rules 1941 No.287), authorised each State Premier to direct 'blackouts' and to 'make such provision as he deems necessary to protect the persons and property of the civil population'. 
[5] QHR 650229, ‘Sarina Air Raid Shelter (former)’.
[6] Queensland Government Gazette, 23 December 1941, and a report to the Under Secretary of Public Works, 23 January 1942 (standard plans had been sent out), in QSA item 269093. These surface shelters were only meant to protect people, caught by surprise out in the open, from blast and debris – not a direct hit (D Sullivan, ‘Brisbane’s air raid shelters: the palimpsest as war memorial’, Thesis submitted as part of a Bachelor of Architecture, University of Queensland, 1992, p.27).
[7] ‘List of local authorities in the area of which public air raid shelters are being provided, & particulars of progress of work’, 26 January 1942, in QSA item 269093.
[8] The underground shelters were at Bundaberg and Mount Morgan. In five cases (Atherton, Cairns, Gladstone, Mackay, and Toowoomba) the DPW built shelters without local authority assistance. Some local authorities, like Brisbane, undertook and funded their own shelter building program. The Brisbane City Council spent £88,933. The DPW’s construction program outside Brisbane cost £56,596; £30,929 worth of the work was undertaken by the DPW, and the rest by local authorities with funds provided by the DPW.  (‘Statement No.1, showing expenditure by the Public Works Department in connection with the provision of public shelters’ (undated), and ‘Expenditure on Public air raid shelters in local authority areas (undated), in QSA item 269093; ‘Council liability on shelters’, Courier Mail, 13 February 1943, p.3).
[9] Building the Navy's Bases in World War II History of the Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Civil Engineer Corps 1940-1946, Volume II, Part III, Chapter 26 ‘Bases in the Southwest Pacific’, p. 279, https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/b/building-the-navys-bases.html (accessed 22 May 2019). Brisbane was the location of various units’ headquarters, plus supply and ordnance depots, military transit camps and hospitals, research facilities, naval bases (including a US submarine base), munitions factories, military airfields, and aircraft assembly and maintenance facilities.
[10] KC Dod, The Corps of Engineers: the war against Japan, Washington, Office of the Chief of Military History, U.S. Army, 1966, pp.109-12; H Pearce, WWII-NQ: a cultural heritage overview of significant places in the defence of north Queensland during World War II, Brisbane, Environmental Protection Agency, January 2009, pp. 11-19, 51-2; ‘South West Pacific campaign’, https://www.ww2places.qld.gov.au/south-west-pacific-campaign (accessed 11 April 2019); QHR 602084, ‘Y Station, 16 Heavy Anti-Aircraft Battery’; ‘Headquarters, US Army Base Section No.3 – Brisbane Somerville House, APO 923’, https://www.ozatwar.com/ozatwar/basesection3.htm (accessed 11 April 2019).
[11] BCC Annual Report, 1941-42, pp.11-13; ‘Air Raid Precautions control room’, https://www.ozatwar.com/bunkers/bunkerturbotstreet.htm (accessed 1 July 2020).
[12] BCC Annual Report, 1941-42, pp.11-13 (claimed seating, lighting and lavatory accommodation would be included in all public surface shelters); ‘Air raid shelter work’, BCC Department of Works, undated, Microfiche H-7-87 (lists all the surface shelters and trench shelters in Brisbane and suburbs, and their completion status. Mentions 300ft (91m) of concrete lined trenches, and 1250ft (381m) of reinforced concrete pipe); ‘Pipes used in shelters’, The Telegraph (Brisbane), 26 February 1942, p.3 (large concrete pipes being used for Victoria Park); QHR 601781, ‘Howard Smith Wharves’. Although the BCC 1941-42 annual report claimed the surface shelters would each accommodate 50 people, the Department of Works list of shelters indicates 70 persons per standard pillbox or reusable shelter, with varying numbers for ‘special’ pillbox shelters. Slit trenches were dug in Newstead Park, Mowbray Park, New Farm Park, Albert Park, Hardgrave Park, Lang Park, Highgate Hill Park, Musgrave Park, Hefferan Park, Davies(?) Park, and Gregory Terrace Park.
[13] BCC Annual Report, 1941-42, p.11-13 (Pillbox, bus stop, and park shelter numbers). The BCC Department of Works’ list of shelters records 177 ‘pill’ shelters; 21 ‘bus’ shelters (including 2 ‘bus (stone)’), and 37 ‘cantilever’ (park) shelters. However, both the annual report’s list and the Department of Works’ list total 58 reusable shelters of a bus stop or park shelter design.
[14]  R Freestone and D Low Chow, ‘Frank Costello: pioneer planner and educator’, in D Nichols, A Hurlimann, C Mouat and S Pascoe (Eds) Green fields, brown fields, new fields: proceedings of the 10th Australasian Urban History, Planning History Conference, Melbourne, University of Melbourne, 2010, pp.132-144; ‘City Architect likely to be Sydney man’, Courier Mail, 22 February 1941, p.3.
[15] ‘Structural ARP’, address before the Constitutional Club, Brisbane, on Thursday, 26 February 1942, by Frank G Costello, FRAIA, City Architect, Architecture, (Journal of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects) 1 April 1942, pp.38-42.
[16] QHR 601511, ‘Brisbane City Council Carpark’.
[17] Department of Natural Resources, Mines and Energy (DNRME) aerial photographs ADA00065888, 20 April 1936, and BCC000234730, 31 May 1946 (both appear to show palm trees, providing no camouflage for the shelters). The photograph ‘New car park on the corner of Wickham and East Streets, Fortitude Valley 1959’, State Library of Queensland negative 189953; DNRME aerial photograph QAP1060058, 26 September 1960 and QAP3571311, 16 June 1981; and a 1981 photograph, BCC Library Services, BCC-C35-1711-1, all confirm the post-war presence of mature palm trees adjacent to the air raid shelters.
[18] ‘Air raid shelter work’, BCC Department of Works, undated, Microfiche H-7-87.
[19] Queensland Government Gazette, 23 December 1941, in QSA item 269093. Later Queensland Government plans for standard pillbox shelters (non-reusable design) indicated either a 6 inch roof (152mm), or alternatively 12 inches (305mm), where building debris could fall on the shelter (QSA Item 328638. Concrete pill box shelter. Detail Sheet no.7, Jan 1942 (State Works Department standard plan).
[20] ‘Air raid shelter work’, BCC Department of Works, undated, Microfiche H-7-87. One was at the Windsor Town Hall, Lutwyche Road (not extant). A 1950 photograph also shows a tram shelter/former air raid shelter on Wickham Street, which uses stone piers (BCC Library Services, BCC-B54-749); but this shelter is not on the BCC Department of Works list of shelters.
[21] Shelters were also built in Fortitude Valley on Marshall Street, Yeovil Street, Duncan Street, Warner Street, Gipps Street, McLachlan Street, Alfred Street, Ann Street and Amelia Street (‘Air raid shelter work’, BCC Department of Works, undated, Microfiche H-7-87. In this list, next to the number of shelters of each design built at each location, is either a small ‘b’, or a small ‘c’, referring to the wall construction being either brick or concrete. The East Street shelters are marked as ‘c’); ‘BCC Works Department location of Air raid shelters 1944’, H-9-63 (map)).
[22] ‘Valley children’s playground’, Daily Standard, 3 June 1922, p.10; DNRME Survey Plan IS291, 1943; QHR 601786, ‘Bedford Playground’. The Queensland Playground Association was formed to promote the establishment of children's playgrounds and recreation centres in districts of poverty and high density, in order to improve the mental and physical wellbeing of children. The playgrounds were planned within a short distance of the local state school, usually near swimming baths and central to the density of housing. The Fortitude Valley playground is visible in the DNRME aerial photograph ADA00065888, 20 April 1936, on the opposite side of Wickham Street from the Valley Baths, and extending southeast along the East Street side of the block. The five shelters are visible in DNRME aerial photograph BCC000234730, 31 May 1946. At this time, there was also a large temporary building, probably military, in the park. Those parts of Queensland which were bombed by the Japanese included Horn Island in the Torres Strait (multiple raids between March 1942-June 1943), Townsville (three raids, July 1942) and Miallo, north of Mossman (31 July 1942).
[23] Of the 156 standard pillboxes built, none survive in BCC ownership. The special pillbox on Queens Wharf Road is included in the Queensland Heritage Register entry for the porphyry retaining wall on William Street. A ‘bus’ style shelter (according to the BCC Department of Works list), with its concrete walls still extant, also survives on Ferguson Street, Manly, opposite the war memorial, but it is not owned by the BCC, and has had a timber building constructed on top. Not including those shelters built for workers (such as under the Story Bridge, or at Howard Smith Wharves), private air raid shelters, or shelters built at railway stations by Queensland Rail, public air raid shelters built by or for local authorities also survive at Babinda [QHR 602743], Sarina [QHR 650229], Gordonvale (part of), Gympie [QHR 602778] and Maryborough [QHR 600714].
[24] ‘Air raid shelter work’, BCC Department of Works, undated, Microfiche H-7-87. As well as the four park shelters in Fortitude Valley, there is one at Hefferan Park in Annerley; two at Albert Park; two at Wickham Park; one in Buranda Playground in Woolloongabba; two in Raymond Park in Kangaroo Point; and one each in small parks or road reserves in Kelvin Grove, Morningside, Nundah, Stones Corner, and Windsor. Most are used as simple park shelters, as intended, but the shelter at Nundah has been modified as a toilet block, and the park shelter at Kelvin Grove is used as a bus shelter (as distinct from those shelters of the ‘bus stop’ design).
[25] Photograph, ‘New car park on the corner of Wickham and East Streets, Fortitude Valley 1959’, State Library of Queensland negative 189953 (shows surface preparation near the Wickham Street shelter); DNRME aerial photograph QAP1060058, 26 September 1960 (car park in use); 1981 photograph, BCC Library Services, BCC-C35-1711-1 (cars under Wickham Street shelter); DNRME aerial photograph QAP3571311, 16 June 1981 (shows still only palm trees adjacent to shelters).

[26] In the wartime BCC Department of Works list of shelters, the East Street shelters were listed as having concrete walls; yet in three of these shelters, rendering over the former location of the walls on the floor slab, c400mm wide, seems to project beyond the outer edge of the roof, indicating possible brick walls. For the southern shelter, although the wall locations are indicated by later brick paving 350mm (13.8 inches) wide (still closer to the stipulated thickness of brick walls rather than concrete walls) the outer edge of the walls appears level with the edge of the roof.

Image gallery

Location

Location of Fortitude Valley Air Raid Shelters within Queensland
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Last reviewed
1 July 2022
Last updated
20 February 2022