Thompson Road, 2/79, NORTH FREMANTLE WA 6159
DESCRIPTION
Heritage TitleCOMMERCIAL BUILDING, 79 THOMPSON RDAddress2/79 Thompson Road NORTH FREMANTLE WA 6159Geo tag[1] Heritage Place No6128Other NamesOffice and LaboratoriesICI Old Offices and LaVacuum Oil CompanyConstruction Commenced1890Construction MaterialRoof – METAL: Corrugated IronWall – BRICK: Painted BrickWall – BRICK: Pointed BrickWall – BRICK: Rendered BrickFormer W.A. Heritage ThemesDEMOGRAPHIC SETTLEMENT & MOBILITY: Technology & technological changeOCCUPATIONS: Commercial & service industriesOCCUPATIONS: Manufacturing & processingTRANSPORT & COMMUNICATIONS: Road transportStatement Of SignificanceCommercial Building, 79 Thompson Road is a rendered brick and iron single storey building dating from c1915. The place has aesthetic value for its contribution to the streetscape and the surrounding area. It is representative of the industrial building stock located in parts of North Fremantle. Historically significant as a representation of a commercial premises in North Fremantle and for its associations with the introduction and subsequent development of motor and other spirits in Western Australia. The building was designed by prominent Fremantle architect and councillor, Joseph Allen, who also designed a number of other buildings in Fremantle and elsewhere in WA.ArchaeologyConditionCondition assessed as good (assessed from streetscape survey only).HistoryThompson Road was named for George Thompson (1838-1874), Fremantle's first town clerk (1871-73). The street is mainly residential, with some commercial development at the northern end between Alfred Road and McCabe Road. The majority of the houses were built c. 1900. Only a few lots on the street remained vacant in the 1920s. In 1914, the Vacuum Oil Company, a subsidiary of the Standard Oil Company of New York (SOCONY), established warehouses and offices in Thompson Road. Prior to this, the company had premises in Packenham Street. The company chose to relocate to Rocky Bay because of the ease of port and rail access for the receipt and dispatch of stocks. The site initially operated as a distribution point for imported Vacuum products but by 1919, a large warehouse, laboratory and office had been built. Designed by well known architectural firm of Allen and Nicholas, builder R. Know was responsible for the work. Joseph Francis Allen was a prominent architect and politician in the Fremantle area. He had migrated from Cornwall in 1879, and after a time in NSW, had settled in Western Australia. He was a justice of the peace, a Fremantle councillor, chairman of the Fremantle Hospital and twice mayor of East Fremantle. He designed numerous buildings in the Fremantle area, including the East Fremantle Town Hall, the Fremantle Trades Hall, the Commercial Travellers Club and 7 Pakenham Street, the original premises of the Vacuum Oil Company. The company sold lubricating oils, refined oil, aviation gasoline and petroleum spirits, which came from a variety of SOCONY Vacuum refineries and were packaged in different ways (such as 44 gallon drums and case petrol, a wooden box with two four-gallon cans). This changed in 1926, when bulk oil offloading facilities were built at Berth No. 1, North Quay. Vacuum Oil had several bulk tanks built at this main oil terminal. Petrol was then shipped to Fremantle from a refinery in Sumatra and directly into the stores on North Quay. From there, it was packaged into cases for distribution until the widespread introduction of tanker trucks. By the mid-1920s, the company had additional warehouses in West Perth, Bunbury and Kalgoorlie to meet the rising demand or petroleum and oil products. There was also a huge demand for case petrol from the North West, and petrol was carried to the northern ports between Carnarvon and Darwin by one of the four State ships on the Darwin-Fremantle route. Other country orders were directly loaded onto railway wagons that would be shunted down the Rocky Bay siding to the side of the warehouse, loaded with stock and taken out. In the mid-1950s, Vacuum added two bulk lubricating oil tanks and bulk kerosene store facilities to the North Quay depot. It also had limited manufacturing capacity for mixed oils and on-site analysis at the Thompson Road site. Up until 1962, SOCONY Vacuum delivered petroleum requirements from the Suez Canal to the west of Hawaii. When the company broke up, the assets were divided between Mobiloil and Esso. The North Fremantle operation was transferred to Mobiloil, a sister company of Vacuum Oil. Mobiloil vacated the Thompson Road site in 1963, moving their storage and packing operation to a small warehouse on North Quay. By this time, Mobiloil also had bulk storage facilities at Esperance, Bunbury, Geraldton, Port Hedland and Derby. The Thompson Road site was purchased by Imperial Chemical Industries of Australia and New Zealand (later ICI), which used it as a warehouse, office and laboratory. The large warehouse at the rear of the site was demolished in 1990. The office building and laboratory were converted to residential units c. 2000. This place was included in the "North Fremantle Heritage Study", prepared by Craig Burton, for the City of Fremantle, June 1994. Physical DescriptionCommercial Building, 79 Thompson Road is a single storey rendered masonry former commercial building with symmetrical facade designed in the Federation period. Walls are rendered and painted brick and the roof is hipped corrugated iron behind a rendered parapet wall. Verandah is under a separate bullnose corrugated iron roof supported by wall mounted metal brackets. The building is set on the front boundary line. The building plinth is rendered. The simple roof parapet sits above a moulded string cornice and has a simple pediment. Windows are timber framed casement and double hung. The place has been converted to residential units.AssociationJospeh AllenVacuum Oil CompanyPlace UseOriginal Use – COMMERCIAL: Office or Administration BldgOriginal Use – COMMERCIAL: WarehouseOriginal Use – INDUSTRIAL\MANUFACTURING: OtherOriginal Use – RESIDENTIAL: Conjoined residenceIntegrity/AuthenticityMedium degree of integrity (original intent clear, current use compatible, high long term sustainability, some later unsympathetic materials). Medium degree of authenticity with some loss of original fabric. (These statements based on street survey only).Place TypeIndividual Building or Group
Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations
Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations CustodianHeritage CouncilHeritage Council Decisions and Deliberations TypeRHP - To be assessedHeritage Council Decisions and Deliberations Date22/08/2097
Local Government Statutory Heritage Listings
Local Government Statutory Listing CustodianCity of FremantleLocal Government Statutory Listing TypeHeritage ListLocal Government Statutory Listing StatusYesLocal Government Statutory Listing Date8/03/2007
Local Government Non-Statutory Local Heritage Survey
Local Government Non-Statutory Local Heritage Survey CustodianCity of FremantleLocal Government Non-Statutory Local Heritage Survey Date18/09/2000Local Government Non-Statutory Listing Local Heritage Survey Management CategoryLevel 2
PARENT PLACE
Parent Place No22385
RELATED
INTERNAL
Heritage EntryYes
Thompson Road, 2/79, NORTH FREMANTLE WA 6159. City of Fremantle Local History Centre, accessed 31/05/2026, https://history.fremantle.wa.gov.au/nodes/view/35740



