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The Maitland Technical College was designed by Government Architect Walter Liberty Vernon in 1908, constructed by BJ Pearch of Hamilton for £7,393 and opened in 1910. The original design was reduced in scope to meed budgetary constraints. The building was described as one of the Departments most ornate and featured a fine façade to High Street and a cantilevered marble staircase. A two storey detached workshop block of modest design by Vernon was constructed in 1911.

The building initially accommodated a Museum and technical teaching spaces and was referred to as the Maitland Trades School from c1913 – 1935.

The building was used to develop skills of people during the depression but despite growth of technical institutions during the 1930s-1950s the facility did not expand. Following the flood in 1955 the museum objects were relocated to the Sydney Museum of Applied Arts and Science but the College continued as a technical teaching facility. A new technical college for Maitland opened in 1987 and the College closed and has only had intermittent use since.

Description of the new college building at the time of the opening ceremony as reported in the Maitland Mercury 6 August 1910.

The new college building is of brick with Ravensfield stone dressing and slate roof, the general design being perpendicular Gothic. The High Street façade forms an imposing but quiet and dignified aspect being flanked at each end with gables and massive rectangular piers, while the balance of the design has been well maintained. Between the two gables the front is divided by three half octagonal piers, standing well in relief. The main entry porch is approached from the footway by seven trachyte steps, and is surmounted by a large moulded stone segmental arch, the face above being divided into moulded panels with stone diaper work above. Fourteen stone mullion windows with stone quoins, fitted with metal frames, furnish light to the front rooms on the ground and first floors. The roof is steeply pitched and is of slate. Four dormer windows furnished in muntz metal relieve any monotony in the roof surface.

The seven trachyte steps lead through the entrance porch, into the vestibule, from which access is gained to the stairs hall, through folding doors under a Tudor arch. The fittings of the vestibule are in Tasmanian Blackwood all to detail while the flooring is parquetry of red beam with a border of marble, the whole floor being set in concrete. Swinging doors under a Tudor arch give access from the vestibule to the No 1 museum court, which is separated from No 2 museum court, by three large late Gothic arches, with massive piers moulded and finished in Keen’s cement. The openings in each museum court are finished in the same way, and a projecting moulded dado at a height of eight feet runs throughout the two courts, the ceiling of which are plain, but finished with massive cornices. A corridor six feet wide leads from the lane entrance along the rear of the museum courts into the stairs hall, through a Tudor arch. Provision has been made for access from this corridor to the new wing provided for in the second contract. Access is gained to the first floor from the stairs hall by a handsome staircase of Australian marble, the treads being of white Sicilian marble. The railing is of wrought ornamental ironwork, with polished Blackwood handrail, and a second handrail along the wall. The walls of the stairs hall are in face-brick bedded in black mortar. The floor of the hall is parquetry of red beam timber with marble border, all bedded in concrete. Apart from the handrail, there is no woodwork in the staircase, which is probably the finest of its kind in the State.

The first floor provides accommodation as follows: - A large demonstration room a classroom for chemistry, geology, etc., lecture room, library and corridor. The demonstration room is over the museum and is 22 feet high, with an open roof, carried on three hammer beam trusses. All walls throughout the building are finished in Keen’s cement. Fireplaces are also provided liberally for asbestos fires. The resident master’s offices open from the stairs hall and are on the left of the vestibule.

Water and gas services are laid on throughout. The ventilation is a main feature of the building, and calls for special attention. The inlet vents are all of galvanised tubing, coming in at various points through large tubes, and having smaller branches. All exhausts from the ground floor, as well as from the first floor, are similarly constructed. The tubing is taken up through the walls and connects into larger shafts in the roof, where they are centralised and discharge through large cowls above the roof. The building has cost about £8,000 and was designed in the office of the government architect Colonel W L Vernon, and was erected by Mr B G Pearse of Hamilton under the able supervision of Mr John Harding, clerk of works.