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Fremantle Naval Store

History

Constructed in 1935, the Fremantle Naval Store, as the name suggests, was built as a warehouse for the Royal Australian Navy by the Army (according to the plaque that is affixed to the wall of the building).

 

It comprises of a two storey steel framed, masonry building and is located on the same site that encompasses the Artillery Barracks and Fremantle Harbour Signal Station.

 

With the Naval Store located in close proximity to the port, it provided easy access for storing and distributing supplies to naval vessels.

 

Fremantle Port has historically been an important naval base during both World Wars. This was especially the case in WW2 when the port became a submarine base, following the bombing of Pearl Harbour by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service on 7 December 1941.

2020 - 2025

HMAS Stirling

HMAS Stirling on Garden Island was commissioned on 28 July 1978. It was recognised early on by Captain James Stirling in 1827 as a potential naval base but it wasn’t until 1966 when a feasibility study was conducted on the island, did the Australian Government endorse the establishment of HMAS Stirling as a naval support facility. During World War 2, Garden Island had been used by the Department of Army, who constructed a number of gun batteries and ancillary buildings to protect Cockburn Sound as part of Fremantle Fortress.

 

HMAS Leeuwin

HMAS Leeuwin in East Fremantle was commissioned on 1 August 1940 as a depot for the Royal Australian Navy. Two years later, it relocated to Preston Point on the otherside of the Swan River but was used again after World War 2 to train reservists and personnel. On 11 November 1960, HMAS Leeuwin was decommissioned as a naval base and reclassified for the purposes of a Junior Recruit Training Establishment (JRTE) until 1984.

 

The site appears to continue to operate under the Australian Army and although political discussions have arisen time to time in past debates in regards to selling the site off for redevelopment, the Department of Defence continues to maintain the site for the use of cadets and a range of other purposes.

The Naval Store Today

Since its construction in 1935, the warehouse had been leased to the Navy from the Army until 1980. With both HMAS Leeuwin and HMAS Stirling used by the Royal Australian Navy, as well as their changing needs, the Navy Store was no longer required and is now used for civilian purposes.

 

The Navy Store was previously been managed by the Enkel Collective Co-op Ltd, who leased out the warehouse for short term requirements, particularly for “arts, studios, music, exhibitions, events and more”.

 

As of 2025, a new contemporary arts organisation called Vessel is set to take over managing the Naval Store. The independent non-profit organisation plan to transform the industrial space “into a hub of innovation, creative incubation and boundary-pushing artistic programming”. In layman’s terms, this appears to mean a contemporary arts centre for artists to “practice and take creative risks”.

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