Richmond pub The Kingston collapses into administration
One of Melbourne's most historic pubs is facing an uncertain future as its owners grapple with financial strife.
The Kingston, a heritage-listed venue on Highett St in Richmond dating back to the 1850s, has collapsed into insolvency, with administrators undertaking an urgent sale campaign.
The Richmond institution is owned by the De Fraga family, spearheaded by husband and wife duo Jonathan and Chantal De Fraga, who are prominent names in Melbourne's hospitality scene.
It can also be revealed that the De Fraga family sold off two other popular Richmond venues – Public House and the Swan Hotel.
It is understood both venues were purchased by hospitality giant Australian Venue Co., with settlement completed in October 2024.
The Kingston, which employs 29 staff, advertises itself online as a 'sophisticated yet relaxed hotel and dining experience, nestled in the quiet leafy streets of Richmond'.
The hotel has recently undergone an extensive revamp, estimated to cost $1.5m, including a newly renovated public bar, deck and beer garden, and the addition of ritzy restaurant Marble & Pearl, showcasing premium Australian beef and local seafood.
In the mid-1970s, The Kingston was a significant early player in the development of inner-city pubs as music venues, hosting bands including the Pelaco Brothers, Skyhooks and Crossfire
For six years in the 1980s, it became an all-lesbian run pub, with the late Pat Longmore as its licensee.
The pub, which is housed in a corporate vehicle called Trident Star Enterprises, previously faced a winding up application by the Australian Tax Office lodged in the Federal Court in January this year.
Winding up notices are usually issued by creditors of a company in order to enforce the payment of a debt.
If the debt is found legitimate and a company is unable to pay, the business is usually placed into liquidation by the court.
The winding up application has since been adjourned and the company was placed into voluntary administration, with Daniel Juratowitch and Rachel Burdett of Cor Cordis appointed administrators on March 11.
A Cor Cordis spokesman told the Herald Sun they had run a successful sales campaign, which attracted strong interest from potential purchasers.
'A number of interested parties are now undertaking due diligence in relation to the company's affairs and future prospects,' they said.
The spokesman said the De Fraga family may consider proposing a deal to creditors – known as a deed of company arrangement – although no formal proposal had been put forward at this time.
They said a second meeting of creditors was not required to be held until July this year.
'The administrators will continue to fulfil their statutory duties and will keep creditors informed as the administration progresses,' they said.
The Swan Hotel was also housed in the company Trident Star Enterprises, while Public House was run by Mr De Fraga's company Public House Consolidated, which has since entered liquidation, a notice lodged with ASIC earlier this week reveals.
Mr De Fraga had previously completed an estimated $3m renovation on Public House in 2020.
It comes after the appointment of administrators to Trident Star Enterprises ended up in the Supreme Court of Victoria this week, after Cor Cordis legal representatives discovered a technical defect with the process of their appointment.
The appointment had been made by Mrs De Fraga using the power of attorney after the court revealed Mr De Fraga had been diagnosed with a serious illness – an act found to be legally ineffective.
But the court decided that the appointment was ultimately valid, citing the administrators' good faith, urgency and need to avoid disruption.
Justice Paul Cosgrave said the administrators had already taken substantive steps in conducting the administration.
'Primarily, they have continued to operate the Kingston Hotel business and have procured the transfer of the liquor licence,' he said.
'It is likely that any challenge to the validity of their appointment would be disruptive to the business and create further inconvenience and potential loss to creditors.'
The Kingston was contacted for comment.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

AU Financial Review
36 minutes ago
- AU Financial Review
‘It's been one of the hardest things we've had to deal with'
Before she was the chief executive of Dun & Bradstreet, the first Australian woman to lead a management buyout, and a company director, Christine Christian grew up in the country, an hour out of Melbourne. Every Sunday, her father would take her and her siblings to the big smoke, where the Victorian State Library was a regular haunt. 'I got to know every nook and cranny in this place when I was young,' she says from a quiet room at the institution. 'We'd look at the big maps and atlases, and dream of where we might go. I still remember walking up the steps as a little kid. It was all just … so grand, so awe-inspiring.'

Sky News AU
37 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
Nationals Leader David Littleproud demand Prime Minister Anthony Albanese rules out kowtowing on US beef imports
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese 'needs to' immediately rule out kowtowing to Donald Trump on biosecurity laws on US beef imports, Nationals Leader David Littleproud has demanded. Government officials reportedly told The Sydney Morning Herald that Australia could alter its biosecurity laws to allow US beef exports without risks to local industry, in a move to appease Trump as he wages his trade war. Australia banned US beef in 2003 after a mad cow disease outbreak before undoing this in 2019 when the outbreak subsided. Cattle raised in Mexico and Canada but slaughtered in the US is still banned, however, this could be changed according to the report. Mr Littleproud raised concerns about Australia's cattle industry on Friday and urged the Prime Minister not to use the sector as a bargaining chip in negotiations with the US President. 'There needs to be certainty. The Prime Minister needs to rule it out immediately,' the Nationals Leader said on Sky News. 'He needs to make sure that he's very clear with Australian producers that our biosecurity standards will not be reduced and that … if we want to get imports that originated from Mexico or Canada, that there's some traceability on it like Australian producers have.' He called for the Prime Minister to be transparent with Australian beef producers as concerns fester about the nation's biosecurity following this report. 'I don't think Australian producers are asking for anything unfair here, they're just trying to protect their production systems, making sure that they can not only feed Australians but feed the world,' Mr Littleproud said. 'The Prime Minister and his department who are mooting these things need to be very, very clear with Australian beef producers that it's not on the table and it won't be on the table at all. 'But when you start getting these reports - you don't start seeing these reports unless there's smoke and when there's smoke, there's fire.' Australia exports more than $4b of beef to the US annually, making it the largest market for Aussie beef exports behind China. After Trump revealed his sweeping tariffs and invited impacted nations to negotiate, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese vowed to protect the nation's biosecurity laws, Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and news publishers against tech giants. 'We will not weaken the measures that protect our farmers and producers from the risks of disease or contamination,' he said in a statement. Cattle Australia chief executive Chris Parker issued a statement highlighting the importance of traceability for foreign-produced beef. 'Our position is that the US needs to be able to demonstrate it can either trace cattle born in Mexico and Canada, or has systems that are equivalent to Australia's traceability, before imports of meat could occur from non-US cattle,' Mr Parker said. 'Cattle Australia is in ongoing communication with the Federal Government regarding this issue and the vital importance that our science-based biosecurity system is not compromised as part of trade discussions with any country.' Mr Albanese is expected to have a meeting with Trump either on the sidelines of the G7 meeting in Canada or in the US later in June where the Prime Minister will make Australia's case for tariff exemptions. Australia faces 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium alongside a broad 10 per cent levy on all goods, which is still paused by the Trump Administration.

AU Financial Review
an hour ago
- AU Financial Review
AI jobs: Apocalypse or a four-day week? What AI might mean for you
Paul Smith Technology editor It is 2027 and the world-leading US artificial intelligence company OpenBrain has lost control of its latest system, Agent 4, which has grown so smart that it hides its true abilities and goals from the human engineers and earlier AI models monitoring its development. Over in China, a rival company, DeepCent, is only two months behind in the race to build an artificial superintelligence that surpasses human intelligence in all domains. Paul Smith Technology editor Paul Smith edits the technology coverage and has been a leading writer on the sector for 20 years. He covers big tech, business use of tech, the fast-growing Australian tech industry and start-ups, telecommunications and national innovation policy. Connect with Paul on Twitter. Email Paul at psmith@