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Location96 Stevenson Street KEW, BOROONDARA CITY LevelIncl in HO area indiv sig |
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What is Significant?
The Carmelite Monastery Melbourne, 96 Stevenson Street, Kew, is
significant. It was established on previously undeveloped land in
Stevenson Street in the late 1920s. The land was part of the
'Stevenson Heights Estate' of 1927, subdivided from earlier large
estates that were part of Crown Allotment 76. Significant buildings,
designed in 1928 by architect William Patrick Conolly, include the
Romanesque Revival Church, the Spanish Mission style Cloister and
cottage, and other built elements, including the perimeter wall and
Spanish baroque gateway. The grounds are also significant, including
the organisation of space into ornamental and productive gardens, the
existing pathway layout, and mature trees in particular the row of
Cupressus sempervirens, which was part of the original
planting scheme, and other mature vegetation (including mature
conifers, Quercus palustris, Betula pendula, Ulmus
sp, Cinnamomum camphora, Grevillea robusta, Cordyline
australis). The subdivision pattern reflected in the perimeter
wall is also significant. The later brick buildings, which were not extant in the 1930s, are
not significant. Newly brick-paved surfaces, although not an
unsympathetic introduction to the interwar garden, and the modern
metal entrance gates, are not significant. The tennis court is not significant.
How is it significant?
The Carmelite Monastery Melbourne at 96 Stevenson Street, Kew, is of
local historic, aesthetic, and associative significance to the City of Boroondara.
Why is it significant?
Historically, the Carmelite Monastery Melbourne as a whole, including
its subdivision, Romanesque revival Church, Spanish Mission Cloister,
cottage, gateway, perimeter wall, and the grounds are significant as a
highly intact and well-maintained architect-designed monastic complex,
in continuous use by the Carmelite nuns as a contemplative cloistered
community since it opened in 1929. (Criterion A) The Carmelite Monastery Melbourne subdivision is significant for the
evidence it provides of the early pattern of subdivision in this part
of Kew in 1927 from larger estates with individual mansions. The
Monastery was established on previously undeveloped land in Stevenson
Street in the late 1920s, on cleared land in between the estates of
'Mount Royal' and 'Mooroolbeck'. The land was originally part of Crown
Allotment 76, the original grant of John Bakewell, which was
subdivided into irregular shaped parcels of land. The irregular east
boundary of the Carmelite Monastery and the boundary wall remain as
tangible evidence of this irregularity in the earlier subdivision.
(Criterion A) The Monastery provides evidence of the sustained and influential
presence of religious orders in Boroondara from the nineteenth century
and well into the twentieth, particularly evident in Kew, whose
histories became entwined with the histories of local schools,
hospitals and welfare institutions founded and maintained by them.
Unlike some religious orders, that were active and influential in the
community, however, the Carmelites are distinguished as an enclosed
religious order. However, the inclusion in the monastery of a public
Oratory meant the community was welcomed to their Masses. The grounds
and the spatial arrangement of the site into cloistered and publicly
accessible spaces provide important evidence of the cloistered
lifestyle of the Carmelite nuns, and the relationship between the nuns
and the community. (Criterion A) The Church at the Carmelite Monastery Melbourne is significant as one
of a number of Roman Catholic buildings established in Kew in the
interwar period that were built in the Romanesque Revival
architectural style. Opened in 1921, the Sacred Heart Church on Cotham
Road, Kew, is an earlier and grander example of the Romanesque revival
style used for Roman Catholic Buildings, than the Church at the
Carmelite Monastery. Both churches are associated with church
architect William Patrick Conolly who was responsible for the
completion of the Sacred Heart Church. The Church at the Carmelite
Monastery Melbourne was designed by Conolly seven years later in 1928.
Two years after that, Conolly designed the VHR listed third Church at
St John's, East Melbourne; likewise a grander building than the
Carmelite Church but in the same Romanesque architectural style. Two
decades earlier, in 1907-08, Conolly had designed another grand
Catholic Church in the Romanesque revival style in regional Victoria,
in Benalla. (Criterion D) The Church at the Carmelite Monastery Melbourne is therefore
significant as representative of Conolly's early twentieth century
church architecture in Victoria the Romanesque style, which perhaps
reached its zenith in the St John's Church example in East Melbourne
of 1930. Characteristic features of the style that are represented by
the Carmelite Monastery church include: the semi-circular arch
openings for the main entry (a simplified Romanesque portal with
paired colonnettes) and for the plate tracery windows on the east and
west elevations; the circular rose window and the Machicolation motif
on the masonry band above it on the principal elevation. The siting of
the Church on a relatively high ground, the higher eastern side of the
site, is also characteristic of Romanesque Revival architecture. The
striking and elaborate interior decoration of the Church, overseen by
Conolly and completed in 1931, is also highly intact and well
maintained. (Criterion D) The Cloister, Cottage, boundary wall and gateway are also significant
as highly intact Monastic buildings designed in 1928 by Conolly. These
other Monastic buildings, Conolly designed in the Spanish Mission
architectural style. The terracotta tiled roofs of the Cloister and
Cottage, small-paned timber framed windows in arched openings, and the
roughcast rendered walls are all characteristic of the style. The
buildings are physically and stylistically linked by the use of
interwar Mediterranean revival architectural styles (Spanish Mission
and Romanesque), and are unified by the consistency of the roughcast
render finish to the walls. The buildings are highly intact and well
maintained. (Criterion D) The grounds of the Monastery are significant for their high degree of
intactness, integrity and as typical interwar and monastic gardens.
The original grounds are highly intact, and appear to retain a very
high proportion of their original layout, organisation of space,
circulation patterns, and planting. The organisation of the grounds
into discrete garden rooms, the combination of formally laid out
ornamental gardens and productive gardens, some of the plant species
(especially conifers, Mediterranean Cypress, Golden Elm, camellias),
and the concrete paths with rolled concrete edges are characteristic
of interwar gardens. The layout of the cloister garden is a
centuries-old characteristic of cloister gardens; square in plan and
divided equally into four sections by two intersecting paths that meet
at a central focal point (usually a statue, planting, or fountain). A
single tree is planted in each of the four sections. (Criterion D) The Carmelite Monastery Melbourne has potential for strong or special
associations with the Carmelite nuns who reside there, the broader
Carmelite community, and the congregation. (Criterion G) The Monastery is significant for its association with Catholic
Archbishop Daniel Mannix (1864-1963), who performed the foundation
stone ceremony for the new Carmelite Monastery in July 1928, the
cloistering ceremony on the Monastery's opening day on 19 May 1929,
and a dedication ceremony for the set of mosaic Stations of the Cross
in April 1933. (Criterion H)
Religion
Monastery