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Location160 LORD STREET, RICHMOND VIC 3121 - Property No 200550
File NumberY2011:9019LevelRecommended for Heritage Overlay |
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What is significant? How is it significant? Why is it significant? The dwellings are also of aesthetic/architectural significance. They represent a variant on Federation house architecture, and while comparatively modest in size, are distinguished by their detailing and prominent gabled verandahs. Elements of note include the gridded Japanese-flavoured verandah friezes; paired verandah posts with floral cut-out post spandrels; painted cement dressings; three-light front windows in box frames over apron sills; and chimney stacks.
The properties at 160-166 Lord Street, Richmond are a row of four adjoining single storey Federation brick cottages, with hipped roof forms clad in corrugated galvanised steel, and gabled front bays with verandahs. The single bay verandahs each screen a three-light box-framed window; the front doors are set well back to the side of each house.
The properties at 160-166 Lord Street, Richmond, are of local historical and aesthetic/architectural significance.
The properties are of historical significance, as a substantially externally intact collection of four Federation brick cottages which date from 1911-12, and provide evidence of worker's housing in Richmond in the early twentieth century. The dwellings are associated with Eleazer Lesser, who acquired and developed a number of properties in Richmond in this period, including similar residential developments in Lord Street, Dickens Street and Burnley Street.
Residential buildings (private)
House