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Other NameShop and residence Location37 GLASS STREET, ESSENDON, MOONEE VALLEY CITY LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
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What is significant? The building is a two-storey shop and residence on a corner site.
Walls are of clinker brick with panels of cast-cement relief and
tiles, and the hip roof is clad in terracotta tiles. The facade
composition is asymmetric, with one half of the tiled hip roof framed
by raised piers and the other hidden by a parapet. A verandah,
supported by steel tie-backs, sits above the broad shopfront. The
shopfront was replaced c1950s, but is sympathetic in that it has
retained the configuration of the original.
How is it significant?
Why is it significant? It is historically significant for demonstrating a bygone aspect of
pre-WWII life: Prior to widespread car ownership and home
refrigeration, neighbourhood corner stores were an important amenity
in residential areas, where day-to-day needs could be purchased.
(Criterion A)
The corner shop at 37 Glass Street, Essendon, is significant. It
was built for a Miss E McDonald in 1929 to a design by Melbourne
architect Harry Norris.
The shop is of local architectural/aesthetic and historical
significance to the City of Moonee Valley.
It is architectural historicallysignificant for its association
with leading Melbourne interwar commercial architect Harry A Norris.
His practice was founded in the early twenties and spread interstate
through his clients' commercial activity. He was responsible for many
notable buildings, including Mitchell House, the Nicholas Building,
the Kellow Falkiner Showroom, and Majorca House in central Melbourne.
The shop illustrates Norris' translation of a high-end architectural
fashion to a suburban context. It is also of architectural and
aesthetic significance as a shop in the Spanish Mission style, which
was rarely used for commercial buildings in Moonee Valley. It is
distinguished for its striking Spanish Baroque cast-cement reliefs and
the Moorish tiles of its facade, as well as for its fine verandah,
which has a level of detail rarely seen on suburban shops. (Criteria
H, B & E)
Retail and Wholesale
Milk Bar