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LocationUnion Road and Bona Vista Avenue and The Avenue and Warwick Avenue SURREY HILLS, BOROONDARA CITY LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
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What is Significant
The Union Road South Residential Precinct is of historical and
aesthetic/architectural significance to the City of Boroondara. Why is it Significant The Union Road South Residential Precinct is of historical
significance,as a long-standing residential area in Union Road, Surrey
Hills, which demonstrates aspects of the growth and consolidation of
Surrey Hillsfrom the latter decades of the nineteenth century through
to the later interwar period. Development generally commenced in the
1880s after extension of the railway line to Lilydale and the
construction of the railway station in 1882. However, as with other
areas of Surrey Hills,the 1890s economic Depression stymied
development, which then picked up again after the extension of the
Riversdale Road tramway through to Wattle Park in 1916 and the
cessation of World War I, with development intensifying and
consolidating in the interwar period. Land in the precinct was
promoted in early estate subdivisions as being especially
'picturesque' , a result of the topography of the precinct, and the
elevated siting of the east side of Union Road in particular. The
precinct is also not able for a concentration of larger scaled houses
on generous allotments in the northern section, which in turn reflects
apattern which is common in Boroondara, of establishing substantial
properties on main or principal roads.
Grading and Recommendations
Recommended for inclusion in the Schedule to the Heritage Overlay of
the Boroondara Planning Scheme as a precinct. For a full list of individual place gradings within the precinct,
please refer to the attached PDF citation, or individual child records
attached to this parent record. For full details of individual gradings within the precinct, please
refer to the attached PDF citation, or child records.
Union Road South Residential Precinct, Surrey Hills, is located
between Canterbury Road to the north and Riversdale Road to the south,
Union Road to the west and The Avenue to the east. The precinct, in
two main areas, comprises 'significant' and 'contributory' dwellings
from the1880s through to early 1940s, and has a comparatively high
level of intactness. Properties included in the precinct are
concentrated alongand to the east side of Union Road in the northern
section of the precinct. In terms of the topography, the precinct
slopes down from the north to the south with, as a general pattern,
larger and older housesat the north end and smaller and more modern
dwellings further south. In the higher areas of Union Road, houses are
also often elevated off the ground, which enhances their presentation
and prominence. A large number of dwellings are of timber, a building
material which is characteristic of Surrey Hills; there are also brick
buildings in the precinct. In terms of the eras and styles of
development, there are two main periods albeit with intervening bursts
of building activity. They are the late Victorian and Federation
periods of development, following the initiall and sales of the 1880s
which resulted in houses being built from the1880s (a limited number)
into the 1890s to 1910s; then the second major phase of development
following World War One with houses in the precinctdating from the
1920s through to c.1940 (and effectively the early yearsof World War
Two, prior to the 1942 ban on non-essential construction).
How is it Significant
Union Road South Residential Precinct is also of
aesthetic/architectural significance. Victorian houses are generally
in the Italianate manner with L-shaped plans; iron verandah friezes;
verandah roofs separated from the main hipped and slate-clad roofs;
corniced chimneys; and some timber ashlar fronts on weather board
examples. Federation architecture is represented in houses at the
north end of Union Road and in The Avenue, and displays some typical
characteristics of the genre including a dominant main roof often with
an integral verandah roof; diagonal planning; return verandahs; and an
accentuated corner bay or tower bracketed by two or more wings
projecting at right angles. More numerousin the precinct are Bungalow
designs and later interwar housing, which also display typical
characteristics such as horizontal proportions;square plans with a
corner 'cut outs' to provide for a porch-verandah;side entries set
well back on the site; and main transverse gable roofs, sometimes with
a gabled wing to the front. Later interwar houses in the precinct have
simplified Tudor elements in clinker and tapestry brick,with some
cement render; brick gable fronts with boxed eaves; steeper roof
pitches than seen with the Bungalows; slender chimneys with no potsand
often without verandahs.
Residential buildings (private)
Residential Precinct