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Location141-149 Ryrie Street, GEELONG VIC 3220 - Property No 217648 LevelIncl in HO area indiv sig |
C Listed - Local Significance
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE The Belchers Corner building, 141 -149 Ryrie Street, Geelong, has significance as a legacy of the commercial developments in Geelong during the interwar (1920s - 40s) period and particularly with Norman Belcher, a member of the prominent business family whose father George F. Belcher had built the adjacent Hopetoun Chambers building in 1891. Constructed in 1926 to a design by I.G. Anderson, the building has further significance for its landmark corner situation, with visual connections to other significant interwar and Victorian commercial buildings. The Belchers Corner building, 141 - 149 Ryrie Street, is architecturally significant at a LOCAL level. It demonstrates original design qualities of a conservative interwar modern Renaissance style. These qualities include the regularly arranged first floor window bays with a colonnade of square Corinthian pilasters on the Ryrie Street facade, entablature which reads "Belchers Corner" on the Ryrie Street facade and "MCMXXI" on the Moorabool Street facade, entablature roundels, steel framed 12 paned first floor windows with hopper sashes and blind panels above the panels outside the pilaster colonnade having decorative sculptural motifs, slight projection of the ground floor facades, three paned steel framed ground floor highlights, cantilevered verandah, shopfront composition and form, including the metal framed shop-fronts with ingoes, broadly projecting cornice and the parapets with alternating solid panels and voids. Internally, the significant features include the office layout and detailing, particularly the modern Renaissance timber joinery architraves, door-heads, transoms and timber doors, and timber staircase. The Belchers Corner building also has a notable townscape relationship with three other prominent buildings forming the intersection of the two principal Geelong thoroughfares of Moorabool and Ryrie Streets. The building complements the architecture of the structures visually connected to it, notably the former T amp G Building 1934, former Mercantile Bank 1888 and former Bank of New South Wales 1938. The Belchers Corner building, 141 - 149 Ryrie Street, is historically significant at a LOCAL level. It is associated with commercial developments in Geelong during the interwar 1920s1940s period. In particular, this building has associations with Norman Belcher, auctioneer and estate agent, who had the building constructed in 1926 to a design by I.G. Anderson, architect, the contractor being J.C. Taylor and Sons. Belcher was a member of a prominent and established family in Geelong, with his father, George F. Belcher, having built the neighbouring Hopetoun Chambers in 1891. Overall, the Belchers Corner building, 141 - 149 Ryrie Street, is of LOCAL significance. References M. Beraldo, 'Studio 4 Conservation Project Belchers Corner, unpublished manuscript, School of Architecture amp Building, Deakin University, 1991. Beraldo used the following sources Anderson, I.G. Original Drawings for Belchers Corner Building. Anderson, I.G. Specification of work to be done, April 1926. Auction Notice 1938. "Geelong" Promotional publication for the City of Geelong, 1930. Geelong Advertiser, 22 August 1891 and 21 August 1926. Taylor, J.C. & Sons Statement of Accounts, undated. Geelong City Rate Book, Barwon Ward, 1938. D. Rowe (Authentic Heritage Services Pty Ltd), 'Geelong West Town Hall Heritage Report with Recommendations for Future Development', prepared for the Geelong Ethnic Communities Council, August - September 2001. Geelong Town Plan, 1858, Geelong Historical Records Centre.
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