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Location24 Ryrie Street, GEELONG VIC 3220 - Property No 303235 LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
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C Listed - Local Significance
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE
The building at 24 Ryrie Street, Geelong, has significance as a
reaonably intact example of both an 1874 Victorian building and a late
1890's Federation Free style building. It has further historical
significance as the location of the undertaker, James Monro, from
1874. He occupied the building until his death in c.1905 when the
building continued to be occupied by the Monro family until 1966. The building at 24 Ryrie Street is architecturally significant at a
LOCAL level. Although altered, it still demonstrates original or early
design qulities of its 1874 construction and late 1890's alterations,
forming an eclectic Victorian and Federation Free style. These
qualities include the ground floor timber framed shopfront windowswith
panelled stall boards below, ingo with the timber framed doorway and
transom window above, and the side timber framed doorway with four
panelledtimber doorand transom window above.Other intact or
appropriate qualities of the 1874 era include the gable roof form,
unpainted dichromatic brick chimney with a multi-corbelled top
(eastern side), and the location of the first floor windows. The
Morewood and Rogers galvanised iron pantiles may be recycled from the
original 1850's building on this site. Intact or appropriate qualities
of the late rendered brick curved bay with a capped top and flanking
narrower bays having projecting painted piers with moulded capping and
circular motifs between. Other intact or appropriate qualities include
the painted and rendered brick wall contruction, unpainted red brick
chimney with a multi-corbelled top (western side), side brick
parapets, configuration of the rear spaces and the front verandah that
is supported by square timber columns and is adorned with simple
timber fretwork valances and balustrades, with the balcony valance
accentuated by the solid curved timbering having trefoil cut-outs. The building at 24 Ryrie Street is scientifically significant at a
LOCAL level. The Morewood and Rogers roof pantiles represent a rare
form of construction popular in Victoria in the 1850's. Overall, the building at 24 Ryrie Street is of LOCAL significance.
REFERENCES
Drainage Plans and Reports, Barwon Water profis system, 1916,1917,1930,1935,1949.
Sands & McDougall Geelong Directory 1972, Geelong Historical
Records Centre.
Sand & McDougall "Invicta" Geelong directory 1968,
Geelong Historical Records Centre.
Geelong City Council Rate Books (Kardinia Ward) 1870-1960, Geelong
Historical Records Centre.
Geelong Town Plan 1881, Geelong Historical Records Centre.
Morrow, W, Geelong Advertiser Index, 1874, Geelong Historical
Records Centre.
Hawthorne, Ian, Geelong and District, Geelong Historical Records Centre.
Removed from City Fringe Heritage Overlay
Commercial
Office building