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Location28 VIEW STREET KANGAROO FLAT, GREATER BENDIGO CITY
File Number607860LevelRegistered |
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The Kangaroo Flat school is the sole occupant of a triangular block
surrounded by road in Kangaroo Flat. The first Common school was built
here in 1870 by builder George Pallett, to a design by the prolific
Bendigo architectural firm of Vahland and Getzschman. The style has
been described as German Renaissance Revival. The building is of red
brick with cream brick pilasters and parapets, and stucco detailing.
The elaborate front gable features a porch with twin arched openings
flanked by stucco tourelles, and pilasters surmounted by miniature
castellated cappings (now missing). When built a raised lantern ran
the length of the ridge above the queen-post truss roof structure.
This was intended to provide light and ventilation to the classroom
without the distraction and glare from windows in walls. The side
walls were originally blank, and windows were added in the early
twentieth century when the lantern was removed. The second brick
building was added in 1877, in a restrained Gothic style similar to
many urban schools of that period. It features cream and red brick
banding and patterning, timber eaves brackets and bellcote, and
jerkinhead slate roof. The adjoining timber and weatherboard
classrooms with verandah were added shortly after. The buildings are
now a part of the Kangaroo Flat Primary School which also occupies
newer premises on another block nearby. The Kangaroo Flat School building is of architectural importance to
the State of Victoria. The design of the Vahland and Getzschmann portion of the Kangaroo
Flat Common School exhibits a particularly rich and unusual
combination of features, in a period when most Common schools,
especially in rural areas, were very austere. The building is executed
in a striking German Romanesque Revival style, making use of
decorative elements and scale in a manner not seen among the other
works of these architects. Kangaroo Flat displays the most complete
and elaborate example of three school buildings designed in very
similar form and style by these architects. The shape of the existing
gable ends still reflects the unusual lantern for ventilation and
lighting which originally ran the length of the ridge.
Education
School - State (public)