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Other NameCanterbury Mansions Location208 Canterbury Road,, CANTERBURY VIC 3126 - Property No B4908
File NumberB4908LevelState |
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Canterbury Mansions (1889) and stables, formerly the Canterbury Club
Hotel, is historically and architecturally significant at state level as
a rare example of a suburban hotel complex of the late nineteenth
century; a complex which includes the kitchen wing and two-storey brick
stables, which were an integral and necessary part of the activities of
the hotel.
The former Canterbury Club Hotel is also unique and historically
significant in being able to provide visible, easily identifiable
evidence, in built form, of the influence and power of the Temperance
Movement in Victoria in the nineteenth and twentieth century. This
movement brought about the reduction in numbers of hotels in Victoria in
the nineteenth century; lessened the hours of hotel trading in 1915 and
introduced "six o'clock closing" in 1916; and culminated with
the Local Option Poll of 1920 and the closure of hotels in the
Municipalities of Box Hill and Camberwell. Canterbury Mansions is the
only known intact readily identifiable example of such an hotel.
Canterbury Mansions is architecturally significant as an example of the
work of the important boom architect, William Wolf, designed in a
conservative Italianate style which successfully adds to the prominence
of the corner site by its composition with wings flanking a distinctive tower.
Classified: 26/11/1981
Revised: 15/05/1991
Farming and Grazing
Stables