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Other NameSan Remo Ballroom Location357 NICHOLSON STREET,, CARLTON NORTH VIC 3054 - Property No 215185 LevelIncl in HO area not sig |
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Precinct statement of significance
Component streets include:
Amess Street, Birdsall Place, Canning Street, Curtain Street, Davids
Lane, Davis Street, Drummond Lane, Drummond Street, Earl Street,
Fenwick Street, Fletcher Lane, Henry Street, Herbert Street, Hughes
Street, Lee Street, Lygon Street, Macpherson Street, Mary Street,
Newry Street, Nicholson Street, Ogrady Street, Park Street, Pigdon
Street, Princes Street, Rathdowne Street, Reserve Street, Richardson
Street, Shakespeare Street, Station Street, Sutton Street.
Statement of Significance
What is significant?
Survey patterns
Land that was to become North Carlton and Princes Hill, developed
from the 1850s as an outpost of Melbourne Town, with a blue stone
quarry reserve, an associated penal station, and the Melbourne General
Cemetery as the main attributes set among native woodland. North Carlton (66) was surveyed in 1869 (67) as an extension for
Melbourne's residential suburbs. The new half-acre blocks extended as
far as Fenwick St, continuing the north-south grid of Carlton, with 30
metre frontage allotments served by generous 20 and 30 metre wide
government roads. Reserves were set aside for public buildings and
gardens. The renowned surveyor, Clement Hodgkinson, was the initiator
of the 1869 North Carlton plan, as head of the Crown Lands and Survey
Department (68). In 1876 the balance of North Carlton, north of Fenwick St
(approximately 173 acres), was subdivided into small suburban lots
typically with 15 metre frontages but each was provided with the
Victorian-era amenity of rear service lanes, separating utilitarian
household functions such as coal and other deliveries, nightsoil
cartage and stabling, from the formal house facade. The 30m wide roads
of Drummond, Rathdowne and Canning Streets were also continued north.
The subdivision led to a distinctive form of housing development where
closely spaced, sometimes richly decorated, houses are viewed over low
formally arranged front gardens and fences, forming a continuous and
distinctive residential Victorian-era streetscape. The extension of the Melbourne Building Act in 1872 to cover
all of the Melbourne municipality ensured fire proof regulated
construction and promoted a more homogenous built character for North
Carlton (69).
Transport
Public transport which was at first a horse-drawn omnibus service
along Nicholson St to the city, stimulated development in Canning and
Station Streets where standard pattern terrace housing predominated.
With the population growth came the first government primary school
(opened 1873, later replaced by the Lee St Primary School, 1878 (70),
shops, shop rows, and corner hotels. The 1883 announcement of Rathdowne and Nicholson Sts as future cable
tram routes meant an explosion of dense residential development of
terrace housing in almost every street north to Park Street. In 1887-8
new cable tram and Inner Circle railway services gave this area
perhaps the best access to public transport of any Victorian-era inner
Melbourne suburb: rows of shops and residences were built along the
tram routes. At the cable tram terminus in Nicholson St, adjoining the
North Fitzroy Inner Circle railway station, a major shopping centre
developed with grand shop rows, extending from Macpherson to Park
Streets. Then at the fringe of suburbia, northern sections of Canning
and Drummond Sts were popular for larger, detached late Victorian
houses that might have been served by private transport in the form of
stabling. The Inner Circle passenger train link to the Melbourne
(Princes Bridge) was completed in 1901 and operated until 1948 which
explains the popularity of North Carlton in the Edwardian and Interwar eras.
Landscape
Significant public landscape in the area is both early, in the form
of Curtain Square with its Victorian era residential perimeter, and
residual, such as the linear park along the former Inner Circle
railway in Park St. Significant street trees include median planting
of Drummond St (mature poplars) and Canning St (mature palms
alternating with poplars), more recent median planting of exotic trees
along the line of the former cable tram route in Rathdowne Street(pin
oaks), and the plane trees along the centre of Newry St. Small front
gardens in the dominant terrace housing of the suburb make up most of
the private landscape, including typically low and visually
transparent iron and masonry fences, ornamental borders to garden
beds, and paved paths and verandah floors: all often highly decorative. These living landscape elements along with the hard landscape of the
street and its fittings, such as the stone paving and cast-iron street
furniture, reinforce the strong sense of period in the suburb.
Main development phases
Post 1900, infilling of North Carlton's vacant sites proceeded
quickly and by about 1915 the suburb was virtually complete, with
religious and educational buildings, and government services following
each development surge. The suburb, once developed, was almost entirely residential with some
factory-warehouse development after 1900 serving the commercial
development in Nicholson and Rathdowne Streets. As a result North Carlton is a highly homogenous 19th and early 20th
century residential suburb largely occupied by dense terrace
development, set within a rigid rectilinear grid of north-south and
east-west streets, served by rear lanes as an obligatory feature of
polite suburban life of the era. Early and original rear outbuildings
are an integral feature of the Victorian and Edwardian era character
of North Carlton and are of particular historic significance where
houses are on corner allotments where their outbuildings are exposed
to public view.
Immigration
As a dense residential enclave close to Melbourne, employment
centres, and the metropolitan public transport hub, North Carlton has
also shared in the accommodation role of other inner suburbs,
absorbing waves of immigration into aged but cheap housing stock and
developing specific ethnic attributes, among the existing Victorian
and Edwardian-era infrastructure, with each successive immigration wave. Traces of the Jewish (71), Greek, Italian (72), Lebanese and Turkish
communities that settled in the suburb are still evident. Their
community gathering places include those for the Serbian Orthodox, and
Ukrainian Orthodox Church communities, the 1932-3 Kadimah (former
Jewish centre), St. John the Baptist's Greek Orthodox Church, and the
more recent Mosque in Drummond Street. Often they occupy the
Victorian-era Christian buildings. Beyond the meeting places are the distinctive house renovations that
transformed the Victorian-era Italianate into a form of post WW2
Italianate. Examples of these have been documented by the National
Trust of Australia (Vic) (73): all of these places are important
milestones in North Carlton's development as a reception centre for immigrants.
Main development era
The main development period evident in the heritage overlay is that
of the Victorian and Edwardian-periods. There is also a contribution
from well preserved inter-war buildings, documented examples of
immigrant meeting places and house renovations, and individually
significant places of all eras.
Contributory elements
Contributory buildings or elements in the North Carlton Heritage
Overlay Area (HO326) include typically (but not exclusively) attached
and some detached Victorian-era and Edwardian-era one and two-storey
house groups and rows having typically: . Pitched gabled or hipped roofs, mainly set behind facade parapets, . Face brick (red, dichrome and polychrome) or stucco walls; . Corrugated iron roof and slate roof cladding, with some Marseilles
pattern unglazed terra-cotta tiles; . Chimneys of either stucco finish (with moulded caps) or of matching
face brickwork with corbelled capping courses; . Post-supported verandah elements facing the street, set out on two
levels as required, with cast-iron detailing; . Less than 40% of the street wall face comprised with openings such
as windows and doors; and . Front gardens, originally bordered by typically timber or iron
picket front fences of around 1m height; . Some face brick (typically red brick) stables with lofts at the
rear of the larger houses, and brick privies, all set on rear lanes; also . Corner shops and residences with display windows and zero boundary setbacks. Contributory elements also include attached Victorian-era and
Edwardian-era mainly two-storey shop and residence rows in the major
north-south streets, having typically: . Facade parapets, with pitched roofs behind; . Face brick (red, dichrome and polychrome) or stucco walls; . Corrugated iron and slate roof cladding; . Chimneys of either stucco finish (with moulded caps) or of matching
face brickwork with corbelled capping courses; . Post-supported, mainly Corporation Style iron street verandahs as
shown on the MMBW Detail Plans (74); . Less than 40% of the street upper wall face taken up with openings
such as windows; . No front or side setbacks; also . Timber framed display windows and entry recesses. Contributory elements also include: . Well preserved buildings including one storey houses and industrial
buildings from the pre Second War era; . Curtain Square, as a typical Victorian-era Garden Square, with
mature exotic formally arranged planting; . Mature street and park tree plantings (fig, palms, plane and elm trees); . Regular rectilinear allotment layout, street patterns and widths; . Provision of some public and church reserves in the town plan; . Public infrastructure, expressive of the Victorian and
Edwardian-eras such as bluestone pitched road paving, crossings, stone
kerbs, and channels, iron bollards and gas lamp bases, and asphalt
paved footpaths.
How is it significant?
North Carlton Heritage Overlay Area (HO326) is aesthetically,
socially and historically significant to the City of Yarra
(National Estate Register [NER]Criteria E1, G1, A4)
Why is it significant?
The North Carlton Heritage Overlay Area is significant: . For its association with Melbourne's early history, as seen in the
former Collingwood Stockade quarry reserve sites (such as Curtain
Square), and the Penal Station (later the Lee St. Primary School site). . As a demonstration, in plan form (south of Fenwick St), of 1869
urban design and the formal aesthetic of colonial urban planning for
orderly development and suburban amenity within Melbourne's 5-mile
township reserve, with the wide streets and intersections (laid out in
a north south grid) providing a superb framework for the ornamental,
highly cohesive built form of the precinct, with its intact 19th
century terraces, corner shops, hotels, and the plan's provision for
public, garden and religious building reserves, all enhanced by the
adjoining public landscape of the Melbourne General Cemetery; . For the association with Clement Hodgkinson, the initiator of the
1869 North Carlton plan, who was head of the Lands and Survey
Department and an important figure in the development of Melbourne's
inner-urban suburbs, parks, and 19th century infrastructure; . For the historical importance of the 1876 government subdivision
(North of Fenwick St) for its deliberate inclusion of much smaller,
affordable allotments in order to capture the rising market of small
investors, then aided by Building Society finance. This yielded the
rapidly built, dense Boom-era terrace housing, and the later similarly
dense attached Edwardian housing. No parks or reserves for religious
use were provided; . For inclusion in this subdivision of larger, 1/2 acre allotments,
as elevated sites along the wide streets of Lygon, Drummond and Park
Sts. The residual adjacent quarry-damaged areas delayed the sale and
development of these allotments such that they became superb sites for
large detached inter-war villas; . For the representation in the subdivisions of the conventions of
Victorian and Edwardian life where utilitarian features such as coal
sheds, privies, stables/garages, rubbish containers, vehicular
entrances or driveways, were concealed off lanes from public view; . For the early engineering and infrastructure such as the strict
grid formation of street, lane and allotment layouts, dressed
bluestone kerbs, pitched bluestone guttering, lanes and crossovers,
asphalt footpaths and roads, and the presence of formally planted
street trees which provided an important setting for a fine collection
of residential, community and commercial buildings; . For the high aesthetic value of the precinct as evident in the
continuous rows of similarly designed Victorian and Edwardian-era
architecture, the regular street pattern and wide north south streets; . For the valuable landscape features such as Curtain Square, with
its monuments and large trees, views to the Melbourne General
Cemetery, the formal 20th century European tree and palm plantations
in Drummond, Canning, and Rathdowne Streets, and plane trees planted
in Newry and Nicholson Streets, plus important private gardens; . As a highly intact example of a residential suburb built
substantially between 1868 and c1915, reflecting well the 1880-1891
Boom era and the Federation recovery period of 1900-1915, a fine
physical illustration of its major development period, with shops and
hotels built on corners to the residential streets, providing
Victorian-era, pre motor car convenience within walking distance; . As evidence of the effect on development of public transport in the
form of cable trams in Nicholson and Rathdowne Sts, and the Inner
Circle Railway (1888) that promoted dense, rapid development of the
precinct and the distinctive late Victorian commercial shopping strips
in these streets; . As the largest and most cohesive collection of small Victorian and
Edwardian terrace and attached housing forms of any suburb in the
State, with many small row houses and pairs sited in the longer,
narrower streets of the 1876 northern subdivision; . For the many examples of grandiose terrace housing, contrasting
with the simplicity of the less common early terrace forms; . For the important landmark buildings and community focal points in
the locality that include public buildings such as the Lee St Primary
School,19th century churches and halls, corner shops and hotels, and
the 20thcentury meeting places for immigrants, including Serbian
Orthodox, Ukrainian Orthodox Church communities, the 1932-3 Kadimah
(former Jewish centre), St. John the Baptist's Greek Orthodox Church,
and the more recent Albanian Mosque in Drummond Street; and . For the individually significant buildings from all eras and well
preserved building examples, from pre World War Two, that express a
rich assembly of architectural design within the characteristics of
Victorian and Federation-era residential styles, some factories and
warehouses, Moderne style flats, and large inter-war villas.
References
66 north of Princes St, also known as `Collingwood Stockade' and
later lunatic asylum 67 Yule (ed): 25 cites Parish plan dated 16 November 1869, with notes
that sales were to start Jan 1870 68 From 1860, Clement Hodgkinson was appointed the administrative
head of the Lands Department, and displayed a strong interest in the
planning and development of Melbourne's suburbs and parks. 1861- 1874
Clement Hodgkinson was the Victorian Assistant- Commissioner of Crown
Lands and Survey. 69 Yule (ed): 447 70 also known as North Carlton Primary or State School 71 Yule (ed): 59, 72-73, 304 Jewish influx 1880s-90s inner city,
1920s-50s Carlton centre of State population until WW2; Italians,
Greeks, Turks, Lebanese main phase 1950s-60s, Carlton as `Little
Italy' by 1960, peak 28.5% of Nth Carlton population by 1971, also
growth inter-war 72 Yule (ed): 476 1920s wave as escape from fascism, post WW2 wave 73 see Yule (ed): 473 A Willingham 74 See MMBW Detail Plan 1196 of 1899
Residential buildings (private)
Residence