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| Other NameSurbiton Location71 Stevenson Street KEW, Boroondara City LevelIncl in HO area indiv sig |  | 
  What is Significant?
 Surbiton at 71 Stevenson Street, Kew, a Victorian Italianate
  residence built in 1875 for John Charles Walter, Treasury officer,
  Solicitor and Proctor of the Supreme Court is significant. Walter also
  served as a Director of the Victorian Pyrites and General Smelting
  Company and on the general committee of the Homeopathic Hospital.
  Walter built Surbiton and lived there until it was sold in 1884 to
  Fitzroy timber merchant Anthony Bray Lindley. A subsequent owner was
  Western District squatter Walter George Simmons whose property
  holdings included Moreton Plains near Stawell and Nareeb Nareeb near
  Glenthompson before relocating to Surbiton until 1905 when the
  property was again sold. 
  How is it significant?
 Surbiton at 71 Stevenson Street Kew is of local historic,
  architectural and aesthetic significance to the City of Boroondara. 
  Why is it significant?
 Surbiton at 71 Stevenson Street Kew is historically significant as a
  demonstration of early-mid Victorian residences before the boom of the
  1880s and 1890s. Often referred to as mansions, their size and degree
  of refinement contrasted against the general scale of housing at the
  time. Surbiton reflects the history of Kew as a suburb of British
  expatriates who built their home and gardens to replicate those that
  they had left behind. The ownership of the 71 Stevenson Street
  reflects the status of Kew as a suburb for the well-off, whose
  professions included Government officials, merchants and pastoralists
  from the Western District of Victoria. (Criterion A)  Surbiton demonstrates the early-mid Victorian architecture of the
  Victorian Italianate and Renaissance Revival, reflecting the
  predominant architecture of the time in Britain. Like other residences
  of this decade, Surbiton is more refined in detail and form than
  Victorian Italianate houses of the 1880s and 90s, and relies on a
  classical vocabulary of low pitched hipped roofs, restrained use of
  bay windows, classical mouldings in stucco. (Criterion D)  Aesthetically Surbiton, designed by architects Dall and Roberts is
  significant for its Victorian Italianate design including a projecting
  front wing with canted bay window and a classically-derived three
  light window. The building is enhanced by the stucco finish and
  mouldings including eaves brackets, window mouldings and quoining; and
  its slate roof. Other notable features include the concave verandah
  features with cast iron posts and a fine frieze and brackets (note
  that this may have been rebuilt). The integrity and intactness of
  Surbiton contributes to its aesthetic values. (Criterion E)
Residential buildings (private)
House