| Back to search results » | Back to search page » |
|
Location126-144 Canterbury Road and 5-51 Chaucer Street and 2-28 Chaucer Street and 2-44 Dudley Parade and 4-6 Keats Street and 4-12 Marlowe Street and 9-25 Myrtle Road CANTERBURY, BOROONDARA CITY LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
|
What is Significant? Griffin Estate & Environs Precinct, comprising residential
properties at 126-144 Canterbury Road, 5-51 & 2-28 Chaucer
Crescent, 2-44 Dudley Parade, 4-6 Keats Street, 4-12 Marlowe Street
and 9-25 Myrtle Road, Canterbury, is significant. Griffin Estate was
originally subdivided in 1885, but less than half of the blocks sold
at that time. The central section, along the south side of Chaucer
Crescent and the east/north side of Myrtle Road and Dudley Parade, was
marketed for a second time in 1904, marking the beginning of a rapid
period of residential development. Original street names honoured
English poets: (Geoffrey) Chaucer Crescent, (Christopher) Marlowe
Street, and (Edmund) Spencer Crescent (now Myrtle Road). To the east of Marlowe Street, the precinct extends into part of the
Logan Estate, which was subdivided in 1893, then readvertised for sale
around 1907. The naming convention of the Griffin Estate was extended
into this new area, with the continuation of Chaucer Crescent, and
Keats Street (named after Romantic poet John Keats). There was limited development in the precinct prior to 1901, with a
small cluster of houses on Chaucer Crescent. The majority of the
houses were constructed during the Edwardian period, between 1906 and
1918, leaving a handful of lots to be developed during the interwar
period and just after World War II. The following properties are Significant to the precinct: 136
Canterbury Road (HO375), 138 Canterbury Road (HO376), 140 Canterbury
Road, and 24 Chaucer Crescent (HO380). The following properties are
Non-contributory to the precinct: 6, 7, 13, 15-15A, 16-16A, 17, 18,
27, 29 & 31 Chaucer Crescent; 12 Dudley Parade; 6 Keats Street;
4-4A, 8, 10 & 12 Marlowe Street; and 11 Myrtle Road. The remaining
properties are Contributory to the precinct. How is it significant? Griffin Estate & Environs Precinct is of local historical,
architectural and aesthetic significance to the City of Boroondara. Why is it significant? Griffin Estate & Environs Precinct is of historical significance
for its demonstration of the early suburban development of Canterbury.
The opening of Canterbury Railway Station in 1882 spurred the creation
of suburban estates from 1885, Griffin Estate being one of the
earliest. It was followed by Logan Estate in 1893, on the east side of
Marlowe Street. A number of these early houses, built in the late
1880s, survive along Chaucer Crescent. Like Canterbury more generally,
the major phase of development in the precinct was the Edwardian
period, with the final infill of streetscapes in the interwar period
and just following World War II, illustrating the pattern of
development characteristic of the suburb. (Criterion A) The Griffin Estate & Environs Precinct is of architectural
significance for demonstrating the principal characteristics of early
suburban housing in Canterbury. There was little nineteenth-century
development in the locality, so the small group of houses built
between 1888 and 1901 are significant for illustrating the
characteristic features of the Italianate style. All have the low
M-profile hipped roof, bracketed eaves, corniced chimney and verandah
set below the eaves with cast-iron detail. All but one are of
facebrick (enlivened with polychromy or cement-render detail), and
have an asymmetrical facade (with a canted or gabled projecting bay). The precinct is particularly rich in Edwardian-era architecture,
built between 1903 and 1915, ranging from smaller middle-class
dwellings to substantial residences. Most are Federation Queen Anne in
style, and have diagonal emphasis, expressed in the verandah form or
by the presence of a corner bay window or entrance. The pyramidal or
gabled-hipped roofs are clad in terracotta tiles, slate or corrugated
iron (this last one more common for timber houses). Features include
projecting gabled bays, bay windows, hoods over windows, red brick
chimneys with decorative details such as corbelling, strapwork,
roughcast or terracotta chimney pots, and sash or casement windows
often with decorative highlight windows. A variant of this type has a
generally symmetrical facade, with two projecting bays around a
central porch, often supported on Tuscan-order columns. (Criterion D) The Griffin Estate & Environs Precinct is of aesthetic
significance thanks to its picturesque streetscapes of fine suburban
houses, many of them architect designed. Appreciation of the
dwellings, individually and as a group, is enhanced by the curved plan
of Chaucer Crescent and Myrtle Road/Dudley Parade, the elevated siting
of houses on the north sides of these streets, the consistent garden
setbacks, and the presence of mature street trees (alternating Plane
trees and Melaleucas along Chaucer Crescent). (Criterion E)
Residential buildings (private)
House