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Location2-8 Bonville Court and 29-77 Cooloongatta Road and 28-92 Cooloongatta Road and 78-92 Fordham Avenue and 1-7 Gowar Avenue and 2-4 Gowar Avenue CAMBERWELL, BOROONDARA CITY LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
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What is Significant?
The Harley Estate & Environs Precinct is significant. It
comprises 2-8 Bonville Court; 29-77 & 28-92 Cooloongatta Road;
78-92 Fordham Avenue; and 1-7 & 2-4 Gowar Avenue, Camberwell. Most of Cooloongatta Road was part of the Camberwell Estate, on land
released in 1921 and 1924. Houses in this part of the precinct were
built between 1925 and 1940. At the south end of the precinct is the
Harley Estate, which was created in 1935 by the Colonial Mutual Life
Assurance Society to assist employees of the society to obtain their
own homes, and then opened to the general public. Homes were
architect-designed in the English cottage style to recreate an English
village feel, and were constructed 1935-40. The houses at 75 Cooloongatta Road and 78 Fordham Avenue are
Significant to the precinct. Non-contributory houses at 29, 34, 36,
37, 41, 42, 48, 54, 60, 62, 68 & 82 Cooloongatta Road and 7 Gowar
Avenue. The remaining properties, including the Methodist Church at 58
Cooloongatta Road, are Contributory. Original front fences and garages
are contributory.
How is it significant?
The Harley Estate & Environs Precinct is of local historical,
architectural and historical significance to the City of Boroondara.
Why is it significant?
The precinct as a whole is historically significant for exemplifying
the important role of public transport in the suburban development of
Camberwell prior to widespread car ownership by its proximity to
Hartwell Station which was mentioned in advertisements for the
Camberwell Estate subdivisions. (Criterion A) Harley Estate is significant as an example of an unusual interwar
employer-sponsored housing development in Boroondara. While there are
many examples from the 19th century through to the 1950s of
manufacturing businesses, such as brickworks and factories, building
workers housing in Hawthorn, Canterbury and many other Melbourne
suburbs, these were usually located so that employees could live near
their place of work. In the Harley Estate, created for CBD office
workers, we see the acceptance of the ideal of the suburban lifestyle
which involved a daily train commute by fathers. (Criterion A) Architecturally, the houses in the precinct are fine representative
examples of styles popular during the 1920s and the 1930s, including
California Bungalow, Art Deco, Tudor Revival/Old English, and Georgian
Revival. The houses generally exhibit a high level of intactness,
including the retention of many original front fences. (Criterion D) The Harley Estate is of aesthetic significance for its high-quality
architecture and visual unity. The estate was planned to resemble an
English village, full of 'English cottage style' dwellings, which were
the work of the most prominent designer of this style, Robert Bell
Hamilton. These designs are distinguished by their quality design and
details, including many that are repeated to indicate their
inter-relatedness, including cut-outs of a pine tree or a simple
flower seen on timber shutters and the gables of timber houses, gable
vents created of brick headers set on an angle for clinker brick
houses, and massive brick chimneys with corbelling at the top. The
Significant dwellings at 75 Cooloongatta Road and 78 Fordham Avenue
are fine two-storey examples of Georgian and half-timbered Old English
dwellings, respectively. They are distinguished by their picturesque
massing and distinctive details. As a whole, its serves as a showcase
of the English-inspired domestic architecture for which Robert Bell
Hamilton is so renowned. (Criteria E & H)
Residential buildings (private)
House