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Location30 Sunnyside Avenue and 32 Sunnyside Avenue CAMBERWELL, BOROONDARA CITY LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
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What is Significant? 30 and 32 Sunnyside Avenue, built in 1920-21 are significant as two
unusual and fine examples of the variations within the Arts and Crafts
bungalow style. How is it significant? The properties are of local historic, architectural, aesthetic
significance to the City of Boroondara. Why is it significant? 30 and 32 Sunnyside Avenue Camberwell are historically significant as
houses constructed for the same owner, Isabel Crawford who purchased
adjoining lots in Sunnyside Avenue in 1919 and 1921. Historical
significance is attached to the architectural practice of Schreiber
and Jorgensen within Boroondara for their work at Xavier College
Chapel and the Burke Hall campus. More broadly, Justus Jorgensen is
better known as an artist and one of the founders of Montsalvat.
(Criterion A) 30 and 32 Sunnyside Avenue demonstrate in their modest proportions,
the tenets of the Arts and Crafts movement whereby there was virtue in
the handmade and the unpretentious. Furthermore, the two bungalows
exhibit a plainness of wall surface that is advanced for its time,
looking towards this feature of modernism. The Arts and Crafts
character is demonstrated in the composition of No.30 with its
chimneys and low, proportions enhanced by wall buttressing. In No.32
this is demonstrated through the plain wall surface, the five tall
chimneys and the emphasis on the structural piers. (Criterion D) 30 and 32 Sunnyside Avenue are aesthetically significant for their
different expressions of the small Arts and Crafts bungalow. This is
embodied in the picturesque composition of No. 30 including the large
stepped chimneys as a dramatic counterpoint to the low horizontal
proportions of the house further anchored to the ground with corner
buttresses. The use of engaged wall piers to articulate the front
facade and the characteristic use of porch piers as used on Schreiber
and Jorgensen's 57 Droop Street provide integrated, rather than
applied, decorative detail. The characteristics for which No. 32 is
notable include the porch piers with repeated decorative motifs, tall
chimneys, eaves brackets and roughcast wall surface (also at No.30),
Timber-framed sash windows on both houses are typical of the period
but add to their overall integrity. (Criterion E)
Residential buildings (private)
House