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Location62-72 Main Street and 75-97 Main Street and 66A Station Street GEMBROOK, CARDINIA SHIRE LevelIncluded in Heritage Overlay |
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What is significant? The Gembrook commercial precinct which comprises much of the original
township area, between Station Road and Gembrook Road. The township
developed initially to service the local Gembrook tmber and fruit
growing industries, then for tourism in association with the arrival
of the railway, and later mixed farming. Individually significant
places include: - 93 Main Street (Sacred Heart Catholic Church, HO63) - 62 Main Street (Bhutan Pines at Gembrook Railway Station site,
HO61,as well as the Oaks, Moterey Pines and Blackwoods, HO61) - avenue planings of oak, blackwood, flowering gum (which extend
along Main Street and beyond the commercial precinct, east to west,
from 12 Beenak East Road to 48 Belgrave-Gembrook Road) - 66A Main Street (Coffee Palace) - J.A.C. Russell Reserve - 72 Main Street (Post Office) - 75 Main Street (Curiosity Shop, only) -77 and 79 Main Street (the motor garages) - 81 Main Street (house) - 97 Main Street (the former Gembrook Store) 68-70, and 81A, 83-87, 89, 91, 91A, 95 and the house at the rear of
75 Main Street are non-contributory. How is it Significant? The Gembrook Commercial Precinct is of local historic and aesthetic
significance to Cardinia Shire. Why is it Significant? Historically, the Gembrook Commercial Precinct is significant for the
tangible evidence it provides of important phases of the township's
establishment from 1874 to service the local timber and farming
industries, and its growth in the interwar period when it grew
following the coming of the railway, the picturesque rail journey
attracting day-trippers and vacationers and later motorists. (RNE
criterion A.4) Historically, it is also significant for its
associations with the Rev. John Edward Bromby, who laid out an area
for the town in 1874. (RNE criterion H.1) Historically, the Gembrook Station site, the J.A.C. Russell Reserve,
and the Sacred Heart Church are significant for the evidence they
provide of the early township and its tourism surge after World War
One which was greatly enhanced by the new railway and Gembrook's role
as its terminus (RNE criterion A.4). The avenue plantings, 66 Main
Street (Coffee Palace), 72 Main Street (Post Office), 75 Main Street
(Curiosity Shop), 77 and 79 Main Street (the motor garages), 81 Main
Street (house), and 97 Main Street (the former Gembrook Store) form
the core of old Gembrook and as such contribute to the significance of
the precinct. All these places provide physical evidence of Gembrook's
history as a tourism destination, and contribute to the historic
character of this largely unified civic and commercial precint. Aesthetically, the oak, blackwood and flowering gum street plantings
have signifcance as an element unifying the township and streetscape
(RNE criterion E.1). The former Coffee Palace (now a take-away food store and residence)
also contributes to the historic significance of the locality of
Gembrook as a surviving example of the coffee palaces opened in many
Victorian resort towns in the 1920s and one of the early buildings in
the town (RNE criterion A.4). This building, presumably founded on
temperance principles like other coffee palaces, has significance also
for its associations with locally prominent persons such as Patrick
McNulty and his wife, the first owners, and in the late 1930s with the
Hickes (RNE criterion H.1).
Commercial
Commercial Precinct