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Other NameHouse Location40 Church Street, FITZROY NORTH VIC 3065 - Property No 227270 LevelIncl in HO area contributory |
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Precinct statement of significance
Component streets include:
Alexandra Parade, Alfred Crescent, Alfred Street, Apperly Street,
Austin Way, Bainbridge Place, Bakehouse Lane, Barkly Street, Batman
Street, Bennett Street, Best Street, Birkenhead Street, Brennand
Street, Brunswick Street, Bundara Street, Byrne Street, Church Street,
Circle Place, Clauscen Street, Coleman Street, Delbridge Street,
Eastham Street, Egremont Street, Falconer Street, Fergie Street,
Freeman Street, Grant Street, Holden Court, Holden Street, Hopetoun
Place, Howe Street, Ida Street, Ivan Street, Jamieson Street, King
Street, Kneen Street, Laura Place, Liverpool Street, Mark Street, May
Street, Mckean Street, McKillop Lane, Melville Street, Michael Street,
Miller Street, Napier Street, Newry Street, Nicholson Street, Park
Parade, Park Place, Park Street, Percy Street, Pilkington Street,
Porter Street, Queen Street, Queens Parade, Rae Street, Railway
Street, Reid Street, Rowe Street, Rushall Crescent, Scotchmer Street,
Seacombe Street, St Georges Court, St Georges Road, Tait Street,
Taplin Street, Taylor Street, Tranmere Street, Tucker Place, White
Street, Woodhead Street, Woodside Street, York Street.
Statements of significance
North Fitzroy has two sub-areas: (A) The Government planned section south of Holden St (B) The privately planned section north of Holden St
(A) NORTH FITZROY HERITAGE OVERLAY AREA (SOUTH OF HOLDEN ST)
What is significant?
Early subdivision
The south section of North Fitzroy (south of Holden Street ) was
retained in Crown ownership until 1865, as part of the Melbourne
township reserve. This was a ring of land extending 5 miles from
Hoddle's original Melbourne town plan that was set aside in 1844 for
'orderly' development in government planned subdivisions. (75) North of Holden Street, large agricultural allotments had been sold
in 1839, their boundaries surviving in the east-west streets of
Miller, Barkly and Clauscen Streets. There was also an area, bounded
by (approximately) Nicholson, Church, Rae and Scotchmer Sts, that was
sold as private quarry allotments in 1851 to encourage production of
building stone. (76) The future suburb was bordered by a road to Heidelberg and the Plenty
districts (later Queen's Parade) that ran diagonally to Hoddle's
survey grid through the North Fitzroy's Crown reserve. It was
proclaimed in 1850 as one of Melbourne's 3 chain (60 metre) government
roads, now called 'Hoddle boulevards'. To the north, the township of Northcote on the Merri-Merri Creek
(later Westgarth) was laid out by Hoddle in 1852 with some
allotments extending south of the Merri Creek to Rushall Crescent in
North Fitzroy. These allotments now have substantial buildings dating
from the 1850s and 1860s (see Queen's Parade Heritage Area, HO 331). St. George's Rd was another diagonal route, on the western flank of
the area, used to transport construction materials to the 1854-8 Yan
Yean water supply scheme near Whittlesea. (77) By 1860, Fitzroy
Council annexed the 480 acres now comprising North Fitzroy. Distinguished naturalist and engineer, Clement Hodgkinson, as
Victorian Assistant-Commissioner of Crown Lands and Survey 1861-74,
was responsible for the government subdivisions of Carlton (south of
Princes St, 1860), North Carlton, North Fitzroy and Clifton Hill
(1865-9), Hotham Hill (1866), South Parkville and North Parkville
(1868-9). Under his supervision, suburban planning employed the
cost-efficient grid system used by Hoddle. A model town design (78) in
the area by Hodgkinson's predecessor. Andrew Clarke (the designer of
St Vincent's Place, South Melbourne), is thought to have inspired the
curved streets of Alfred and Rushall Crescents in North Fitzroy,
although both streets were laid out under Hodgkinson (79).
Edinburgh Gardens
Lacking a public recreation reserve, the new Fitzroy Council was
temporarily granted 7 acres in 1858 bounded by Reilly Street
(Alexandra Parade),Queens Parade and Smith St. (80) The 1858 reserve
was for a future Anglican parish church and the Collingwood (later the
Metropolitan) Gas Company which commenced production in 1861. In 1862,
Fitzroy Council requested an oval-shaped 50 acre public reserve
flanking the Yan Yean tramway (St.George's Road). The oval reserve was
laid out under Hodgkinson and extended south in 1863, as a squared-off
addition to the reserve to the line of Freeman St, to provide the
Prince of Wales Cricket Club an extra playing ground (81). In 1882-3,
Edinburgh Gardens was permanently granted to the Council and planting
of its avenues commenced.
Land sales and development -
Sale of North Fitzroy's 1/4 - 1/2 acre allotments commenced in 1865,
extending west from Rushall Crescent. Further east, lots between
Brunswick and Nicholson Street were sold between 1867 and 1875.(82)
Settlement increased after 1869 when horse-drawn omnibuses began
running from North Fitzroy along Nicholson St and Queen's Parade to
the city. Development concentrated around the established quarry route
(Nicholson Street) and the road to the Yan Yean Reservoir (St.
George's Road). St. Brigid's Catholic Church in Nicholson Street was
commenced in 1869 and the Methodist Church, further north, in 1874. In
the pre-Boom years (before 1883) this was North Fitzroy's most
established area, characterised by modestly scaled brick and wood
houses, shops, hotels, and commercial premises, the latter prevailing
on main routes such as Rae, Reid, Brunswick Sts and St Georges Rd. North Fitzroy Primary School was built in Alfred Crescent (HO212)
overlooking Edinburgh Gardens. This was typical of 19th century
government planned suburbs where public schools were located on or
near public recreation reserves. A police station was established west
of the school, giving the north-west corner of the gardens a civic
character, embellished by an ornamental fountain after the turn of the
century. (83) St Luke's Church of England in St Georges Rd was
commenced in 1879.Suburban development was rare east of St Georges
Road prior to the Boom, but in 1869 philanthropist George Coppin
created the Old Actor's Association village overlooking Merri Creek
close to Northcote, later the site of the Old Colonists' Association
(HO218). Nearby land was granted to the Licensed Victuallers'
Association for asylum homes and a school (site of Fitzroy Secondary
School since 1915). (84)
Transport
When cable tram routes along Queen's Parade, Nicholson Street and St.
Georges Road commenced construction in 1883, North Fitzroy landowners
began subdividing their allotments. On the Nicholson Street tram
route, owners of the 1850s stone quarries and the 1839 farm allotments
north of Holden St, followed suit. When tram services began in 1887 many new houses were ready for sale
or under construction. North Fitzroy emerged as a late-Victorian
commuter suburb with local shopping strips along the cable tram
routes, the commercial strip of St Georges Road extending east and
west along Scotchmer Street. Convenience shops were built on
pedestrian street corners as households multiplied. The Inner Circle
Railway running via Royal Park, North Carlton, Nicholson St, and
Clifton Hill was completed in 1888 with a spur line dividing the
Edinburgh Gardens into two, and terminating at the 'Fitzroy' station,
Queen's Parade. A new rail link direct to the city (the Clifton Hill
to Princes Bridge line) opened in 1901 (85) and saw Edwardian
buildings filling out the suburban streets east of St. Georges Road
and the revitalising of the main shopping strips. Public transport
continued to support North Fitzroy as a commuter suburb during the
1920s with the opening of Rushall railway station and the
electrification and extension of the St Georges Rd and Nicholson St tramways. North Fitzroy's suburban development, especially east of St George's
Road to Rushall Crescent, was far from complete when the Boom
collapsed in 1893. However its good access to public transport led to
a rapid recovery. A number of small factories were built in or near
the 19th century commercial strip of Scotchmer St, the best
architectural examples being of the late 1930s.
Main development era, south of Holden St
The main development period evident in the heritage overlay south of
Holden St is that of the Victorian era with a substantial contribution
from the Edwardian-period. There is also a contribution from some
well-preserved inter-war buildings and individually significant places
of all eras.
Contributory elements, south of Holden St
The North Fitzroy Heritage Overlay Area (south of Holden St)
contributory elements include (but not exclusively) generally detached
and attached Victorian-era and Edwardian-era houses having: . Pitched gabled or hipped roofs, with some facade parapets, many elaborate; . One storey wall heights but with many two storey house rows, . Rectilinear floor plans, with many bayed room projections on the
plans of large houses; . Face brick (red, bichrome and polychrome) or stucco walls, some weatherboard; . Corrugated iron and slate roof cladding, some Marseilles pattern
terracotta tiles; . Chimneys of either stucco finish (with moulded caps) or of face
brickwork with corbelled or cemented capping courses; . Post-supported verandah elements facing the street, set out on two
levels as required with cast-iron and timber detailing, and many
curved verandah wing-walls; . Less than 40% of the street wall face comprised with openings such
as windows and doors; and . Front gardens, originally bordered by timber or iron picket front
fences of around 1m height; often set between brick or cemented
pillars and curved brick garden wing walls. . Face brick (typically red) privies set on rear lanes, with some
stables and lofts to the larger houses; . Shops and residences sited on corners with display windows and zero
boundary setbacks; Contributory elements also include attached Victorian and
Edwardian-era shops, and residences over, with . Facade parapets and pitched roofs behind, . Two storey wall heights, . Post-supported street verandahs as shown on the MMBW Detail Plans (86), . No front or side setbacks; also . Timber framed display windows and entry recesses. Contributory elements also include: . Well preserved buildings from the pre Second War era, that are
visually related to the dominant scale, siting and form of the area; . Service buildings, like pre WW2 electric substations; . The distinctive suburban plan, enhanced by curving street forms,
and defined by boulevards; . Edinburgh Gardens as a Victorian-era residential circus, and for
the other garden, boulevard and median reserves (such as Queens
Parade), with mature exotic and formally arranged planting; . Mature street tree plantings (such as plane and elm tree rows,
Queensland brush box); . The provision of public and church reserves in the town plan,
including the Inner Circle Railway reserve; . The rectilinear Victorian-era allotment plans and street layout
with wide main streets, rear service lanes, all counter posed with
circular parkland reserves, major angled streets and boulevards; . The dominance of spires and towers of public buildings, churches
and some large houses in the skyline; and . Public infrastructure, expressive of the Victorian and
Edwardian-eras such as bluestone pitched road paving, crossings ,stone
kerbs, and channels, and asphalt paved footpaths.
How is it significant?
HO327 North Fitzroy Heritage Overlay Area (south of Holden St) is
aesthetically and historically significant to the City of
Yarra (National Estate Register [NER] Criteria E1, A4)
Why is it significant?
The Government planned section of Fitzroy North (south of Holden St)
is significant . As a demonstration of the earliest stages in the development of
North Fitzroy, commencing with the 1850s Yan Yean tramway and the
quarry route of Nicholson St, the establishment of North Fitzroy's
first churches and its pre-Boom suburban mixture of small residential
and commercial buildings coinciding with provision of horse drawn
public transport.; . For its late 19th century buildings that represent rapid growth and
change in the character of the relatively remote suburb to an
established residential and business area with a range of commercial
and institutional buildings serving the wider population of North Fitzroy; . For the aesthetic value of its suburban planning, with the
combination of curving streets and garden reserves, and the vistas
created by the intersections of standard rectilinear subdivision with
the strong diagonals formed by St Georges Road and Queens Parade, the
exceptionally wide streets and crescents, the triangular garden
reserves, and focal views to buildings and parkland. This aesthetic is
underscored by the built form seen in the construction of commercial
and institutional buildings to the property alignment along a number
of streets and on corners; . The generous public domain, with street plantings of historic elms
and 20th century plane trees, . For its low rise streetscapes of intact Victorian and Edwardian
buildings one and two-storey terrace and villa housing; . For the range of Victorian and Edwardian-era building form and
finish, from the modestly decorated timber cottages and stuccoed
Italianate style houses, simply designed corner hotels and shops, to
the rich variety of decorative buildings including an extraordinary
concentration of decorative bichrome and polychrome brickwork and
flamboyantly decorated Italianate residential and commercial terraces,
banks and hotels, interspersed very occasionally with dominating
narrow spire and tower elements of religious, commercial and
institutional buildings. . As one of Melbourne's early residential commuter suburbs served by
train and cable tram services linking it to the city by 1888, with
extensive Boom era terrace buildings and closely built row housing
within this sub-area providing evidence of the effects of public
transport on early development; . As essentially a well preserved Boom-era suburb that, despite the
abrupt economic collapse of the early 1890s, continued developing
during the Great Depression years and into the first decades of the
20th century due to the amenity of its planning, parkland, local
schools and shops and extensive public transport. This yielded both
the generous frontages and sizes of the post-Depression villa houses
and the row house forms and narrow frontages of the Boom era; . For its traditional Victorian-era residential character, evoked by
the formal presentation of the decorated facade to the street with its
small ornamental front garden, low front fence, pedestrian gateway and
front path, with the functional necessities of delivering coal,
removal of nightsoil and occasional stabling provided by the back lanes; . For landmark buildings and sites that formed key meeting places in
the area during the main development era of the 1860s to the
1930s,including religious institutions, schools, monasteries and
churches, and the buildings associated with charitable bodies such as
the Salvation Army, Church of Christ Bible School, and the temperance
movement. Also the former Nth Fitzroy Police Station, the former
Licensed Victualler's School and Asylum site and complexes such as the
Old Colonists Homes; . For the asphalt footpaths, pitched lanes, gutters and lane
crossovers and mature street and individual plantings (such as mature
elms, planes, palms, and Kurrajongs) that reinforce the unified
character of the dense, relatively low-rise residential development; . The 19th century landscape of Edinburgh Gardens and its
representation of Fitzroy's cultural history in its plantings,
memorials, recreation sports club grounds and pavilion buildings, plus
the Inner Circle Railway reserve as a cultural landscape strip across
the north of the area; . For the outstanding Victorian and Edwardian-era streetscapes such
as those surrounding the Edinburgh Gardens (Alfred Crescent, St
Georges Road, Brunswick and Freeman Streets) that include a rich
collection of Victorian-era Gothic and Italianate style buildings
interspersed with fine buildings from the Edwardian period; . For the important views and vistas within the area, including those
of the Edinburgh Gardens, its mature trees and historic structures, as
seen from many parts of the Heritage Overlay Area, and views obtained
from Edinburgh Gardens to the many significant buildings at its
curtilage and the city skyline, the vista from the elevated position
of the Cricket Club grandstand toward the upper facades of buildings
in Freeman and Brunswick Streets, and the Brunswick Street vistas
(south to the spire of St Patrick's Cathedral, and north to St Luke's spire) . For the contribution of well-preserved inter-war buildings,
particularly the small intact inter-war houses where the building
design has adapted to the prevailing built character of the area in
siting, scale, decorative quality and stylistic variety.
(B) NORTH FITZROY HERITAGE OVERLAY AREA (NORTH OF ANDINCLUDING
HOLDEN ST)
What is significant?
Development north of Holden St
(Refer also to Development south of Holden St) North of Holden St, the 1839 farm allotments closest to Nicholson St
were subdivided for row-housing during the late Victorian-era Boom
years but remained empty until after 1900. Suburban development
followed in the years to 1920 with timber villas on relatively wide
(approximately 10 metre frontages). Some empty sites were developed in
the 1930s and 1940s with medium density, duplex and estate housing
development, some of these being architecturally distinctive. Mature
street tree planting includes plane trees, typical of Edwardian-era
and inter-war planting. The Merri State (now Primary) School 3110 and
landscaping, in Miller St, is a key early non-residential building in
this part of the Heritage Overlay Area.
Main development era, north of Holden St
The main development period evident in the heritage overlay is that
of the Edwardian-period with a contribution from the Victorian era.
There is also a contribution from some well preserved inter-war
buildings and individually significant places of all eras.
Contributory elements, north of Holden St
The North Fitzroy Heritage Overlay Area (north of and including
Holden St) contributory elements include (but not exclusively)
generally detached (and some attached) Victorian-era and Edwardian-era
mainly one-storey houses having typically: . Pitched gabled or hipped roofs, with few facade parapets; . One storey wall heights but with some two storey house rows; . Weatherboard or block fronted wall cladding, with face brick (red,
bichrome and polychrome), or stucco walls; . Corrugated iron roof cladding, with some Marseilles pattern
terra-cotta tiles, with some slate roofing; . Chimneys of either stucco finish (with moulded caps) or of matching
face brickwork with corbelled capping courses; . Post-supported verandah elements facing the street, with timber
(Edwardian-era) or cast-iron detailing; . Less than 40% of the street wall face comprised with openings such
as windows and doors; and . Front gardens, originally bordered by timber picket front fences of
around 1m height. Contributory elements also include: . Corner shops and residences, with display windows and zero boundary setbacks; . One and two storey commercial strips (i.e. St Georges Road) with
some key corner Victorian and Edwardian-era buildings and well
preserved inter-war examples; . Well preserved buildings, including visually related one and two
storey residential buildings from the pre Second War era, are
contributory to the heritage overlay; . Long east-west streets as former rural allotment boundaries, with
repeating allotment sizes and rectilinear allotment forms; . The inner circle railway reserve, with associated railway infrastructure; . Mature street tree plantings (typically plane trees) and reserve
planting (typically palms), and . Public infrastructure, expressive of the Victorian and
Edwardian-eras such as bluestone pitched road paving, crossings, stone
kerbs and channels, and asphalt paved footpaths.
How is it significant?
HO327 North Fitzroy Heritage Overlay Area (NORTH OF AND INCLUDING
HOLDEN ST) is aesthetically and historically significant to the
City of Yarra (National Estate Register [NER] Criteria E1, A4)
Why is it significant?
North Fitzroy Heritage Overlay Area (NORTH OF AND INCLUDING HOLDEN
ST) is important: . For the clear indication of important early land development phases
in the suburb as follows: - East-west, relatively long and narrow streets originating from
private subdivision of the 1839 agricultural allotments that
originally fronted Merri Creek; - The evident effect of the 19th century Boom era when aggressive
subdivision coincided with provision of public transport, creating
dense late-Victorian development near the Nicholson St cable tram terminus; - The more generous post-1906 subdivisions (suiting the construction
of detached timber villas) representing changed values in land prices,
and the relatively new suburban ideal of affordable house and garden lifestyle; - The slow transformation into a completed residential suburb by WW2,
with the last few vacant sites accommodating inter-war dwellings, some
developed with medium-density housing, duplexes and flats. . For the consistent and intact streetscapes of late Victorian
terrace and row housing in the south-west corner of the area, and
Italianate style and Edwardian timber villas, interspersed
occasionally with inter-war houses, in the balance of the area; . For the visual consistency and good period expression of streets in
the north and east parts of the area, consistently one-storey, timber
construction, decorative detail, and detached siting with consistent
garden setbacks; . For the interwar medium density development pockets, including
those contained within Pilkington St and parts of Barkly St, King and
Miller Streets, significant for its intactness, form and high quality design. . For the shopping strip streetscape of St Georges Rd, significant
for its landmark Victorian-era buildings, plus intact early 20th
century and interwar buildings in both Classical Revival and Moderne
styles; and . For important landscape and vistas, including the view of Merri
Creek Bridge framed by palms and mature elms in the Merri Primary
School reserve, and mature street plantings of plane trees.
References
75 Scurfield G.The Hoddle Years: surveying in Victoria
1836-53, Inst. Land Surveyors Aust Inc. 1995, Paragon Printers
ACT, 1995, p92: also Priestley S., The Victorians; making their
mark, Fairfax et al., 1984, p43 76 F.H.S. op cit. 77 Lemon, A.The Northcote Side of the River, Northcote CC and
Hargreen, 1983, p49 78 shown in the Kearney 1850s plan along with other idealised
suburban designs that were never realised (see part Nth Melbourne) 79 Allom Lovell and J Patrick, 2004. Edinburgh Gardens, Brunswick
Street, North Fitzroy, Conservation Management Plan: cite Reserve File
RS360, DSE, 80 Swanson, Rex, Landform Australia Pty. Ltd., 'Edinburgh Gardens
Landscape Study'.City of Fitzroy, 1987 81 ibid 82 F.H.S., Chapt. 2 83 MMBW Map of North Fitzroy 1897, SLV picture collection 84 Jacobs Lewis Vines, North Fitzroy Conservation Study,
Fitzroy City Council, 1978: F.H.S, Chapter 2. and early MMBW survey Maps. 85 Lemon op cit and MMBW Maps from 1891-06 86 See MMBW Detail Plan 1196 of 1899
Residential buildings (private)
House