Posts Tagged ‘row of four’

22-28 Blackburn Street. Adelaide, South Australia

Terrace Houses: 22-28 Blackburn Street. Adelaide, South Australia

This unnamed row of four double storey ashlar bluestone terraces in the Regency style includes “Wisteria Terrace” which operates as a bed and breakfast.  The others remain used as houses.  They form an important terraced city streetscape and are very typical of those in Adelaide, however with some distinctive features.

257-260 South Terrace, Adelaide. South Australia

Terrace Houses: 257-260 South Terrace, Adelaide. South Australia

This row of four double storey regency style sandstone terraces has been adaptively reused as a Disability Information and Resource Centre and has recently been restored and refurbished.

The side walls are in ashlar while the front facade is smoothed sandstone blocks with rectangular mouldings around the openings and ledges on the windows. The double storey verandah is a simple affair with wooden support posts and wooden balustrades.  The arched doorways are clustered together (as are the French doorways on the upper storey) and the ground floor sections around the door are emphasized by projecting forward.

George’s Terrace: 59-65 Cardigan Street, Carlton. Melbourne, Victoria

George's Terrace: 59-65 Cardigan Street, Carlton. Melbourne, Victoria

This row of four double storey terraces was four houses, built in 1905 by George Ievers, a realtor and speculator.

George’s Terrace appears as an Italianate Victorian Terrace  (compare to nearby Mary’s Terrace) however built many years after the end of the boom.  The naming appears in a cartouche under a classically inspired pediment with crown and flanking scrolls.

154-160 Carrington Street, Adelaide. South Australia

154-160 carrington street adelaide south australia

Terrace Houses: 154-160 Carrington Street, Adelaide. South Australia

The row of four double storey bluestone terrace houses in this photo was built in 1878 one of several speculative developments by builder Simon Harvey. The terrace presents mainly to Carrington Street but has sides facing Royal Place and Pulteney Street and forms part of a magnificent collection of Victorian era terraces around Hurtle Square.

The most notable aspects of this terrace is the dominance of the roof, the unusual spacing of verandah posts, the positioning above the city footpath and the wholeness of the composition.

Darcy Lever Terrace: 33-39 Hurtle Square, Adelaide. South Australia

darcy lever terrace 33-39 hurtle square adelaide south australia

Darcy Lever Terrace: 33-39 Hurtle Square, Adelaide. South Australia

This row of four double storey houses fronts Hurtle Square but also presents an end terrace to Halifax Street is named “Darcy Lever Terrace” is typical of the Adelaide style but a great individual example. Constructed in local basalt with mostly timber verandahs they were built in 1878 by Simon Harvey.

The roof is hipped with plain rendered chimneys and double wooden eaves brackets. The terraces have rendered mouldings with keystoned window surrounds, the keystones featuring vermiculation and string course moulding to visually separate the floors at the end terrace. The side facades have a brick pattern while the front facade.


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Recent Comments
  • bigsby: Having seen what they’ve done to this place im really surprised they don’t knock it down and...
  • Tennille: It is great to see a terrace from Cooks Hill. I live in a terrace row a block away from here on Parry...
  • Rackel: Hey there, so when do you think this house was built? And what materials do you think was used to build it?...
  • Jasper: they were recently sold advertised as a pair for just over $100K each ! :O uber bargain
  • Andrew: What a gem in Ballarat. I have never seen the likes of them before. They are so nicely symmetrical and the...
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