Posts Tagged ‘single storey’

Specimen Cottage: 178-180 Hargreaves Street. Bendigo, Victoria

Specimen Cottage: 178-180 Hargreaves Street. Bendigo, Victoria

Specimen Cottage, the oldest terrace house in Bendigo is also reputed to be the oldest house and possibly oldest buildings in the city.  The row of two sandstone ashlar cottages was built in two stages.  The first single storey double fronted cottage was erected in 1856 by local stonemason James Brierley.  The name and date are enscribed in stone above the doorway.  In 1861 he extended it with a matching double storey cottage.

27-33 Hawke Street. West Melbourne, Victoria

Single storey terrace houses: 27-33 Hawke Street, West Melbourne

While architecturally simple and missing their iron lacework decorations, these four single storey row houses are of a style that is actually quite rare in Melbourne but proliferated in the 1870s in inner Sydney areas such as Glebe and Newtown where extensive rows can be found (example 31-42 Mitchell Street, Glebe).

What is distinctive about this style is not the transverse gable configuration, but the combination of the blade party walls, central chimney, slate tile and banded paint (cream and maroon) concave corrugated iron verandahs referred to as Post-regency in Sydney.

Barwon Mill Cottages. 42-52 Lower Paper Mills Road, Fyansford. Geelong, Victoria

Barwon Mill Cottages. 42-52 Lower Paper Mills Road. Fyansford, Geelong. Victoria

This row of six single storey double fronted workers cottages was built between 1878 and 1879 in local bluestone and designed by Joseph Watts as part of the historic Barwon Paper Mill Victorian era industrial complex and a rare example of British model company housing ensuring that it has the highest heritage protection being on the Victorian Heritage Register (H0743)1, National Trust Register2 and part of a City of Greater Geelong heritage overlay HO2083.

 

Princess Row: 190-198 Petrie Terrace. Brisbane, Queensland

Photo by:Michael Gardner used with permission

Princess Row: 190-198 Petrie Terrace. Brisbane, Queensland

Located on the corner of Princess Street and Petrie Terrace, this row of four attached workers cottages on the fringe of the central business district was built in an era when Brisbane was still without public transport. Forming part of the historic Petrie Terrace group of terraces and cottages, its prominently steep gable roof is free of projecting party walls and each cottage is marked only by paired dormer windows and shared chimneys between each pair. This is probably the most rustic of the remaining working cottages with its corrugated iron roof clearly corroding. The addition of an interwar shopfront on the corner obscures one of the end terraces.

22-26 Lilydale Grove, Hawthorn East. Melbourne, Victoria (Demolished)

22-26 Lilydale Grove, Hawthorn East Victoria

Formerly a row of four, the remaining three of this row of single storey Queen Anne terraced cottages tells the sad tale of heritage in Melbourne’s Hawthorn which is being assailed by development from all directions.  Just a stones throw from the magnificent Auburn Road precinct reknowned for its late Victorian streetscapes, this row however has no heritage protection and it shows.  One of the end terraces (28) has already been demolished to become a rear access driveway for a showroom/factory complete with a lovely barb wire fence.  The row is unfortunately heavily obscured by evergreen shrubs.  The terrace pictured (number 26) which although unoccupied and derelect is in the most original condition, but currently advertised for sale as a development site.



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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