Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall, 12 Scallan Street, STAWELL
12 Scallan Street STAWELL, NORTHERN GRAMPIANS SHIRE
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Statement of Significance
The Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall, 12 Scallan Street, Stawell, has significance for its associations with the Holy Trinity Church and for its rudimentary gable roof form and design that suggests it was constructed in the late 19th or early 20th centuries. Altered and extended, the building appears externally to be in fair condition and of reasonable integrity.
The Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall is architecturally significant at a LOCAL level. Although altered and extended, it still demonstrates some original/early design qualities typical for a late 19th or early 20th century hall building. These qualities include the steeply pitched and gabled roof form, corrugated profile roof cladding and the horizontal timber weatherboard wall cladding. Other intact or appropriate qualities include the 9 paned timber framed windows with 6 paned transoms, rear elongated face brick chimney with a corbelled top and terra cotta pot, and the projecting and tapered buttresses.
The Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall is historically significant at a LOCAL level. It is associated with the development of the Holy Trinity Anglican Church, possibly from the late 19th or early 20th centuries.
The Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall is socially significant at a LOCAL level. It is recognised and valued by sections of the Stawell community for religious and recreational reasons.
Overall, the Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall is of LOCAL significance.
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Holy Trinity Anglican Church Parish Hall, 12 Scallan Street, STAWELL - Physical Description 1
The Holy Trinity Anglican Parish Hall, 12 Scallan Street, Stawell, is characterised by a rudimentary, steeply pitched roof form clad in introduced corrugated Colorbond, together with a small gabled wing at the rear and an introduced flat roofed brick pavilion at the front. The gabled hall and rear wing are constructed of horizontal timber weatherboards and have early 9 paned windows with 6 paned transoms above. A rectangular opening in the gable end has been blocked up. The rendered and tapered buttresses projecting from the hall appear to have been introduced. Another early feature is the elongated, face brick chimney with a corbelled top and terra cotta pot at the rear.
Heritage Study and Grading
Northern Grampians - Shire of Northern Grampians - Stage 2 Heritage Study
Author: Wendy Jacobs, Vicki Johnson, David Rowe, Phil Taylor
Year: 2004
Grading: Local
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HILL PIPE ORGAN - ST PETER'S LUTHERAN CHURCHVictorian Heritage Register H2177
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CENTRAL PARKVictorian Heritage Register H2284
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COMMONWEALTH MEMORIALVictorian Heritage Register H1943
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