House (Closer Settlement)
284 HOPE STREET,, BRUNSWICK WEST VIC 3055 - Property No 12425
Closer Settlement Houses
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Statement of Significance
What is significant?
Closer Settlement schemes were a response by the State Government to the 1890s depression, which had severe impact on Victoria and working class areas such as Brunswick in particular. The aim was to provide agricultural land on a lease purchase arrangement to enable those of limited means to establish a farm and a livelihood. The Brunswick Estate, established in 1900, was the fourth Closer Settlement scheme in Victoria and the first in metropolitan Melbourne. It was extended twice by the additions of the Dal Campbell Estate (1904) and Cadman Estate (1905), creating a total of 161 allotments. The final scheme in Brunswick, known as the Phoenix Estate and containing 73 lots, was established in 1907. Houses on the estates were constructed from 1900 and the estates were fully developed by the beginning of World War I.
Unlike some other Government-assisted settlement schemes, where standard house designs were provided, each successful applicant for the Closer Settlement estates was allowed to provide their own house design. As a consequence, a range of house designs is evident, but broadly speaking, the extant houses fall into two categories: simple cottages and more elaborate villas. The former are usually symmetrical and double fronted with a front door flanked by simple sash windows and contain two or four main rooms, under a hipped or gabled roof, sometimes with a rear skillion. There are one or two plain brick chimneys and a simple front verandah with no decoration (sometimes the verandah was an early addition).
The more elaborate villas are either symmetrical or asymmetrical in layout and are distinguished by superior materials and detailing including Ashlar-look boards to the main elevations, intricate timber fretwork or cast iron frieze to the verandahs, eaves brackets and other applied decoration, and corbelled brick chimneys. Some examples demonstrate the transition from the Victorian period, while others are more distinctively Federation/Edwardian in style with Queen Anne details such as pressed metal, rendering or half-timbering to the gable ends.
Almost all the houses in this serial listing are weatherboard.
It appears that around 230 Closer Settlement houses were constructed in Brunswick. However, the majority have been demolished and only about 30 survive today. This serial listing comprises the most intact examples of the surviving Closer Settlement houses, as follows:
- 6 & 10 Allard Street*
- 5 Balfe Crescent
- 46 & 47* Cumming Street
- 280 & 284 Hope Street
- 9 McColl Court
- 30 Murray Street*
- 19* & 23* Passfield Street
- 18, 37*, 43* & 51* Waxman Parade
*These houses have an individual citation and statement of significance.
How is it significant?
The Closer Settlement Houses serial listing is of local historic significance to the City of Moreland.
Why is it significant?
The houses provide tangible evidence of the Victorian government's Closer Settlement Scheme, designed as a response to the devastating 1890s depression conditions in Victoria, in the early years of the twentieth century. The Brunswick Estate is of significance as it was the first metropolitan Closer Settlement scheme and provided a model for the metropolitan estates that followed. Spread over a wide area, the houses collectively demonstrate the scale of the original schemes and the range of houses erected by the successful applicants. Whilst typical in style and detailing, the range of house designs is significant as a reflection of the differences in the financial means, skills and backgrounds of the original applicants and has research potential to reveal further information about the schemes. (Criteria A, C & D)
The development of the Closer Settlement estates was also significant in the transformation of southwest Brunswick into a distinct local community and laid the foundations for the suburban development that occurred during the interwar and postwar periods. (Criterion A)
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House (Closer Settlement) - Physical Description 1
The house at 284 Hope Street (corner Bent Street) is a single storey late Victorian timber house with elaborate detailing. It is asymmetrical in form, with a projecting gabled bay on the west side, and a hipped verandah across the balance of the facade. The verandah is set on turned timber posts with a vertical slatted frieze and simple timber brackets. The front facade is timber block-work, with weatherboards used on other elevations. Eave brackets and lozenges decorate the facade. Triple-light casement windows are located on each of the two main parts of the facade. Substantially intact.
House (Closer Settlement) - Physical Conditions
Good
House (Closer Settlement) - Integrity
Intact
House (Closer Settlement) - Physical Description 2
This is an Edwardian timber house, asymmetrical in plan with a hipped roof and projecting gabled bay. The facade is clad in imitation ashlar with elongated and square diamond mouldings at the eaves and pressed metal to the gable end, which also has a decorative barge board and timber trusswork. The entry door has a sidelight and highlights, and the windows to the main elevations are triple casements with toplights, with a skillion hood supported on timber brackets above the window in the projecting bay. The skillion verandah is supported on turned posts and has an intricate timber frieze and moulding to the fascia. There is one brick chimney with a stringcourse and stepped cornice. Overall, the house has good integrity and intactness.The privet hedge along the front boundary is a typical early garden planting and may encase an early woven wire fence.
Heritage Study and Grading
Moreland - Moreland Heritage Gaps Study 2017
Author: Context Pty Ltd
Year: 2017
Grading:Moreland - Moreland City Council: Local Heritage Places Review
Author: Context Pty Ltd
Year: 2004
Grading:Moreland - Keeping Brunswick's heritage: A Report on the Review of the Brunswick Conservation Study
Author: Context Pty Ltd
Year: 1990
Grading: Not Assessed
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