Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Toorak 平均房價
House$2,045,700
Unit$1,147,200
House 價格比去年下降26% .
周邊地區
Armadale$1,834,800
Burnley$1,272,500
Hawthorn$2,343,700
Kooyong$2,232,000
Malvern$2,251,400
Prahran$1,627,600
South Yarra$1,883,300
Toorak Median Rent
House$1,536
Unit$775
The House rent is 上升26% .
Toorak 房屋成交價
Toorak 3142 地區介紹
A75 - 77 Irving Road, Toorak
距離:5.9 公里 to CBD; 976 米 to Heyington Station [公共交通]

鄰居照片
地圖位置 | 街景 | 周邊成交價
改建申請曆史:
被市政府指定為 Victorian heritage
What is significant? Greenwich House is a large mansion built in 1869 for the merchant and politician James Lorimer, probably to the design of the architect Leonard Terry. The two storey house is an Italianate style bay-fronted mansion of eighteen rooms, notable for the central Roman Doric portico and restrained ornamentation.
How is it significant? Greenwich House is of historical and architectural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant? Greenwich House is of historical significance as one of the oldest surviving Toorak residences. Its associations with a number of important figures and its changes in use over a long period make it a valuable historical document through which many social and economic transformations can be traced. The house was one of the first built on the early close sub-divisions in the Toorak district, at a time when the area was becoming keenly sought after as a site for residences of the wealthy. Its original owner, James Lorimer, moved from the house in 1876 as his growing status demanded a more substantial residence. Subsequent owners made their own alterations, expanding the house with additions such as a ballroom, extended servants' quarters and more bedrooms. But by the 1920s its years as a family residence were numbered. Like many of Melbourne's mansion houses, Greenwich House underwent many changes of use in the 20th century, reflecting changing social and economic conditions. Much of its original grounds were subdivided and built upon, the house itself was converted to flats and then to hostel accommodation for the Navy, before becoming the Chinese consulate in the 1980s.
Greenwich House has been associated with a number of important individuals and families, emphasising the desirability of both the house and the area in which it was located. James Lorimer (1831-1889), its first owner, was a prominent contributor to public life from the 1860s to his death in 1889. He was a prosperous merchant and foundation commissioner of the Melbourne Harbour Trust (Lorimer Street in Port Melbourne commemorates his contribution to the development of Melbourne's port) as well as a noted banker and politician. In the 1860s Lorimer took an active role in opposition to protection, playing an important part in election campaigns on behalf of the Constitutional Party. Lorimer sold the house to William Halliday in 1876. Halliday, a grazier and member of the NSW Legislative Assembly, is chiefly remembered for his involvement in the battles between NSW pastoralists and the emerging labour unions in the latter part of the 19th century, one of the most formative periods of Australian political life. Other notable owners or lessees of the house included the Austin family, prominent pastoralists, and the theatre director Frank Thring who leased the house to entertain actors and other theatre people. Although Greenwich House has been altered over the years, its basic early 20th century form
附近公交:
公交站類型距離
39-Irving Rd/Toorak Rd電車108 米
39-Irving Rd/Toorak Rd電車110 米
38-Woorigoleen Rd/Toorak Rd電車153 米
38-Woorigoleen Rd/Toorak Rd電車165 米
40-Kooyong Rd/Toorak Rd電車336 米
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