Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Quarry Hill Median Price
House$658,700
Unit$333,300
Land$530,000
The House price is 9% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Bendigo$729,100
Flora Hill$544,900
Golden Gully$431,100
Golden Square$596,900
Kennington$660,600
Quarry Hill Median Rent
House$440
Unit$378
The House rent is 2% lower than last year.
Quarry Hill property sold price
Quarry Hill 3550 Profile
A70 CARPENTER STREET, Quarry Hill
Distance:130 km to CBD; 1.5 km to Bendigo Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - March 11, 2004
What is Significant?
The Bendigo Cemetery site is bounded by Carpenter Street on the east, Houston Street on the north and Burnside and Paterson Streets to the south. It comprises two distinct sections, the original nineteenth century cemetery, surveyed in 1857, and the twentieth century (1915, 1928 and 1940) extensions to the south. The Bendigo Cemetery which replaced an earlier burial ground in the town centre, developed from the mid-1850s according to plans prepared by government surveyors Richard Larritt and John Green. George Avery Fletcher, who was Bendigo town clerk, surveyor, cemetery secretary and designer of the cemetery's chapel, may have had some involvement also in the layout. For health reasons the cemetery was located outside Bendigo city centre and was designed to be an attractive destination for visitors. The cemetery officially opened for burials in February 1858 and was gazetted in 1875.
The cemetery is an early and sophisticated example in Victoria of cemetery planning derived from Picturesque notions of beauty. The influence of England's large garden cemeteries and the writings of cemetery designers such as John Claudius Loudon are particularly evident in the Gothic Revival Chapel, built centre-stage in the grounds for its ornamental as well as utilitarian value. The internal roadways and paths, fence and gates, two rotundas, cast iron signage, lodge and symbolic plantings of trees enhance these aesthetic qualities, as do the memorials which form a major visual element of the cemetery landscape. The monument to explorers Burke and Wills, as well as several Chinese footstones and associated Chinese burning towers, stand among a remarkable collection of artefacts reflecting past funerary craft and customs. These include ornate cast iron grave and compartment markers, coffin trestles, a cast iron bell stand, wreath stands, an extensive array of immortelles, a double water closet, directional signage, cast iron horse hitching posts, and metal alloy plaques.
How is it Significant?
The Bendigo Cemetery is of architectural, historical, aesthetic, and scientific (botanical) significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it Significant?
Bendigo Cemetery is of aesthetic significance as a place of picturesque beauty for the vistas and views within the cemetery.
Bendigo Cemetery is of architectural significance for the design of the cemetery buildings (the mortuary chapel, two rotundas and lodge), the fence and gates as well as for its layout (roads and pathways)
Bendigo Cemetery is of aesthetic significance for its layout and nineteenth century plantings including a fine pair of Himalayan Cedars (Cedrus deodara) located next to the Burke and Wills monument, two specimens of Southern Magnolia (Magnolia grandiflora
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Bendigo Cemetery/Carpenter StBus47 meters
Bendigo Cemetery/Carpenter StBus69 meters
Havlin St/Carolin StBus201 meters
Bendigo Cemetery North/Carpenter StBus260 meters
Houston St/Carpenter StBus358 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版