Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Richmond Median Price
House$1,454,900
Unit$677,300
Land$948,300
The House price is 3% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Abbotsford$1,207,300
Collingwood$1,134,500
East Melbourne$3,052,500
Hawthorn$2,343,700
Kew$2,327,900
Melbourne$590,000
South Yarra$1,883,300
Richmond Median Rent
House$882
Unit$579
The House rent is 13% higher than last year.
Richmond property sold price
Richmond 3121 Profile
A1/22 Abinger Street, Richmond
Distance:3.4 km to CBD; 737 meters to East Richmond Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
What is significant?
The substantial property at 22-28 Abinger Street and 37-45 Lyndhurst Street, Richmond, incorporates a mix of former maltings buildings and concrete silos which have been adapted to residential use. The buildings comprise two malt buildings with gable ends to Abinger Street (1880-late nineteenth century); four linked reinforced concrete silos (1930s); a large rectilinear brick building of two-three levels which faces Lyndhurst Street at the south of the site (pre-1945); a modern five-storey block with a gabled roof located at the south end of the 1880 malt building; forecourt to the north side of the silos; and a yard concealed behind an older brick wall to Lyndhurst Street. The two former malt houses fronting Abinger Street have gable ends with brick cornices, bluestone footings and brick walling in English bond, with segmentally arched windows. Both buildings have been subjected to varying levels of intervention and removal of fabric, as part of their residential conversion. The 1937 silos are a set of four linked concrete silos, which have had windows punched into the silo walls and other alterations including the addition of the 'ship's prow' frontage. The large two-three storey plain face brick building on the south of the property has a long east-west rectilinear footprint; as with the earlier malt buildings, it has had intervention and removal of fabric as part of the residential conversion works.
How is it significant?
The former maltings at 22-28 Abinger Street and 37-45 Lyndhurst Street, Richmond, is of local historical and aesthetic/architectural significance.
Why is it significant?
The former maltings is of local historical significance. The maltings was established in 1880 by brewers, Findlay and Sons, then owners of the nearby (in Abinger Street) Southern Brewery which was one of the largest in Melbourne. The first malt buildings on the property were designed by architect John Flanagan, who was responsible for other industrial buildings in the inner suburbs in the 1870s and 1880s. Brewing and malting were important local industries, and Richmond was home to a number of malting works. Development in the first half of the twentieth century included construction of the 1930s silos, and other expansion to the south and south-east of the original development. Noted maltsters Barrett and Burston took over the property in 1913, and continued to operate the malt works into the 1970s. The property is also significant as one of the first large-scale former industrial complexes in Melbourne to be converted, in the mid-1990s, to residential use.
The former maltings is additionally of local aesthetic/architectural significance. The property incorporates a mix of substantial historic former maltings buildings and concrete silos, dating from the 1880s through to the mid-twentieth century. While the adaptations to residential
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
60-Abinger St/Church StTram157 meters
60-Abinger St/Church StTram170 meters
19-Richmond Town Hall/Bridge RdTram191 meters
19-Richmond Town Hall/Bridge RdTram198 meters
18-Church St/Bridge RdTram232 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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