Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Fitzroy Median Price
House$1,686,300
Unit$871,200
The House price is 1% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Carlton$1,387,700
Carlton North$1,626,400
Clifton Hill$1,569,200
Collingwood$1,141,000
East Melbourne$3,052,500
Fitzroy North$1,570,000
Fitzroy Median Rent
House$906
Unit$610
The House rent is 5% higher than last year.
Fitzroy property sold price
Fitzroy 3065 Profile
A108 Nicholson Street, Fitzroy
Distance:1.6 km to CBD; 955 meters to Parliament Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - January 1, 2008
World Heritage Environs Area Precinct Citation
Statement of Significance
What is Significant?
History
The World Heritage Environs Area Precinct generally borders and is adjacent to the Royal Exhibition Building (REB) and Carlton Gardens, Carlton. It includes land and properties in the suburbs of Carlton and Fitzroy, the northern area of Melbourne's Central Business District, and East Melbourne.
The western and northern areas of the precinct are located in Carlton where the subdivision and sale of land for private development commenced in the 1850s. Carlton Gardens, which were first envisaged by Charles Joseph La Trobe as early as 1839, remained largely undeveloped until about 1855, when improvements were made to a design by Edward La Trobe Bateman. The REB was constructed in the gardens in 1879-1880, to house the international exhibition of 1880. The gardens were selected because they provided the desired park-like setting for the building, central location, and at 64 acres (26 hectares), were adequate in size. In return for the use of the gardens for exhibition purposes, the Government undertook to substantially upgrade the perimeter and appearance of the gardens, post-exhibition, thereby enhancing their attractiveness within the local Carlton and Fitzroy contexts.
Land surrounding parks and gardens in Carlton, including Carlton Gardens, attracted higher quality residential development in the nineteenth century. Rathdowne Street also attracted some institutional uses in the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, including churches, schools and hospital uses. By the 1890s, the majority of Carlton exhibited a largely tight and orderly subdivision pattern including a network of small laneways. In the precinct, this subdivision pattern is still particularly evident along Carlton Street. In Rathdowne Street, infill development began encroaching at the south end in the 1970s.
The eastern area of the precinct is located in Fitzroy, which was originally known as 'Newtown' and was one of the first areas of Melbourne to be developed outside the original town reserve. Subdivision of Fitzroy was somewhat haphazard due to the first allotments of the late 1830s being large (between 12 and 28 acres) and subsequently subdivided without restriction. Victoria Parade and Nicholson Street were Government roads of this era, which helped to provide a framework for a more regular pattern of subdivision in adjacent areas. Private roads, including Gertrude Street were also created, some of which had inconsistent widths and alignments. Gertrude Street was one of the first non-Government streets to be laid out by landowners in Fitzroy and became one of the most important non-Government streets in South Fitzroy, mainly because its original line a
 
22 Apr 2010
Part demolition alterations and additions to construct a studio above the garage at the rear.
(Source: City of Yarra, reference no: PL10/0271)
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
13-Hanover St/Nicholson StTram50 meters
13-Hanover St/Nicholson StTram54 meters
14-Murchison St/Nicholson StTram246 meters
14-Bell St/Nicholson StTram245 meters
14-Hanover St/Brunswick StTram281 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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