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Richmond Median Price
House$1,460,700
Unit$681,200
Land$948,300
The House price is 1% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Abbotsford$1,206,100
Collingwood$1,141,000
East Melbourne$3,052,500
Hawthorn$2,302,000
Kew$2,344,600
Melbourne$643,300
South Yarra$1,995,900
Richmond Median Rent
House$882
Unit$571
The House rent is 13% higher than last year.
Richmond property sold price
Richmond 3121 Profile
A48 Lyndhurst Street, Richmond
Distance:3.3 km to CBD; 721 meters to East Richmond Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - August 31, 2015
What is significant?
Lyndhurst Terrace, constructed in 1874, at 40-50 Lyndhurst Street, Richmond is significant. It is comprised of two groups of three houses, each built of bi-chrome brick on bluestone foundations with a shared, low-pitched hip roof with no visible party walls, typical of terrace rows built before the 1886 building regulations. The bi-chrome brick is expressed as quoining around the doors and windows, and as in diaper patterns below the windows, and also under the eaves between cream eaves brackets. The bi-chrome brick chimneys have rendered caps with moulded cornices. Nos. 40 & 42 retain what appear to be the original four panel front doors, while nos. 42 and 48 appear to have the original leadlight toplights above the door.
Non-original alterations and additions including the front verandahs and wing walls are not significant.
How is it significant?
Lyndhurst Terrace at 40-50 Lyndhurst Street, Richomnd is of local historic and architectural significance to the City of Yarra.
Why is it significant?
Lyndhurst Terrace is associated with the residential development of Richmond in the 1870s. Built in 1874, it is one of the oldest terrace rows in Richmond. The majority of the surviving nineteenth century houses in Richmond date from 1880-1899 and surviving houses, particularly terrace rows, from the 1870s or earlier are comparatively rare. Although altered, the 1870s construction date is demonstrated by the low pitched shared roofs (shared roofs are typical of terraces constructed in Richmond prior to the adoption of municipal building regulations in 1886), and bi-chrome brickwork with restrained ornamentation including no stucco detailing, which distinguish terrace rows of the 1870s from those built from the mid 1880s to early 1900s. (Criteria A & D)
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
60-Abinger St/Church StTram117 meters
60-Abinger St/Church StTram130 meters
18-Church St/Bridge RdTram213 meters
19-Richmond Town Hall/Bridge RdTram205 meters
19-Richmond Town Hall/Bridge RdTram212 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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