Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Echuca 平均房價
House$639,200
Unit$399,000
Land$780,200
House 價格比去年下降11% .
周邊地區
Bamawm$241,000
Echuca Village$659,100
Echuca West$636,600
Koyuga$401,600
Echuca Median Rent
House$877
Unit$353
The House rent is 上升16% .
Echuca 房屋成交價
Echuca 3564 地區介紹
A109 HARE STREET, Echuca
距離:188.5 公里 to CBD; 395 米 to Echuca 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
Last updated on - June 28, 2005
What is significant?
The health of mothers and infants became of increasing concern in the first decades of the twentieth century. The early baby health movement was driven by committed volunteers frustrated at government inaction. Dr Isabella Younger Ross (1887-1956) who had studied infant health in England helped set up Victoria's first baby health clinic in Richmond in 1917. By 1918 the voluntary Victorian Baby Health Centres Association (VBHCA) was formed to oversee the growing number of centres. Financial support also came from local councils and in 1926 the State government formed the Infant Welfare Section of the Public Health Department and appointed Dr Vera Scantlebury Brown as the first Director.
The first Baby Health Centre in Echuca was conducted from two small rooms in the Town Hall between 1925 and 1950. By 1947 the rooms were insufficient for the needs of the service. In the following year, despite severe post-war labour and material shortages, the Committee of the Baby Health Centre embarked on a fund-raising campaign for a new building, supported by the Echuca Rotary Club. The council provided land on Alton Reserve situated at the end of the commercial centre of the town, but provided no funding for the building. The committee took advantage of the newly introduced State Government construction subsidy of ??1000 and the building was eventually completed by voluntary labour, donated materials and funds from individuals and local businesses and organisations. The building, opened by Dr. A. E. (Betty) Wilmot, Acting Director of the Maternal and Child Hygiene Section of the Health Department on 30 September 1950, is one of the first centres to be completed in country Victoria after World War Two. The architect for the building is unknown.
In plan form the domestic-scale building is symmetrically arranged with double door entrances accessed by porches on either side of a central, projecting waiting room. The entrances and pram porches were specifically designed to provide easy pram access, as well as space for pram parking. Other rooms include the consulting suite, as well as a utility room, kitchen, toilet, tools and wood room. Domestic in scale and design, the centre resembles a house typical of the austere period after the Second World War. The style can be described as Post-war Functionalist or Post-war Austere. The hipped roof is tiled, the brick fabric is rendered (now painted white), and the windows metal framed. The porches are semi-circular, with sections of glass bricks and double wrought iron gates at their entry. The large wrought iron lettering mounted on the render above each entry originally read "HEALTH", the other "CENTRE". A Rotary logo is located at the top part of the chimney. The building is owned by the Campaspe Shire Council and is still in community use as a gallery.
How is it s
附近公交:
公交站類型距離
Paramount Cinema/High St巴士107 米
Coles Supermarket/High St巴士176 米
Nomad Backpackers/High St巴士169 米
Echuca Primary School/High St巴士203 米
Masonic Hall/High St巴士212 米
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