Eltham 平均房價House 價格比去年上升6% . 周邊地區Briar Hill | $1,008,700 ![](/img/up.gif) | Diamond Creek | $1,056,600 ![](/img/up.gif) | Lower Plenty | $1,582,800 ![](/img/up.gif) | Montmorency | $1,121,500 ![](/img/up.gif) | North Warrandyte | $1,346,500 ![](/img/up.gif) | Templestowe | $1,712,700 ![](/img/down.gif) | Warrandyte | $1,605,100 ![](/img/down.gif) | Eltham Median RentThe House rent is 上升10% .
| A93 ARTHUR STREET, Eltham | 距離: | 20.4 公里 to CBD; 1 公里 to Eltham Station [公共交通] |
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| ![](http://cbk0.google.com/cbk?output=thumbnail&w=160&h=130&ll=-37.716401,145.15861) 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 - January 5, 2010 REVISED STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE, CONTEXT, 2010 What is significant? The c1950s Jelbart residence and the c1945 barn, the garden and the gate posts and the surrounding site to the extent of the title boundaries. How is it significant? The Jelbart house and barn are historically and architecturally significant to the Shire of Nillumbik. The garden and the gate posts are historically and aesthetically significant to the Shire of Nillumbik. Why is it significant? The Jelbart house and barn are historically significant because they are unusually large and because together they comprise one of the oldest groups of substantial mud brick buildings erected during the 20th century in the Shire of Eltham and foreshadow the large mud brick residences of the 1960s and 1970s for which the area is well known (Criteria A & B). The buildings are architecturally significant because their construction (using timber post framing and mud brick walling) is a characteristic feature of what became known as the 'Eltham style'- which was prevalent in the area during the mid and latter parts of the 20th century (Criteria D & A). The garden and the gate posts - The garden is historically significant because it is a remainder of a large holding of 200 acres associated with the house (Criterion A).The gate posts are historically and aesthetically significant because they were taken from a 19th-century Toorak mansion and because their removal and re-use illustrates the practice of recycling material from demolished buildings that was one of the characteristic features of 'Eltham-style' architecture (Criteria A, D & E). |
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