Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Cockatoo 平均房价
House$873,500
Land$561,600
House 价格比去年上升5% .
周边地区
Avonsleigh$1,015,500
Emerald$972,900
Gembrook$1,046,900
MacClesfield$1,251,600
Cockatoo Median Rent
House$566
Unit$241
The House rent is 上升34% .
Cockatoo 房屋成交价
Cockatoo 3781 地区介绍
A2-10 MCBRIDE STREET, Cockatoo
距离:48.3 公里 to CBD; 2.7 公里 to Lakeside Station [公共交通]

邻居照片
地图位置 | 街景 | 周边成交价
改建申请历史:
被市政府指定为 Victorian heritage
What is significant?
The former Cockatoo Kindergarten is a 1976 kindergarten building in a semi-rural setting in the township of Cockatoo, about 50 km east of Melbourne. The site is part of the traditional land of the Kulin Nation.
The former Cockatoo Kindergarten is located in the Alma Trelour Reserve. It is a steel-framed circular building with a low pyramidal roof tapering up to a central lantern, which provides light and ventilation, and has a surrounding verandah. Internally it had a large play room, office and toilet facilities. The exterior walls of the building, originally of asbestos sheeting with large areas of glass, have been removed, and some of the internal walls have also been destroyed.
The kindergarten was built to provide facilities for the then rapidly growing population, on land provided by the local Council, using money raised by the Cockatoo Community Co-operative. The circular-plan building was designed by the Melbourne architect Richard Allen to resemble a merry-go-round.
Much of the township of Cockatoo was destroyed in the catastrophic Ash Wednesday bushfires of 16 February 1983, which devastated large areas of Victoria and South Australia. The fire that affected Cockatoo started late in the day and changed direction after the wind went around to the south-west. Many local firefighters and appliances were away fighting fires elsewhere, so the township was exposed. The fire burned 1,800 hectares of land and destroyed 307 buildings. Six people lost their lives in and around Cockatoo.
During the fires the kindergarten building became a refuge for about 300 local people, almost half of whom were children. In the days after the fires the Red Cross used the building as a registration centre.
During the Australian tour of HRH the Prince of Wales and HRH the Princess of Wales in March 1983 the couple visited Cockatoo, and planted a Flowering Gum (Corymbia ficifolia, formerly Eucalyptus ficifolia) at the entrance to the kindergarten to mark the occasion.
The roof of the building was badly affected by the fires, and deteriorated further in the following years, resulting in 2005 in the kindergarten moving to another site. The building remained unused for several years and during this time suffered from vandalism. Council's decision to demolish the building in 2011 met with opposition from the local community, which wanted it kept as a memorial.
How is it significant?
The Former Cockatoo Kindergarten is of historical and social significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
Victoria's Framework of Historic Themes identifies 'seeking refuge from fires' as one sub-theme under 'living with natural processes' (Theme 1.5) and lists 'fire refuges' as an example of places representing this theme.
附近公交:
公交站类型距离
Pakenham Rd/McBride (north) St巴士210 米
Pakenham Rd/McBride (south) St巴士237 米
Baker St/Bailey Rd巴士255 米
Baker St/Bailey Rd巴士255 米
Amphlett Ave/Belgrave-Gembrook (north) Rd巴士562 米
>>更多

房屋许可证数据来自互联网.

© 2015 - English  繁体