Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Southbank Median Price
House$946,700
Unit$677,700
The Unit price is 2% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Docklands$1,487,200
Melbourne$590,000
Port Melbourne$1,603,000
South Melbourne$1,638,200
Southbank Median Rent
House$732
Unit$701
The House rent is 14% higher than last year.
Southbank property sold price
Southbank 3006 Profile
A1 RIVERSIDE QUAY, Southbank
Distance:837 meters to CBD; 465 meters to Flinders Street Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - October 22, 1999
What is significant?
The Jones Bond Store was a large complex of store buildings, the first being constructed on the site around 1865. The extant registered buildings are Stores B and C and building No. 11. These probably date from 1888. The B and C stores were constructed of English-bond face brickwork with cast-iron columns and timber floors and roof trusses. The five storeys are delineated by corbelled brick string courses, and arched and flat arched window heads alternate with each floor. An oculus in each gable is surrounded by cream brick with quoins on the four axes. Building 11 was constructed of brick and bluestone and has a shallow gable roof.
How is it significant?
The Jones Bond Store is of historical and architectural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The Jones Bond Store is of historical significance as one of the largest extant 19th century store complexes in Victoria and one of the few remaining links with Southbank's early industrial and maritime past. The buildings provide evidence of the character of late-19th century warehousing and are a reminder of the fact that the river bank in their vicinity was once a hive of shipping activity. They show how warehouses and shipping freight facilities were more closely integrated in the fabric of the city in the years before containerisation and heavy freight haulage demanded more specialised and separate freight precincts. The simple but substantial character of the buildings reflects Melbourne's growing importance as a port city in the post-gold rush years.
The Jones Bond Store is of architectural significance because it documents a development in building design, namely the multi-storey warehouse, a development which was influenced by the introduction of hydraulic lift technology in the mid 1880s.
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
City Rd/Southbank BvdBus175 meters
112-Casino East/Queens Bridge StTram233 meters
Casino East Tram Safety Zone/Queens Bridge StBus239 meters
112-Casino East/Queens Bridge StTram240 meters
Kavanagh St/Southbank BvdBus196 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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