Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Bulla Median Price
House$1,111,300
Land$625,300
The House price is 8% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Diggers Rest$703,800
Greenvale$913,500
Oaklands Junction$1,338,300
Sunbury$703,800
Bulla Median Rent
House$388
Bulla property sold price
Bulla 3428 Profile
A11 School Lane, Bulla
Distance:131.8 km to CBD; 2.6 km to Bendigo Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
'What is significant?
The Bulla school precinct comprises the primary school and attached residence, a State School Endowment pine plantation on an adjoining parcel of land, and a suspension footbridge (1872) over the nearby Deep Creek.
Former Bulla State School No.46 was erected as a government-funded Common School in 1870-71 and transferred to the State School system following passage of the 1873 Education Act. Operating for 125 years, it has a long connection with the history and development of the rural township of Bulla.
The school consists of a rectangular-shaped schoolroom and an attached three-roomed teacher's residence constructed of even coursed bluestone. The one-roomed bluestone schoolroom has a gable roof, double-hung, multi-paned sash windows, closed-up fireplace, and a bluestone entry porch that is shared with the attached teacher's residence. A timber bedroom and wash-house were added to the residence in 1927. An additional weatherboard classroom, built in 1881 and extended in 1927, abuts the original schoolhouse; this includes a coved and lined ceiling.
The school pine plantation was established in 1929, through the Victorian Government's State School Forest Endowment Plantation Scheme, which was commenced in 1923, and was particularly encouraged at rural and semi-rural schools. The plantation demonstrates the elevated role of forestry education in the state school curriculum in the 1920s and 1930s. As well as engendering an understanding of the conservation and uses of timber, the scheme taught self-sufficiency and self-reliance owing to the self-regulation of the school plantation and the school's control over the revenue from felled timber. In 1950 the Bulla plantation won an award for 'Most Improved School Garden and Grounds' from the Australian Natives Association. The survival of mature pine trees from this plantation provides a strong visual coherence to the precinct.
How is it significant?
The precinct that comprises the former Bulla State School No. 46, adjacent school pine plantation and suspension footbridge, is of historical, architectural and scientific (technological) significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
Former Bulla State School No. 46 is architecturally significant as a substantially intact example of a nineteenth-century bluestone and attached timber school building erected by Board of Education (and its successor the Education Department), which served the dual functions of schoolhouse and teacher's residence. The former Bulla state school is the only known bluestone example of this type.
Former Bulla State School is historically significant at a State level for its continuing function as a small rural school for a period of over 125 years.
The narrow suspension or catenary bridge over the ne
 
02 Dec 2022
Construction of a garage/shed and attached water tank
(Source: , reference no: )
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Cumming St/Murphy StBus447 meters
Maxwell Ct/McIvor HwyBus764 meters
Strickland Rd/Murphy StBus594 meters
Lloyd St/Murphy StBus597 meters
Lloyd St/Jennings StBus750 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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