Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Collingwood Median Price
House$1,126,600
Unit$883,000
The House price is 10% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Abbotsford$1,255,600
Clifton Hill$1,504,700
East Melbourne$3,315,000
Fitzroy$1,609,200
Fitzroy North$1,539,400
Richmond$1,426,700
Collingwood Median Rent
House$834
Unit$694
The House rent is 15% higher than last year.
Collingwood property sold price
Collingwood 3066 Profile
A135-141 Victoria Parade, Collingwood
Distance:2.3 km to CBD; 423 meters to North Richmond Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - January 1, 2008
The following wording is from the Allom and Lovell Building Citation, 1998 for the property. Please note that this is a "Building Citation", not a "Statement of Significance". For further information refer to the Building Citation held by the City of Yarra.
History:
The Prince Patrick Hotel was built on the site of an earlier hotel known variously as the Galatea, Armstrongs, the New Sydney, and the Prince Patrick in 1887 by Samuel Lyons. The first licensee of the new Prince Patrick was Jane Macauley. Ownership and occupancy remained the same at least until 1895.
By 1900 ownership had passed to Samuel Lyons' wife, while the licensee was John Hughes.
Description:
The Prince Patrick Hotel and Shops, 135-141 Victoria Parade, Collingwood, is a double-storey Italianate hotel with two attached shops, on a prominent site on the corner of Rokeby Street. The rendered facades are articulated with superimposed classical orders. The west and south elevations comprise a series of pilastered bays with segmental arched window and door openings. Pairs of pilasters with Tuscan and Corinthian capitals terminate in triangular pediments at parapet level, which are in turn surmounted by rectangular, panelled pediments, flanking balustraded sections. The parapets are further decorated with urns. The pilasters defining the corner splay terminate in a segmental pediment. A smaller pedimented aedicule at first floor level contains incised decoration and the words THE PRINCE PATRICK HOTEL 1887.
Significance:
The Prince Patrick Hotel and Shops, 135-141 Victoria Parade, Collingwood, is of local architectural significance. The building is a good and substantially intact example of a highly ornamented Italianate commercial building, and it is a key element in the Victoria Parade streetscape.
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Wellington St/Victoria PdeBus163 meters
Powlett St/Victoria PdeBus143 meters
16-Wellington St/Victoria PdeTram200 meters
16-Wellington St/Victoria PdeTram221 meters
18-Hoddle St/Victoria PdeTram272 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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