Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Sunshine Median Price
House$882,100
Unit$409,000
Land$677,500
The House price is 1% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Albion$712,700
Ardeer$616,200
Braybrook$754,000
Brooklyn$695,500
Sunshine Median Rent
House$460
Unit$384
The House rent is 6% higher than last year.
Sunshine property sold price
Sunshine 3020 Profile
A140 Morris Street, Sunshine
Distance:12 km to CBD; 493 meters to Sunshine Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - January 1, 2000
Precinct statement of significance:
The Railway Station Estate - Wright & Edwards Heritage Area is of regional historical and architectural significance as a sub-division first developed in the speculative boom of the 1880s. This related to the industrialisation of the area and the creation of a new suburb - the township of Braybrook Junction. The few remaining houses of the early 1890s are amongst the oldest in the district and are a remarkable survival from the era of the 1890s Depression, when many newly-built houses were moved.
The subdivision is significant for its unusual (for the City of Brimbank) late nineteenth century plan with a simple grid of streets, divided into narrow allotments and with rear service laneways. The pattern was unrelieved by any provision for recreation, community facilities or other services. The earliest sold allotments were either intended to be for narrow terrace-type houses, or were subdivided. Allotments first sold in the 1920s were larger, perhaps in response to the impact McKay's subdivisions was having on aspirations of new residents. The houses tend to be simple double fronted plan, asymmetric with a projecting gable, weatherboard clad with corrugated iron roofs.
This subdivision is also significant for its diversity and the range of housing from different periods, especially the years immediately following the establishment of H.V. McKay's Sunshine Harvester Works at Braybrook Junction. The area provides an interesting comparison with H.V. McKay's housing estate, since many of his Ballarat workers moved or built homes here in the early years of the 20th century. The neighbourhood's population more than doubled in ten years, with further expansion in the 1920s -30s and during and after World War Two.
 
11 Apr 2014
2 lot subdivision
(Source: Streamlined Planning through Electronic Applications and Referra, reference no: S050227S)
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Thorpe St/Hampshire RdBus85 meters
Leith Ave/Hampshire RdBus84 meters
Chapman St/Hampshire RdBus187 meters
Chapman St/Hampshire RdBus226 meters
Corio St/Hampshire RdBus293 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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