Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Collingwood Median Price
House$1,134,500
Unit$850,100
The House price is 13% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Abbotsford$1,207,300
Clifton Hill$1,567,800
East Melbourne$3,052,500
Fitzroy$1,649,100
Fitzroy North$1,577,200
Richmond$1,454,900
Collingwood Median Rent
House$792
Unit$673
The House rent is 12% higher than last year.
Collingwood property sold price
Collingwood 3066 Profile
A151 Langridge Street, Collingwood
Distance:2.5 km to CBD; 403 meters to North Richmond Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - March 10, 2007
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 houses at 151-153 Langridge Street, Collingwood, were built in 1884. They are first listed in the Rate Books in 1885 as two brick houses owned by George Beattie, each valued at ??22. The houses were built on two vacant sites, each valued at ??3 in 1883-84: one was owned by George Beattie, the other by Thomas Suckling. The first tenants were Charles Fletcher, a driver, a Richard Wallis, a boot clicker.
Description:
The terrace at 151-153 Langridge Street, Collingwood, comprises two single storey attached bichromatic brick houses, similar in design to the adjoining pair at Nos. 147-149. Walls are of brown face brick, with cream brick dressings and decoration to the central wing wall. Each facade has a door and single timber-framed double-hung sash window. There is a concave-roofed corrugated iron verandah. The single transverse gabled roof has bracketed eaves, is clad in corrugated iron and is penetrated by brick chimneys with rendered moulded caps.
The facade of No. 151 has been painted, as have the chimneys of both houses. Neither house retains a verandah frieze or original front fence.
Significance:
The terrace at 151-153 Langridge Street, Collingwood is of local architectural significance. The pair is a typical example of modest bichromatic brick dwellings from the late Victorian period, and a remnant of the late 19th century residential development of Langridge Street, and, along with the adjoining terrace a Nos. 147-149, it is an important heritage element in a streetscape highly eroded by later industrial development.
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Langridge St/Hoddle StBus122 meters
Langridge St/Hoddle StBus148 meters
18-Hoddle St/Victoria PdeTram287 meters
18-Hoddle St/Victoria StTram293 meters
Victoria Pde/Hoddle StBus359 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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