Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Geelong Median Price
House$1,087,000
Unit$743,300
Land$256,600
The House price is 3% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Drumcondra$1,522,100
East Geelong$937,100
Geelong West$996,000
Newtown$1,208,500
North Geelong$684,100
Geelong Median Rent
House$542
Unit$498
The House rent is 1% higher than last year.
Geelong property sold price
Geelong 3220 Profile
A2-4 MERCER STREET, Geelong
Distance:64.5 km to CBD; 517 meters to Geelong Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - May 6, 1999
What is significant?
The Bay View Hotel, originally called the Western Hotel, was built in 1853-54 to a design by the prominent Geelong architect John Young. The three storey structure has a Barrabool sandstone facade with framed windows, balustraded parapet and a curved corner accentuating the entrance. The original balustraded parapet has been replaced with a more ornamental balustrade and the exterior has been painted. The building was used for a short while as a private school in the late 1860s and as a boarding establishment in the 1880s. It reverted to its original use as a hotel in the 1880s.
How is it significant?
The Bay View Hotel is of architectural and historical significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The Bay View is architecturally significant as an important example of stylised Renaissance Revival architecture in Victoria. It is a notable work of the architect John Young, the Tuscan details of the centre row of windows and the distinctive curved corner entrance being characteristic of his work.
The substantial hotel, situated to capture the passing coach traffic, is historically significant for its associations with the gold rush era when Geelong experienced a boom in population and commercial activity. The building demonstrates the emergence of a more ambitious and sophisticated architectural design characteristic of the gold rush period.
The building is also of historical interest for the way in which its changing patterns of occupancy in the 19th century reflect the changing circumstances of Geelong's economy from the gold rush boom to the decline which commenced in the 1860s.
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Keera St/The Esplanade SouthBus169 meters
Mercer St/The Esplanade SouthBus198 meters
St Peter and Paul Catholic Church/Mercer StBus192 meters
Roy St/Mercer StBus242 meters
Madden Ave/Candover StBus228 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版