Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Toorak Median Price
House$2,045,700
Unit$1,147,200
The House price is 26% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Armadale$1,834,800
Burnley$1,272,500
Hawthorn$2,343,700
Kooyong$2,232,000
Malvern$2,251,400
Prahran$1,627,600
South Yarra$1,883,300
Toorak Median Rent
House$1,536
Unit$775
The House rent is 26% higher than last year.
Toorak property sold price
Toorak 3142 Profile
A24 HILL STREET, Toorak
Distance:5 km to CBD; 856 meters to Heyington Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - December 20, 2001
STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE
What is significant?
The Roy Grounds house and flats at 24 Hill Street, Toorak consists of a residence with a string of four investment units behind. Noted architect Roy Grounds (later Sir Roy) designed the front house as a home for himself and his wife Betty. The plan of the house, a perfect square with a circular courtyard at its centre, is a striking essay in pure geometry, a hallmark of Ground's work during the 1950s. With only highlight windows on the external walls, all of the rooms focus on the internal courtyard, creating an inward looking, almost eastern character. This oriental influence continues to the external design, with strong solid walls, topped by projecting eaves floating above the highlight windows, and a single central large door with oversized knocker. The original planting of the courtyard with persimmon and bamboo also displays an eastern influence.
The three flats to the rear sequentially step back from the main house to allow undercover carparking. While they do not have the geometry or oriental repose of the main house, they include distinctive features such as the angled carpark walls, small slatted balconies, and a double height main space, with a tall window wall facing the side courtyard gardens.
The Grounds house was one of a number of experiments in developing architecture from pure geometry designed by Roy Grounds, an approach he began in the late 1930s. His other most famous remaining examples are the circular Henty House in Frankston, and the domed Academy of Sciences in Canberra. He was the foremost exponent of the approach in the post war period in Victoria, but it was also adopted by some of his contemporaries. The house in Toorak was widely praised at the time, and won the Victorian Architecture Medal of 1954.
In the 1950s Roy Grounds was a member of the Grounds Romberg and Boyd partnership. The partnership broke up partly in response to Ground's appointment as sole architect for the National Gallery, considered his master work, and a building that employed many of the themes in his own house at 24 Hill Street built 10 years earlier.
How is it significant?
The Roy Grounds house and flats at 24 Hill Street are of architectural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The Grounds house is of architectural significance as one of the most celebrated works of modernist domestic architecture of the mid 20th century in Victoria. The perfectly square plan, with a circular courtyard at its centre, is a striking essay in pure geometry, a hallmark of Ground's work, and one of the best examples of experimentation with geometry in the work of post war avant-garde architects in Victoria.
The Grounds house is of architectural
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Grange Rd/Bruce StBus274 meters
Grange Rd/Bruce StBus291 meters
Trawalla Ave/Grange RdBus460 meters
Balmerino Ave/Bruce StBus406 meters
Douglas St/Grange RdBus471 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版