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
A24 Peel Street, Collingwood
Distance:2.2 km to CBD; 771 meters to Collingwood Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - January 1, 2014
Precinct statement of significance
Component streets include:
Cambridge Street,
Oxford Street,
Peel Street,
Wellington Street,
Statement of Significance
What is significant?
Development of the Collingwood Slope (44) began in 1839 when S A Donaldson acquired the major portion of the area, consisting of lot 52 and part lots 53 and 68, and George Otter acquired the northern portion, consisting of part of lot 73.
The pattern of streets, determined by the government's pre-auction survey, yielded large allotments in a gridiron pattern ideal for speculation and intense subdivision.
Subdivision of these allotments commenced in 1848 (lot 73) and 1849 (lots 52 and 53), and by 1853 the whole of the area, bounded by Smith, Johnson and Wellington Streets and Victoria Parade, was built upon. The area was originally known as East Collingwood. It fell outside of the Melbourne Building Act 1849 and was rapidly developed in a relatively unplanned manner by speculators, as a place of small shops and cottages, many of timber.
By the early 1860s, Wellington Street rivalled Smith Street as a commercial precinct and many of the boot and brewing premises established on the Collingwood Slope had spread to the Flat and beyond. While the area contained predominately working class housing and manufactories of varying types, the southern area near Victoria Parade included some grander houses including Portia and Floraston, as well as a number of churches, schools and Dr Singleton's Dispensary in Wellington Street.
In 1883, Foy and Gibson established what was to become a retail and manufacturing empire in the area, when they opened a shop in Smith Street. From then until the 1920s, the entire block bounded by Smith, Wellington, Peel and Stanley Streets (originally occupied by houses, small factories and hotels) underwent a transformation into an industrial landscape which remains externally substantially intact. This major expansionary phase brought woollen mills, clothing manufacture, hosiery, bedding, metal goods and cabinet manufacture to the Heritage Overlay Area at a scale unprecedented in Melbourne at the time; this is reflected in the substantial warehouses which remain today. The Foy and Gibson complex is on the Victorian Heritage Register and hence is not in the Heritage Overlay Area but forms a major part of the history and context of the Heritage Overlay Area.
 
14 Nov 2014
Buildings & works and one new dwelling
(Source: City of Yarra, reference no: PLN14/1051)
 
27 Mar 2018
S72 Amendment to allow for a reduction in the western set back of the building and a decrease in the overall width of the building.
(Source: , reference no: )
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
16-Peel St/Smith StTram145 meters
17-Charles St/Smith StTram205 meters
17-Charles St/Smith StTram208 meters
15-Gertrude St/Smith StTram218 meters
15-Smith St/Gertrude StTram243 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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