Collingwood Median PriceThe House price is 13% lower than last year. Surrounding suburbsAbbotsford | $1,207,300 ![](/img/down.gif) | Clifton Hill | $1,567,800 ![](/img/down.gif) | East Melbourne | $3,052,500 ![](/img/up.gif) | Fitzroy | $1,649,100 ![](/img/down.gif) | Fitzroy North | $1,577,200 ![](/img/white.gif) | Richmond | $1,454,900 ![](/img/up.gif) | Collingwood Median RentThe House rent is 12% higher than last year.
| Map | Street view | Nearby property price | Planning History: | | Registered as Victorian heritage | Last updated on - January 1, 2014 Currys Family Hotel, 289 Wellington Street, Collingwood This site is subject to a Statement of Significance for the building, as well as a Statement of Significance for the Precinct in which it is located. Please find below the Statement for the building, followed by the Statement for the Precinct. Statement of Significance for the building What is significant? The Currys Family Hotel at 289 Wellington Street, Collingwood was created in 1927 for Catherine Foley and has associations with persons such as Theresa Loughnan. The place has a good integrity to its creation date. Fabric from the creation date at the Currys Family Hotel is locally significant within the City of Yarra, compared to other similar places from a similar era. How is it significant? The Currys Family Hotel at 289 Wellington Street, Collingwood is socially and architecturally significant to the locality of Collingwood and the City of Yarra. Why is it significant? The Currys Family Hotel is significant as a hipped roof well-preserved and distinctive 2 storey hotel in a Mediterranean Provincial Revival style with strutted eaves, entry hoods, and a significant tiled dado. The design is enhanced by the corner site. The building is important as a long-term gathering place for the local community. Precinct statement of significance Component streets include: Alexander Street, Alexandra Parade, Ballarat Street, Bendigo Street, Blanche Street, Budd Street, Charlotte Street, Easey Street, Emma Street, Forest Street, Gold Street, Hotham Street, Keele Street, Mater Street, Sackville Street, Wellington Street Statement of Significance What is significant? The land comprising the Gold Street Heritage Overlay Area was first sold in 1839. Part was sold to Sydney-based merchants Hughes and Hoskins, and the northern lots 86 and 87 to J S Ryrie and A Mossman. Subdivision of the south of the area commenced in 1850. Hodgkinson's map of 1858 indicates a small number of houses at the southern ends of Gold and Wellington Streets. The Proeschel 'Map of Collingwood' c.1855 shows Gold, Ballarat, Alexander, Forest and Bendigo Streets, named after the principal Victorian goldfields. Subdivisions seeking to attract former gold seekers were common in 1850s Melbourne, as in the early Yarraville Township (50). Development elsewhere in the Heritage Overlay Area was inhibited by its poor drainage. By 1858 the Reilly Street drain, now under Ale | | 04 Sep 2020 | Transfer of Licence | (Source: , reference no: ) |
| | |