Stawell Median PriceThe House price is 13% lower than last year. Surrounding suburbsStawell Median RentThe House rent is 3% lower than last year.
| Map | Street view | Nearby property price | Planning History: | | Registered as Victorian heritage | Last updated on - August 27, 2004 The former Christ Church Vicarage, 30-32 Seaby Street, Stawell, has significance for its associations with the Church of England in Stawell from 1863 until 1922, and as one of the oldest remaining houses in Stawell. The house at 30-32 Seaby Street is architecturally significant at a LOCAL level. It demonstrates original design qualities of a Victorian style. These qualities include the gable roof form that traverses the site, together with the return broken back and skillion verandah that projects at the front and sides. Other intact or appropriate qualities include single storey height, the unpainted and lapped galvanised corrugated iron roof cladding, rendered brick wall construction, two rendered brick chimneys with projecting cornices, modest eaves, central doorway with flanking timber and glazed French doors, timber verandah columns on pedestals, decorative timber verandah brackets, and the masonry quoinwork. The house at 30-32 Seaby Street is historically significant at a LOCAL level. It is associated with the development of Christ Church in Stawell between 1863 and 1922. Built by Messrs Candy and Barten in 1863 as the Christ Church Vicarage, the house is one of the oldest remaining in Stawell. Overall, the house at 30-32 Seaby Street is of LOCAL significance. |
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