Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Melbourne Median Price
House$590,000
Unit$599,700
The House price is 1% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Albert Park$2,267,600
Carlton$1,396,000
Cremorne$1,323,300
Docklands$1,487,200
East Melbourne$3,052,500
North Melbourne$1,326,300
Parkville$1,881,400
Prahran$1,627,600
Richmond$1,454,900
South Melbourne$1,638,200
South Yarra$1,883,300
Southbank$946,700
St Kilda$1,605,200
West Melbourne$1,376,000
Windsor$1,461,700
Melbourne Median Rent
House$638
Unit$698
The House rent is 2% higher than last year.
Melbourne property sold price
Melbourne 3000 Profile
A304-328 SWANSTON STREET and 179-181 LATROBE STREET, Melbourne
Distance:518 meters to CBD; 119 meters to Melbourne Central Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - April 30, 2008
What is significant?
The trustees for Melbourne's new public library were appointed in July 1853 and on 3 July the following year the foundation stone for the first section of building was laid. Opened in 1856, this building was the first of many constructed on the site to accommodate four institutions over a period of time. These included the Public Library, the National Gallery of Victoria, the Industrial and Technological Museum and the Natural History Museum.
The Chairman of Trustees, lawyer Redmond Barry, was the prime founder of the institution and the aspiration of the trustees was to create one great centre of learning. Initially a competition was held for the design of the library and this was won by Joseph Reed. The first building constructed comprised an entrance hall and upstairs reading room. By 1865 wings had been added to the north and south of the original building, extending the Queen's Hall reading room on the first floor, and in 1870 the portico was added to the front facade.
The National Gallery of Victoria began its association with the site in 1861 when a gallery was opened to display works of art in the south wing of the library. Various buildings and wings were added to display additional artworks in 1874 and again in 1887 and 1892. Despite the continual searching for another site, the National Gallery shared the library site until 1968 when it moved to the new gallery building in St Kilda Road.
The 1866-67 Intercolonial Exhibition, held at the library site led to the opening of the Industrial and Technological Museum on this site in 1870, with many of the exhibits forming the core of the collection. In 1899 the contents of the National Museum, formerly the Natural History Museum, were transferred from the University of Melbourne to the library site. The Museum of Victoria remained at the site until its relocation c2000. At this time the library became the sole occupant of the seven acre site.
Construction of buildings on the library site was almost continuous from 1854 until the construction of the La Trobe Library in the 1960s. Joseph Reed, or his subsequent firms and their descendents, was responsible for the design of a number of building phases, including the initial building, the international exhibition spaces in 1866, the portico in 1870, the various halls constructed for the museum and gallery from 1874 to 1906 and the domed reading room in 1913. Work undertaken in the 1920s-40s was undertaken by Irwin and Stevenson and later work by the Public Works Department.
The main Swanston Street facade of the library is built of sandstone in an English Palladian manner, with central Corinthian portico and flanking wings which terminate in projecting pavilions. A giant order, supporting an entablature and balustrading, runs across the undulating, two sto
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
8-Melbourne Central Station/Swanston StTram25 meters
6-Swanston St/La Trobe StTram19 meters
6-Swanston St/La Trobe StTram30 meters
8-Melbourne Central Station/Swanston StTram35 meters
Melbourne CentralTrain119 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版