Fitzroy Median PriceThe House price is 7% higher than last year. Surrounding suburbsCarlton | $1,450,200 | Carlton North | $1,565,700 | Clifton Hill | $1,504,700 | Collingwood | $1,126,600 | East Melbourne | $3,315,000 | Fitzroy North | $1,539,400 | Fitzroy Median RentThe House rent is 7% higher than last year.
| 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: Alexandra Parade, Brunswick Street, Johnston Street, What is significant? The Brunswick Street Heritage Overlay Area was among the first of Fitzroy's streets to develop commercially, including parts of Crown Allotments 49, 70,71, 83 and 84, sold from 1839. During the 1840s, small shopkeepers located in Brunswick Street to provide local residents with building materials, food and clothing.(19) By 1854, subdivision was near completed and according to one source, '.shops rivalling those in Bourke-street, Melbourne, were to be found in Brunswick-street'. The 1860s-1870s was a period of consolidation in Brunswick Street, as the rude structures of the early decades were replaced with more substantial premises. A cable tram (since electrified) aided Brunswick Street development from the late 1880s. The highly significant three-storey shop row (236-252 Brunswick St, 1888) designed by John Beswicke joined other similarly scaled late Victorian-era commercial buildings including Moran & Cato Merchants (277-285, 1897- ), and the Fitzroy Post Office (296). Banks joined hotels as among the key historical buildings in the street including the Union Bank, the Bank of Victoria and the London Chartered Bank, typically located on prominent corner sites. Aided by the North Fitzroy cable-tram service started in 1886, development of the street, and its architectural character, was virtually complete by the turn of the century, with a number of the original buildings being replaced in the Edwardian-era. After the Second War, there was a high concentration of migrant occupation and small-scale industrial use of many of the shops in the mid 20th century. This low intensity use helped to preserve the buildings, including a high proportion of 19th century shop fronts. The street developed from the late 1970s as one of Melbourne's best-known and popular strip of bohemian cafes, bars, restaurants, hotels, bookshops and other boutiques. This era also meant replacement of many of the corner banks with new buildings. However the greatest loss in the street was the development of the Atherton Gardens Estate by Housing Commission of Victoria when shop rows and an early stone church, between King William and Gertrude Streets, were demolished. Four twenty-storey residential towers were built in their place in 1970-1972. This part of Br | | 23 Jul 2012 | Commercial - Advertising Sign, Liquor License, Reduction in Car Parking | (Source: City of Yarra, reference no: PLN12/0615) | | 04 May 2015 | Transfer of Licence | (Source: Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation, reference no: 26687A11) | | 13 Aug 2016 | Buildings and works | (Source: , reference no: ) |
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