Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Smythesdale Median Price
House$633,300
Land$175,000
The House price is 16% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Haddon$770,100
Ross Creek$981,600
Scarsdale$646,100
Smythes Creek$712,900
Smythesdale Median Rent
House$431
The House rent is 4% lower than last year.
Smythesdale property sold price
Smythesdale 3351 Profile
A62 Brooke Street, Smythesdale
Distance:114.1 km to CBD; 16.7 km to Wendouree Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
What is Significant?
The former police stables and lock up, 62 Brooke Street, Smythesdale, has significance as rare and predominantly intact surviving examples of a 19th century police infrastructure buildings in the Golden Plains Shire. These buildings, along with the neighbouring court house, represent the only surviving structures of a considerable police complex on the former police reserve from 1859. The stables building was erected at this time and the lock up was built in 1866 at the height of the gold rush in Smythesdale. Both buildings are of standard Public Works Department design, in their gabled roof forms clad in slate, rendered brick wall construction (stables) and bluestone construction (lock up) and associated details. The interiors of the buildings are also predominantly intact. Of particular interest in the stables is the brick floor having the bricks set with their lengths into the ground, as well as the timber screen and cement rendered wall finishes. The interior of the lock up symbolises contemporary 19th century attitudes towards confinement and punishment, in the austere flagstone and timber floors, white washed walls, timber-lined ceilings, and especially in the solid timber doors (with substantial iron bolts and hinges) and openings with iron security grilles.
How is it Significant?
The former police stables and lock up at Smythesdale are architecturally, historically and socially significant at the state level. The stables represent the only example of its type in the Golden Plains Shire, and the only known surviving rendered brick police stables by the Public Works Department in Victoria. The lock up is only one of two surviving 19th century bluestone gaols in the municipality today.
Why is it Significant?
The former police stables and lock up at Smythesdale are historically significant (Practice Note Criteria A & B) for their associations with the evolution and development of law and order (and particularly a police presence) in Smythesdale from the height of the gold boom in the town from the 1850s and 1860s. Alongside the neighbouring court house, they served their original purpose until 1959. The buildings symbolise the 19th century police presence in the town, with the lock up servicing prisoners awaiting trial at the neighbouring court house.
The former police stables and lock up at Smythesdale are architecturally significant (Practice Note Criteria D & E) as predominantly intact and rare surviving examples of standard Public Works Department austere designs of the 1850s and 1860s in the Golden Plains Shire. While the buildings have experienced repairs, they reflect their original designs and construction. The former stables building is the only example of its type in the Shire, and the only known surviving rendered brick example in Victoria. The lock up is only one of two lock ups sur
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Loader St/Glenelg HwyBus98 meters
Loader St/Glenelg HwyBus105 meters
Drummond St/Glenelg HwyBus3.6 km
Hamilton St/Glenelg HwyBus3.8 km
Ross Creek Shop/Sebastopol - Smythesdale RdBus6.4 km
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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