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Ararat Median Price
House$407,500
Unit$324,800
Land$255,300
The House price is 5% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Great Western$391,000
Ararat Median Rent
House$338
Unit$325
The House rent is 1% lower than last year.
Ararat property sold price
Ararat 3377 Profile
A63-75 BARKLY STREET, Ararat
Distance:189.1 km to CBD; 891 meters to Ararat Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - September 12, 2002
What is significant?
Completed in 1866-67, Ararat Court House is a small, symmetrical brick building designed by Public Works Department architect Gustav Joachimi in the Victorian Free Classical style with a recessed entry and gabled roof. As with other examples of this style, the vestibule to the court house features a semi-circular brick partition wall with double-entry into the court room. The front exterior, characterised by two Romanesque arches below a circular vent in the gable pediment, also featuresdichromatic brick patterning, bracketted eaves, and brick machicolations to the gable. Internally, the court house has a simple cruciform plan with a central court room flanked by offices at the sides and rear. The original ground plan shows the building dominated by the courtroom with a large office at rear for the judge, and similarly sized offices adjoining this space on both sides. In 1873 a jury room was added to the rear of the western office wing and a new jury box was built in the court room by contractor T. Walker. Major alterations and additions were undertaken by Thomas Corley in 1879-80, when the court room was extended into the space formerly used as a judge's room. A new judge's room was built at the rear, and a sheriff's office was added as an extension to the eastern office wing. During these alterations a first floor gallery was also added to the building and a lantern was installed on the roof of the court room. In 1908-09 Robert Ludbrook built an office for the Department of Crown Lands and Survey by extending the western office wing almost to the line of the facade. During the 1950s the building was re-roofed with terra cotta tiles, and around 1960 the original prisoner's cell was converted to two toilets and a cleaner's room. The building, still serving its original purpose as a court,retains early fittings and the front facade is notable for its high degree of intactness.
How is it significant?
Ararat Court House is of historical and architectural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
Ararat Court House is historically significant as a record of the progress of the once major goldfield town of Ararat in central Victoria. A Court of Mines, established at Ararat in 1857, operated from a temporary wooden building until 1859, when Ararat was declared a General Sessions District and a basalt court house was erected in Vincent Street. This court house was succeeded by the present building which reflects Ararat?s status as a site for Supreme Court sittings after 1860 (until 1909). The building is historically important for its internal plan which incorporated an assessor?s room, a hallmark of the Court of Mines era. It is also historically important as a fine, relatively intact example of the work of Public Works Architect Gustav Joachimi who
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Ararat Post Office/Ingor StBus85 meters
Barkly St/Ingor StBus106 meters
Ararat Medical Centre/High StBus262 meters
Barkly East St/Vincent StBus396 meters
Ararat Town Hall/Barkly StBus435 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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