Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Hepburn Springs Median Price
House$897,000
Land$320,300
The House price is 7% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Daylesford$1,007,300
Hepburn$710,800
Hepburn Springs Median Rent
House$521
Unit$335
The House rent is 1% lower than last year.
Hepburn Springs property sold price
Hepburn Springs 3461 Profile
A64 MAIN ROAD, Hepburn Springs
Distance:91.4 km to CBD; 29.2 km to Castlemaine Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - June 11, 1999
What is significant?
The former Macaroni Factory was commenced in 1859 by brothers Giacomo and Pietro Lucini. The Lucinis were fabric merchants from Intra on Lake Maggiore in northern Italy. As supporters of Giussepe Mazzini, the Democratic Republican leader during the 1848 revolution in the Italian states, the brothers were forced to migrate as political refugees to Melbourne in the 1850s.
As well as operating as macaroni makers for a short time in Melbourne in the early 1850s, Pietro established a bakery in Spring Creek (Hepburn Springs), supplying macaroni, salami and sausages to the large Italian and Swiss population in the Hepburn-Yandoit area. Many of the Italian migrants working on the goldfields in the area were also Mazzini supporters. The Lucini family supported Italian gold prospectors by loans of money and 'grub-staking', whereby the Lucinis supplied weekly rations of bread, macaroni, salami, olive oil, tea and tobacco in exchange for a one-third share of any gold found. The Lucinis also had substantial interests in gold mines in the 1860s and bought and sold gold.
The former Macaroni Factory building was finished in 1862-64 by the addition of the flanking single storey pavilions. As well as functioning as a macaroni factory the building was the Lucini family home, and additionally between 1864 and 1870 it was licensed as the Roma Hotel. In 1880 the Lucini's won a prize for their macaroni at the Melbourne Exhibition. A hand painted sign 'Hepburn Democratic Club' on the front of the building suggests that the building operated as a focus for the local community until the late nineteenth century. The macaroni business continued until the 1930s, when the machinery was sold and the building became holiday apartments.
The building is constructed of stone and brick. The original slate roof was replaced by corrugated galvanised iron in c1930. Shingles to the pavilion roofs survive beneath later corrugated iron.
Internally the building has a comprehensive hand painted mural scheme. Executed by Giacomo Lucini in 1862-64 in a naive style, the murals cover many of the walls and ceilings. Technically the paintings imitate the surface finish of a fresco, where paint is applied to fresh plaster. The themes are secular and political, depicting different aspects of the Lucinis' lives. The largest mural is on the ceiling of the southern pavilion, depicting the flags of Italy, Switzerland, France and Britain (Australia), and six vignettes of home and family life. Stencils were used to create a repeating floral motif to the walls.
How is it significant?
The former Macaroni Factory is of historic, aesthetic and architectural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The former Macaroni Factory is aesthetically significant for its interior decorative scheme. It is one o
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Fifth St/Hepburn Springs Tourist RdBus105 meters
Hepburn - Newstead Rd/Hepburn Springs RdBus827 meters
Hepburn Primary School/Hepburn-Newstead RdBus1 km
Old Hepburn Hotel/Hepburn - Newstead RdBus1.9 km
Opposite CFA/Bridport StBus2.8 km
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版