Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Bend of Islands Median Price
House$989,300
The House price is 51% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Christmas Hills$1,185,000
Kangaroo Ground$2,050,000
Wonga Park$1,494,100
Bend of Islands property sold price
A644 HENLEY ROAD, Bend of Islands
Distance:31 km to CBD; 10.7 km to Croydon Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - June 1, 2006
What is significant?
The Burns house, known as 'Kangaroo', was designed by the architect and artist Peter Burns and built in stages from 1968 on an elevated sloping bush site about 40 km north-east of Melbourne.
Peter Burns (born 1924) trained as an architect but was also a successful artist and graphic designer. The houses designed by him in the post-World War II decades contributed to Melbourne's reputation as a site of architectural innovation. He founded and was the first editor and designer of the influential journal Architecture and Arts, was an active member of the Contemporary Art Society, and a prominent member of Melbourne's artistic avant-garde. The land at Kangaroo Ground was purchased by Burns and his wife Mary in 1966, in the area near Eltham which had been popular a retreat for artists since the early twentieth century. The first stage of the house, in the form of a small equilateral triangle, was built in 1968 as a weekender for the Burns family. Typical of Burns' houses it was designed to give a feeling of stability, repose and protection, with walls sloping inwards at the top and minimal openings to the exterior. The house was discussed by Robin Boyd in Architect in 1971, and featured as the House of the Week in both The Age and The Australian Women's Weekly in 1972. A second triangular building and a connecting gallery were added in 1973, when it became the family home, and a triangular guest house was added in 1976 down the slope to the west, connected to the upper gallery by a covered walk way. A circular swimming pool and a tennis court were also constructed at this time. Minor additions were made to the house in 1980 and 1986. The house is still the Burns family residence. Between 1987 and 2001 the Burns held in the grounds of their house the annual Kangaroo Award for Sculpture, a major competition for contemporary sculptors.
The Burns house 'Kangaroo' is made up of three linked triangular-plan pavilions set in informal gardens, established largely by Mary Burns, and is surrounded by bushland sloping down to the Yarra Valley. Reflecting the relative austerity of the period and the lack of resources of the family it was built using cheap materials, with walls clad externally and internally with fibro, and with Stramit system ceilings and a roof of steel decking. The house has a number of design features that characterise Burns' house designs, including the inward sloping walls, acrylic dome windows and flaps for ventilation. It was designed not to blend in with the bush setting but 'as a gesture to come to terms with nature'.
This site is part of the traditional land of the Wurundjeri people.
How is it significant?
The Burns house 'Kangaroo" is of architectural and historical significance to the state of Victoria.
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Jumping Creek Rd/Homestead (east) RdBus3.9 km
Jumping Creek Rd/Homestead (west) RdBus3.9 km
Toppings Rd/Homestead (east) RdBus4.4 km
Toppings Rd/Homestead (west) RdBus4.4 km
30 Jumping Creek RdBus4.1 km
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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