Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Portland Median Price
House$493,700
Unit$348,900
Land$265,400
The House price is 5% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Portland West$684,000
Portland Median Rent
House$386
Unit$396
The House rent is 7% lower than last year.
Portland property sold price
Portland 3305 Profile
A67 CLIFF STREET, Portland
Distance:300 km to CBD; 75.8 km to Warrnambool Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - August 27, 1999
What is significant?
Portland Court House is a single-storey bluestone court house erected in 1843-45 to a design attributed to the Port Phillip District's clerk of works, James Rattenbury (1808-63). The building exhibits the simplicity and elegance of the Victorian Regency style, with classical elements including a symmetrical facade, prostyle portico supported by four Doric columns, a classical pediment, sash windows with multi-panelled glazing, multi-panelled doors, and smooth-textured ashlar masonry walls. Detailing in the bluestone exterior of the east elevation facade presents a restrained and unified display of skill and simplicity. Apart from the addition of a magistrate's washroom at the rear in 1953, the floor plan is generally intact. Through the main entrance on the east elevation is a large central courtroom surrounded by rooms for a magistrate, jury, clerks, a library, a cell, and sheriff's office. Light enters the courtroom from four directions. Some original furniture and fittings have been removed, but the courtroom retains much of its original joinery and is the most complete and impressive space in the building. An original slate roof has been replaced by terra cotta tiles, the porch filled, and a public toilet block has been built near the site. The building has been continuously used as a court house since its inception and is a key element of the predominantly bluestone civic and judicial precinct at Portland.
How is it significant?
Portland Court House is of historical, architectural and cultural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
Portland Court House is historically significant as the earliest surviving court house in Victoria and as the oldest court house in Victoria still operating. It is a significant feature of the early government quarter in Victoria's oldest settlement, where it is associated with other buildings in a major bluestone precinct which includes the Customs House (1849), Police Watch House (1850), and former Town Hall (1860). It is a physical reminder of the arrival of permanent British justice in Victoria's earliest settlement. Portland Court House is historically important for its rarity as an extant building attributed to Port Phillip's first clerk of works (James Rattenbury). From its overall integrity and construction date of 1843-45, Portland Court House is also historically important for its direct association with Victoria's legal process over more than 150 years, and as a rare, surviving example of a Victorian Government building built before the establishment of the Public Works Department in 1856.
Portland Court House is architecturally important as the earlier of two surviving court houses in Victoria designed in the Victorian Regency style, which was popular in the 1840s and 1850s and nota
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Police Station/Glenelg StBus92 meters
Library/Bentinck StBus166 meters
Opp Library/Bentinck StBus195 meters
Cable Tram Depot/Bentinck StBus364 meters
Julia St/Bentinck StBus402 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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