Coleraine Median PriceThe House price is 18% lower than last year. Surrounding suburbsColeraine Median RentThe House rent is 11% higher than last year.
| A7 Whyte Street and 3 Whyte Street and Picnic Reserve Glenelg Highway and Railway Reserve Pilleau Street, Coleraine | Distance: | 288.9 km to CBD; 141.3 km to Nhill Station [Transport] |
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Map | Street view | Nearby property price | Planning History: | | Registered as Victorian heritage | Last updated on - July 21, 2003 What is significant? Six mature specimens of Ulmus procera, three located in Whyte Street and three located in the railway reserve abutting Pilleau Street, Coleraine. The three in Whyte Street are located in the picnic area 1.1km to the east of the township, in front of a residence at 3 Whtye Street and in the front garden of 7 Whyte Street. The trees were planted as a result of local Councillor, Cr. Eugene Silvester's desire to improve the appearance of Coleraine's Streets. In 1896, the trees were planted as semi-mature ten year old specimens. There were originally located along the whole stretch of Whyte Street, and the remainder were planted in Pilleau Street. How is it significant? The Ulmus procera street trees are of historical and aesthetic significance to the township of Coleraine. Why is it significant? The Ulmus procera street trees which remain in Coleraine represent a typical late nineteenth century street planting. They are important as they were planted as a result of community pressure and council support to beautify what was a relatively new and growing township. The trees are of aesthetic significance as they provide an representative sample of what the main Streetscape in Coleraine may have looked like upto the early 1960s. The remaining trees provide us with an example of the changing nature of trends with plants and with communities, as they represent a popular street tree for the late nineteenth century, when contrasted with the strong movement in the 1970s to plant native trees. |
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