Public Transport | Planning Permit | Business | Property Sold Price
  
Toolern Vale Median Price
House$1,370,000
Land$1,128,600
The House price is 12% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Coimadai$1,390,000
Diggers Rest$703,800
Gisborne$1,080,900
Gisborne South$1,530,000
Long Forest$1,433,300
Toolern Vale Median Rent
House$520
Toolern Vale property sold price
Toolern Vale 3337 Profile
A766-858 Gisborne-Melton Road, Toolern Vale
Distance:42.5 km to CBD; 12.7 km to Melton Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Glen Elgin, 766 Gisborne-Melton Road, Toolern Vale, is significant as a surviving and substantial example of a late nineteenth and early twentieth century farm complex comprising a timber Federation styled main house (albeit altered), substantial brick stables, timber open shed, substantial stone-lined underground tank with a gabled galvanised corrugated steel roof, galvanised corrugated steel and timber shearing shed, two random rubble interwar cottages (one in poor condition), and cattle yard bound by timber post and rail fencing. The setting of the place, comprising a long drive having mature Monterey cypresses, is significant as are the mature conifers, palm tree and other plantings associated with the main and former house gardens. The property was originally established c.1855 by prominent Toolern Vale pioneer and Melton citizen Thomas Grant, and developed as a nationally celebrated Ayershire cattle study by his son, TA Grant, also a prominent local citizen. The date of the present house is unknown, but is likely to have been built for Grant son-in-law A Tedcastle c.1920. The rubble sedimentary stone cottages and another outbuilding on the property are significant for their association with Italian prisoners of war during the Second World War.
Glen Elgin, 766 Gisborne-Melton Road, Toolern Vale, is aesthetically and architecturally significant at a LOCAL level (AHC D.2, E.1). The complex of farm buildings, including the Federation styled main house (albeit altered), substantial brick stables, timber open shed, substantial stone-lined underground tank with a gabled galvanised corrugated steel roof, three-stand shearing shed, two random rubble interwar cottages and similar shed, cattle yard bound by timber post and rail fencing, together with the long drive with Monterey cypresses, the main house garden with mature conifers, palm tree and other plantings, the Algerian Oak, Bunya Bunya Pine and Osage Orange in the vicinity of the original homestead, and the seven English Oaks spaced along the road boundary, demonstrate those significant architectural and visual qualities.
In particular, although altered, the main house demonstrates some design qualities of a Federation style. These qualities include the complex of gable roof forms clad in galvanised corrugated steel, asymmetrical composition, two storey height, horizontal timber weatherboard wall cladding, timber framed windows, brick chimneys with rendered tops, timber framed windows, timber bargeboards, and the return verandah supported by timber posts.
The brick stables demonstrates original design qualities that include the elongated steeply pitched gable roof form and skillion wing clad in galvanised corrugated steel, hand-made brick wall construction, brick chimney with a corbelled top, timber framed window and door openings (except the large opening at one end) and the timber loft door.
Th
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Coburns Rd/Scarlet Oak AveBus7.9 km
Feather Head Way/Scarlet Oak AveBus7.9 km
Nodosa Grove/Scarlet Oak AveBus7.9 km
Nodosa Gr/Scarlet Oak AveBus7.9 km
Sugar Berry Rise/Scarlet Oak AveBus7.9 km
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版