Home Sold Price | Rent Price | Suburb Profile | Property Report | SchoolAbout | Feedback
  
Prahran Median Price
House$1,627,600
Unit$636,500
Land$534,300
The House price is 8% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Armadale$1,834,800
Caulfield North$1,827,100
Melbourne$590,000
South Yarra$1,883,300
St Kilda East$1,501,100
Toorak$2,045,700
Prahran Median Rent
House$963
Unit$585
The House rent is 17% higher than last year.
Prahran property sold price
Prahran 3181 Profile
A10 LITTLE CHAPEL STREET, Prahran
Distance:4.7 km to CBD; 483 meters to Prahran Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - August 17, 1999
What is significant?
The Former Rechabite Hall was constructed in 1888-1889 to the design of Colin Campbell by the builder Henry Slade. The Hall is a modest-sized building in the Second Empire style, with a large mansarded tower and typical elements such as heavily drafted render on the ground floor (resembling stone), an elaborate tripartite window on the upper floor, decorative elements such as consoles, pilasters and festoons and balustraded parapets broken by eclectic pediments. Bluestone was used for the base courses, and prominence is given to the entrance by a pair of highly polished Harcourt granite columns.
How is it significant?
The Former Rechabite Hall is of historical and architectural significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The Former Rechabite Hall is of historical significance as a rare surviving example of a hall erected by one of the many friendly societies and Temperance movements which played such an important role in 19th-century Melbourne. There is only a handful of such halls remaining in Victoria, and only two or three of them are Rechabite halls. This one is probably the finest surviving example, with particularly distinguished external and internal detailing, reflecting the wealth and influence of the Independent Order of Rechabites (IOR), which was reputedly the wealthiest and most famous of the Temperance organisations. In 1888 the IOR in Victoria claimed to have 10,000 members. The Prahran hall was constructed for the Perseverance Tent No.34 of the IOR at a cost of nearly ?4,000. It replaced an earlier 1871 Prahran Rachabite Hall on the site. The Rechabites, like other similar organisations, served as a mutual assistance and moral improvement organisation, advocating abstinence, paying sick leave to its members, and arranging mortgages for members to help them purchase properties. The cooperative and supportive role of the Rechabites was emphasised by the fact that the contractor, Clerk of Works, designers of the furnishings and suppliers of the gasoliers and brackets for this building were all members of the Order.
The Former Rechabite Hall is of historical significance as a symbol of the influence of the temperance movement, and particularly of one of its most notable members, James Munro.
By the late 19th century the temperance movement had a significant influence on Victorian political and social life, with a number of prominent politicians active in temperance organisations. James Munro (1832-1908) was one such politician who used the Prahran Rechabite Hall as his power base in the Rechabite Order. One of the best known of the land boom generation of developers and politicians, Munro was premier of Victoria prior to the collapse of his personal fortunes and bankruptcy in 1893. As Victorian Distr
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
31-Chapel St/Malvern RdTram122 meters
Chapel St/Malvern RdBus132 meters
47-Commercial Rd/Chapel StTram131 meters
47-Malvern Rd/Chapel StTram147 meters
31-Chapel St/Commercial RdTram151 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

© 2015 - 中文版