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Essendon North Median Price
House$1,142,000
Unit$431,000
The House price is 22% lower than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Airport West$900,000
Essendon$1,559,300
Niddrie$1,176,300
Strathmore$1,450,900
Essendon North Median Rent
House$632
Unit$478
The House rent is 16% higher than last year.
Essendon North property sold price
Essendon North 3041 Profile
A132 KEILOR ROAD, Essendon North
Distance:9.8 km to CBD; 1.8 km to Glenbervie Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
What is significant?
The former Presbyterian Church at 132 Keilor Road, North Essendon, is a pink brick church in the Perpendicular Gothic style, evident in its implied verticality, narrow windows, four-centred arches and square tower. Designed by prolific Presbyterian architect J.F.D. Scarborough, it was erected in 1937 to replace a timber church erected on the same site some 13 years earlier.
How is it significant?
The former Presbyterian Church is of aesthetic, architectural and historical significance to the City of Moonee Valley.
Why is it significant?
Historically, the church is significant for its associations with the burgeoning residential development in North Essendon during the inter-war period. Although laid out in the 1880s, the estate on which the church stands did not seriously develop until the 1920s; the first church was erected in 1923, and further development over the next decade prompted the erection of the present church in 1937.
Aesthetically, the church is significant as a fine and intact example of an inter-war church in an academic Perpendicular Gothic style. Although a stark, stripped version of this style was commonly used by architects such as Louis Williams, this more academic manifestation was relatively uncommon in Melbourne at that time. With its distinctive squat tower, implied verticality and unusual pink brickwork, the church remains as a prominent element in this prominent streetscape.
Architecturally, the church is a particularly fine example of the work of J.F.D. Scarborough, a prolific architect who undertook many commissions for the Presbyterian Church during the inter-war period. It stands out amongst Scarborough's ecclesiastical oeuvre for its use of the unusual Perpendicular Gothic style, and as such is most comparable to his celebrated prize-winning design for the Littlejohn Memorial Chapel at Scotch College (1934).
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
Essendon North Primary School/Keilor RdBus34 meters
49-Essendon North PS/Keilor RdTram101 meters
49-Gillies St/Keilor RdTram124 meters
Essendon North Primary School/Keilor RdBus125 meters
50-Cooper St/Keilor RdTram237 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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