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Southbank Median Price
House$946,700
Unit$677,700
The Unit price is 2% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Docklands$1,487,200
Melbourne$590,000
Port Melbourne$1,603,000
South Melbourne$1,638,200
Southbank Median Rent
House$732
Unit$701
The House rent is 14% higher than last year.
Southbank property sold price
Southbank 3006 Profile
A28 Clarendon Street, Southbank
Distance:1.3 km to CBD; 883 meters to Southern Cross Station [Transport]

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Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - September 28, 1999
What is significant?
The Robur Tea Building is named after one of its better known occupants, but it was in fact built between 1887 and 1888 as a warehouse for Fergus and Mitchell, manufacturing stationers. The architect was Nahum Barnet, the engineer John Grainger and the builder James Moore. The building is constructed of load-bearing red brick and provides six above ground floors which are separated by cream brick courses. The largely unadorned walls are amply supplied with windows. The timber floors are supported by cast iron columns and steel beams. The building is a simple box shape with ornamentation confined to a rendered central entrance surround on the east facade which is reflected by an arched balcony the height of the top two floors.
How is it significant?
The Robur Tea Building is of scientific (technical), architectural and historical significance to the State of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The Robur Tea Building is of scientific (technical) significance because of several innovative techniques employed in its construction. The most notable feature of the building is the solution to the problem of foundations. The building was erected on a swampy site and initial advice to the owners was that a building of the size proposed was not feasible. The engineer John Grainger was engaged and he devised a system of 450 ironbark piles and concrete rafts to support the six storey structure. It was a remarkable solution and no directly comparable buildings exist because such difficult foundations were not tackled again until after WWI. Another innovation was the use of steel beams supporting the floors, one of the earliest uses of such technology in Victoria. These innovations are a tribute to John Grainger, architect and engineer, who, in partnership with several reputed architects, contributed to such noted structures as Princes Bridge, the swing bridge over the La Trobe River at Sale, the administration block of the Melbourne Town Hall, Elizabeth House and Collins House and the conversion of Cliveden Mansions, East Melbourne.
The Robur Tea Building is of architectural significance as one of the finest and most prominent examples of a 19th century warehouse in Melbourne. It was for many years one of the tallest buildings outside the CBD, its height and freestanding character making it a South Melbourne landmark even today. The functional requirements of a warehouse are clearly evident in its simple box-like shape, but a certain amount of pride is expressed in the restrained decoration of the eastern facade.
The Robur Tea Building is of architectural significance as a noted work of Nahum Barnet. Barnet was a most prominent architect in the four decades that saw Melbourne emerge from the 1890s depression and flourish during the Edwardian period. Certai
 
11 Oct 2017
Partial demolition and buildings and works to construct a multi-storey building; reduction to the minimum loading bay dimensions and bicycle requirements and altering access to a road in a Road Zone Category
(Source: Melbourne City Council, reference no: 23245/17)
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
124B-Whiteman St/Clarendon StTram60 meters
125-Clarendon St/Normanby RdTram88 meters
124A-Casino/MCEC/Clarendon StTram145 meters
124A-Casino/MCEC/Clarendon StTram179 meters
125-Port Junction/79 Whiteman StTram173 meters
>>More

The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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