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Melbourne Median Price
House$590,000
Unit$599,700
The House price is 1% higher than last year.
Surrounding suburbs
Albert Park$2,267,600
Carlton$1,396,000
Cremorne$1,323,300
Docklands$1,487,200
East Melbourne$3,052,500
North Melbourne$1,326,300
Parkville$1,881,400
Prahran$1,627,600
Richmond$1,454,900
South Melbourne$1,638,200
South Yarra$1,883,300
Southbank$946,700
St Kilda$1,605,200
West Melbourne$1,376,000
Windsor$1,461,700
Melbourne Median Rent
House$638
Unit$698
The House rent is 2% higher than last year.
Melbourne property sold price
Melbourne 3000 Profile
A557-563 ST KILDA ROAD and 1-23 MOUBRAY STREET, Melbourne
Distance:4 km to CBD; 905 meters to Prahran Station [Transport]

Neighbour Photos
Map | Street view | Nearby property price
Planning History:
Registered as Victorian heritage
Last updated on - March 28, 2002
What is significant?
Established in 1866 The Victorian Asylum and School for the Blind (renamed the Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind in 1891) erected a home and school to accommodate 120 children and adults in 1868. Conducted on "general Protestant principles" to promote blind people as useful members of society, it was the first institution of its type in Australia. Architects Crouch and Wilson designed the original bluestone building in Gothic Revival style. Training workshops were soon added and in 1872 the McPherson wing (also designed by Crouch and Wilson), providing a showroom for the institute's output of baskets, nets, brushes and matting was constructed. Being set well back from the St Kilda Road frontage the buildings present an imposing and commanding appearance to that principal Melbourne boulevard. Similar setbacks occurred at the nearby Deaf and Dumb Asylum (designed by Crouch and Wilson) and also Wesley College. The angled gateway and curved main drive flanked with elm trees are further elements emphasising the importance of the building's visual presentation to St Kilda Road.
Ormond Hall for the Blind, named after its benefactor Francis Ormond, was built fronting Moubray Street in 1891. Designed by architects Nathaniel Billing & Son, it was used as a major teaching and entertainment facility. Extensive two storey brick factories, constructed east of the original buildings in 1922-26, were demolished in the 1990s. An early single storey stone building along the north boundary was widened in 1926 and two additional brick storeys were added in 1933 to increase the factory space. J D McLean of the Public Works Department designed this new factory addition. One of many prefabricated houses constructed by the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation, and sold by the Myer Emporium was placed in the grounds between 1947 and 1953.
How is it significant?
The Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind is of historic and architectural significance to the state of Victoria.
Why is it significant?
The Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind (RVIB) is historically important for its pioneering role in the welfare of the blind, being the first institution of its type in Australia. Its construction is associated with the confident post gold rush period of the 1850s and 1860s, when many of Melbourne's major educational, health and social welfare institutions were established in response to the public desire to assist disadvantaged groups. The main building, one of the largest and most prominently sited of these institutions, with spacious grounds facing St Kilda Road, is important in the history of the welfare of the blind in Victoria. The large site, with its long winding tree-lined drive, provided a context for the building which was of a scale and style generally unmatc
Nearby Public Transport:
Stop nameTypeDistance
26-Moubray St/St Kilda RdTram16 meters
26-Beatrice St/St Kilda RdTram24 meters
27-High St/St Kilda RdTram244 meters
27-Lorne St/St Kilda RdTram249 meters
25-Commercial Rd/St Kilda RdTram318 meters
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The planning permit data is from the public websites.

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