Ivanhoe Public Golf Course Clubhouse
1 Vasey Street IVANHOE, BANYULE CITY
-
Add to tour
You must log in to do that.
-
Share
-
Shortlist place
You must log in to do that.
- Download report
Statement of Significance
What is significant?
The clubhouse for the Ivanhoe Public Golf Course, formerly known as Chelsworth and built c.1860 is significant. The immediate surroundings including the mature specimen trees and the screen planting contributes to the setting. The golf course, carpark and roadway are not significant.
How is it significant?
The clubhouse for the Ivanhoe Public Golf Course is of local historic and aesthetic significance to the City of Banyule.
Why is it significant?
The clubhouse of the Ivanhoe Public Golf Course, formerly the homestead Chelsworth built c.1860 is of historic significance for its early establishment as a farming property in Banyule. The origins of the property can be traced to the 1846 when Patrick Stevenson ran a dairy farm in the vicinity. The homestead is significant for its early date of construction and its association with the first settlement in the area. Its location close to the river is rare as other homesteads were built further away from the potential flood risk on higher ground. It is the only early homestead in the Ivanhoe and Heidelberg area that retains a rural setting. (Criterion B)
The house retains some indication of its early date of construction in the hipped roof form arranged in long intersecting wingswhich typically illustrate the early to mid Victorian period of residential design. The integrity of the building is reduced by the number of changes that have taken place to the exterior. The mature exotic trees in the vicinity of the Clubhouse contribute to the setting and provide an important buffer between the building and the road, carpark and golfcourse. (Criterion E)
-
-
Ivanhoe Public Golf Course Clubhouse - Historical Australian Themes
AHC Themes
8.1 Organising recreation
8.1.1 Playing and watching organised sports
HV Themes
9.1 Participating in sport and recreation
Local themes
Private and public planting
Ivanhoe Public Golf Course Clubhouse - Physical Description 1
The clubhouse for the Ivanhoe Golf Course is the much altered building of Chelsworth, a large homestead situated at the end of Vasey Street. The large building features an 'H' shaped plan with an intersecting hipped roof. The front is symmetrically composed with a pair of faceted bay windows and a central entrance. A verandah sits between the pair of projecting bay windows. The building has been extended, reroofed, the windows altered and a porch entry built to the side. The masonry walls have been painted. The form of the house is recognizable as a mid nineteenth century homestead, however the extent of alterations has obscured all of the original materials and detail.
The immediate locality of the building is now dominated by a carpark and roadway and a small amount of garden. Some large trees remain adjacent to the homestead and to one side there is an avenue of planting that screens the view of the golf course. These plantings give the adjacent surroundingsa sense of enclosure.
Heritage Study and Grading
Banyule - Banyule Heritage Review
Author: Context P/L
Year: 2009
Grading: LocalBanyule - Heidelberg Conservation Study
Author: Graeme Butler and Associates
Year: 1985
Grading:
-
-
-
-
-
RAVENSWOODVictorian Heritage Register H0199
-
CHARTERISVILLEVictorian Heritage Register H1140
-
HODDLE SURVEY TREE, KEW GOLF CLUBVictorian Heritage Register H2340
-
1) ST. ANDREWS HOTEL AND 2) CANARY ISLAND PALM TREENillumbik Shire
-
-