32 Provost Street

32 Provost Street
North Melbourne VIC 3051

Also known as
Previous Address
Constructed
Style
Architect
Builder

Timelapse Building Images

No Entries Found

Land Details

  1. 1895 MMBW map
  2. Compiled Crown Record Plan
  3. The Argus, 1854 Government Land Sale, Mr. T. Fulton and others, first Crown land purchasers

Building Details

No Entries Found

Subsequent Building Alterations

No Entries Found

Architectural Features



    No Entries Found


Heritage Significance and Listings

Heritage Listings and Explanatory Notes

The desirable Victorian era terrace dwelling with its own private back yard garden that once existed on this site was demolished and replaced by the industrial building after 1965.

Owners

From To Owner More Info Data Source
to date Private source: Hatcher Index
1854 Mr. T. Fulton and others, first Crown land purchasers source: Hatcher Index
abt 40 thousand years earlier 1835 Boon Wurrung and Woiwurrung (Wurundjeri) peoples of the Kulin Nation https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Victoria source: Hatcher Index

Residents

From To Resident More Info Data Source
to date Private source Hatcher Index
1974 1974 Auckland Electrick Agencies source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1970 1970 not available source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1965 1965 A. O’Brien source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1955 1960 Mrs. F. B. Henderson source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1950 1950 Mrs. E. B. Davis source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1930 1945 Michael McHugh source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1925 1925 Joseph W. Pedrozini source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1920 1920 Bernard Hulse source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1915 1915 Michael Frost source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1910 1910 Edward Tobin source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1905 1905 John Cole source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1900 1900 John Mitchell source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1895 1895 Edward Welsh source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1890 1890 Henry Lack (larourer) source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.
1889 1889 Henry G. Smith source: Sands & McDougall directory, transcribed by Stephen Hatcher.

Social History



Context and Streetscape

Precinct

This property sits within the municipality of the City of Melbourne. We respectfully acknowledge it is on the traditional land of the Kulin Nation.
source: https://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/SiteCollectionDocuments/history-city-of-melbourne.pdf
historical map source: https://www.slv.vic.gov.au/search-discover/explore-collections-format/maps/maps-melbourne-city-suburbs

Zoning
This information must be verified with the relevant planning or heritage authority.

Streetscape

Provost Street was once predominantly a residential street with single and two storey Victorian terrace dwellings, a green grocer shop, butcher shop, pork purveyors, a dairy, a confectioner, dressmaker, bootmaker shop, horse livery, wood yard, cabies, a Coach builder and hotels at either end known as the North Star Hotel at Abbotsford Street corner and Commercial Hotel on the Curzon Street corner.

Provost streetscape today is characterised by significantly less heritage dwellings, an addition of some contemporary multi-storey townhouses, and some 1940s to 1960s industrial buildings.

In 2022, only seventeen of the original forty seven heritage buildings remain (64% destroyed) which once existed on Provost street, compared to an 1895 Melbourne Metropolitan Board of Works map.

As of 2022, some addresses on this street’s density level has been allowed to rise by four to five times larger, due to recent increase in council approved multi-level building redevelopments since 1895. In some cases, unrestricted increases in density can be detrimental to existing residents enjoyment of amenity and quality of life.

Other Information

No Entries Found