Apartments
East Melbourne, Wellington Parade South 279
Newspaper clipping describes an apartment for sale at One East Melbourne, 279 Wellington Parade South. Interior photo. The Age, 15-16 April 2016, Domain p.14.
- 2005 reads
Eastbourne Apartments near completion
Newspaper clipping reporting on near completion of Eastbourne Apartments on the old Dallas Brooks Hall site in Albert Street, East Melbourne. Bates Smart designed the building for Mirvac. Report gives an extensive description of the complex's attributes.
- 1124 reads
Eastbourne Apartments: building to begin
Advertising insert accompanying Herald Sun newspaper gives description of types of aparments being offered. Mirvac is the developer and Bates Smart is the architect.
No date, c.2016
- 1252 reads
Employment contract
Employment contract between Acland Investments and Ethel Madge Hill for her to work as caretaker to 8-10 Simpson Street and 62 Wellington Parade.
- 2533 reads
Garden Avenue
Newspaper clipping about sale of properties at 6 and 12 Garden Avenue, East Melbourne.
From: The Age, 9 November 2019, Commercial Real Estate
- 1238 reads
Heavenly abode
Newspaper article featuring the home of Greg Ladner, milliner, which he created out of the old Latvian Lutheran Church. Two apartments are also part of the complex. 8 October 2005.
- 2575 reads
Jolimont Street 102
A newspaper cutting about new apartments at 102 Jolimont Street, to be known as Parkside East Apartments. The developer is Dominic Calabro of Pacific Estates. Part of the Trethowan collection, a folder of real estate data
- 1026 reads
Jolimont, Palmer Street 009
A symmetrical three storey apartment block finished in rendered brick. The building presents as two projecting wings with the central recessed entry rising through the full height of the building to break the terracotta tiled roof at the eaves line. Balconies extend half way across each level. Several of these have now been built in.
The Hermitage, a block of twelve flats, was built in 1937 by the General Construction Co Ltd to the design of O H Jorgensen for husband and wife, Nicholas and Margot O’Donohue. The Hermitage was so named in memory of the house previously on the site, which was a small timber dwelling annexed to Governor Charles La Trobe’s cottage next door, and used by him as guest quarters.