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HOUSE, 63 FORREST STREET

Author

City of Fremantle

Place Number

26098
There no heritage location found in the Google fusion table.

Location

63 FORREST ST FREMANTLE

Location Details

Local Government

Fremantle

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1935

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents More information
(no listings)

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
(no listings)

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management More information
Category Description
Municipal Inventory Adopted Level 3

Level 3

The City of Fremantle has identified this place as being of some cultural heritage significance for its contribution to the heritage of Fremantle in terms of its individual or collective aesthetic, historic, social or scientific significance, and /or its contribution to the streetscape, local area and Fremantle. Its contribution to the urban context should be maintained and enhanced.

Physical Description

House, 63 Forrest Street has a single storey timber framed house constructed in the Inter War style of Architecture. The walls are weatherboard clad. There is a projecting front room that has a gabled roof and multi paned timber casement window, the front entrance is under the front gable. The roof is gabled and hipped and Zincalume clad. The front verandah is supported by square timber posts over limestone piers. The facade has multi paned timber framed French doors to the verandah and a main entrance door. There are two storey additions at the rear.
There is a front wall built of rubble limestone that has piers to the front boundary.

History

The house was first listed in Post Office Directories in 1902 with Frederick Lewis as resident. The house was originally No. 156. It became number 63 when the whole street was renumbered in 1939.
The 1914 sewerage map (No. 2118) shows a weatherboard house with a roof in two parts, and a full length front verandah. A wash house was attached at the rear on the east side boundary fence. Another weatherboard outbuilding was in the back yard on the western fence.
The 1949 aerial shows that the house was been rebuilt, as it is further back from the street front than on the sewerage plan, and smaller in its footprint. A physical assessment dates the construction at c1935 due to the Inter-War style of architecture.
From 1924 until at least 1949 when post office directory records cease, the occupant was George Alfred Woollams.
Aerial photos show that between 1999 and 2004 the house was reroofed, a two-storey extension built and another large structure built at the rear, although the lot has not been subdivided.

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Original Use RESIDENTIAL Single storey residence

Architectural Styles

Style
Inter-War California Bungalow

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Wall TIMBER Weatherboard
Roof METAL Zincalume

Historic Themes

General Specific
DEMOGRAPHIC SETTLEMENT & MOBILITY Settlements

Creation Date

19 Mar 2019

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

03 Jun 2021

Disclaimer

This data is provided by the City of Fremantle. While every care is taken to ensure the accuracy of this data, the City of Fremantle makes no representations or warranties about its accuracy, reliability, completeness or suitability for any particular purpose and disclaims all responsibility and all liability (including without limitation, liability in negligence) for all expenses, losses, damages (including indirect or consequential damage) and costs which you might incur as a result of the data being inaccurate or incomplete in any way and for any reason. Under no circumstances should this data be used to carry out any work without first contacting the City of Fremantle for the appropriate confirmation and approval.