Local Government
Armadale
Region
Metropolitan
Jull St Armadale
Part of P4684 Minnawarra Park, Sugar Gum Trees and Historic Precinct
(The Relocated) Armadale Primary School
Armadale
Metropolitan
Constructed from 1900, Constructed from 1988
Type | Status | Date | Documents | More information |
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Type | Status | Date | Documents |
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Type | Status | Date | Grading/Management | More information | |
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Category | Description | ||||
Armadale Redevelopment Authority | YES | 23 Mar 2002 |
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Heritage Council | |
Municipal Inventory | Adopted | 01 Sep 2015 | Category A |
Category A |
It has aesthetic significance as an example of a former school building dating from the early 1900s with design features typical of the period of construction.
It has historic significance as the first school in Armadale and representing the early history of settlement of the City.
Of very high social significance as represented by the community project to relocate the building is the 1980s.
A single storey face brick former educational building with a rendered band and corrugated iron gabled roof with a brick chimney with corbelling. The school has split paned double hung timber framed sash windows with fanlights on the west side and recent windows on the east side. There is a skillion roofed verandah which is supported by timber posts and balustrades.
The school now sits in the Minnawarra Historic Precinct but its original location was on the corner of Third Road and Church Avenue, Armadale. The one time adjacent old Jarrah tree off Church Avenue, remembered by many children who attended the school, is still part of the Armadale Shopping City car park. The school, constructed in 1900, was the first built in Armadale and was extended by an equivalent sized classroom in 1906. The land it was built upon was donated by Thomas Saw, as was the land for the nearby Congregational Church (which often served as an extra classroom for the school throughout its life on the original site). The need to extend the Armadale Shopping City resulted in the sale and demolition of the Armadale Primary School and the building of a new school in Carradine Road, Armadale. In 1987 a committee called “The Armadale School and Congregational Church Relocation Trust” was formed to save the Primary School and Congregational Church buildings. Materials from the demolition of the Church were bought back from those who had contracted to buy them and with a Commonwealth grant and many donors and helpers the Church and School were permitted to be built next to the History House Museum and vested in the City of Armadale. Because there was no funding for the school due to unforeseen circumstances, a novel way of relocating the building was successfully attempted. With brick moving gear, mobile cranes and trucks, the building was moved intact to its new site in Minnawarra Park – perhaps the first brick building to be moved on a public road in the southern hemisphere.
Good
Ref ID No | Ref Name | Ref Source | Ref Date |
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MHI | 1995 | ||
ARA Cultural Heritage Strategy | 2005 |
Ref Number | Description |
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No.102 | MI Place No. |
Individual Building or Group
Epoch | General | Specific |
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Other Use | RELIGIOUS | Church, Cathedral or Chapel |
Original Use | EDUCATIONAL | Primary School |
Present Use | SOCIAL\RECREATIONAL | Other |
Type | General | Specific |
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Wall | BRICK | Common Brick |
General | Specific |
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SOCIAL & CIVIC ACTIVITIES | Education & science |
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