Authors: Dr Sue Rosen and Liz Gorman
Client: Royal Hotel, Wyong
Sue Rosen Associates were pleased to provide the client with a Heritage Impact Statement (HIS) for minor, historically sympathetic alterations at the premises...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen and Liz Gorman
Client: Albion Place Hotel
Sue Rosen Associates were pleased to provide the client with a Heritage Impact Statement (HIS) for minor, historically sympathetic internal alterations at the heritage-listed premises.
The Albion Place Hotel, (formerly Taito House / Vine House), is a very late 19th Century, four storey, ‘Commercial Free Gothic’ style building constructed of hard burnt brickwork...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen and Ashna Aggarwal
Client: Private Client
Heritage Impact Statement prepared for the Client's application to subdivide No. 20 Chorley Avenue. As part of the requirements for the Heritage Impact Statement, a history of the property was compiled.
20 Chorley Avenue Cheltenham was originally part of a reserve of Crown land known as The Field of Mars Common. The Field of Mars Common was a 5050-acre parcel of land that was set aside in 1804 by Governor King for the use of the local...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen & Liz Gorman
Client: Gremmo Homes on behalf of the owner
Sue Rosen Associates were commissioned to assess the heritage significance of a small portion of historic road that had been protected by a covenant on the land title for 30 and 30A Millstream Grove. We assessed the appropriateness of the curtilage, impacts on the site’s significance since the covenant was placed, potential for future research, and relationship of the remaining physical evidence of the road to publicly owned land.
The remnant was part of the original 1830-1831 alignment of New Line Road - one of the first major European works in the area, which facilitated settlement of North-Western Sydney...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen & Liz Gorman
Client: Private Client
Our team prepared a Heritage Impact Statement for the client's Development Application for demolition of their existing garage and construction of a new garage at 67 William Street Hornsby. As part of the Statement, a history of the property was compiled.
The property is located on part of...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen, Liz Gorman, Ashna Aggarwal
Client: LIS Architects
This Heritage Impact Statement was prepared as part of the client's application for partial demolition of their existing dwelling and a two-storey addition to their non-heritage listed property.
3 Cleveland Street is situated on part of a 2000-acre grant of land in the South Colah and Gordon Parishes, originally occupied from the early 1830s by prominent timber-getter Thomas Hyndes. In January 1840, Hyndes sold the 2000 acres to John Terry Hughes. Hughes was the nephew of successful landowner and pastoralist, Samuel Terry. By February 1843...
Authors: Liz Gorman
Client: LIS Architects
Our team reviewed the client's architectural plans and was pleased to provide advice regarding the changes they should make to streamline the DA process, while also respecting heritage view corridors of the convict-built North Road, which is the Bedlam Point to Eastwood section of the Great North Road constructed between 1826 and 1836 to link Sydney to Newcastle and the Hunter Valley...
Author: Dr Sue Rosen
Client: Private Client
Our team prepared this HIS to facilitate repair of damages caused to the building during the recent extension of the adjacent seven storey apartment at No.170.
European development of the land began in August 1898, when the Harris family – owners of much of the Pyrmont-Ultimo peninsula - leased part of their...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen, Liz Gorman, Ashna Aggarwal, Emily Pickering
Client: Private Client
Prior to European settlement Hunters Hill was occupied by the Aboriginal people of the Walumeda tribe. Hunters Hill was settled by Europeans during the late 1700s and is often described as Australia’s oldest suburb...
Authors: Dr Sue Rosen and Liz Gorman
Client: MPK Hotels
The team was pleased to prepare an extensive history of the property as part of a Heritage Impact Statement.
The site of the Royal Hotel, Orange has been licenced as a pub since 1858. Originally, a building virtually unregognisable to due years of additions stood here, called the Wellington Inn. Publican Denis Hanrahan purchased four allotments of land for The Wellington, which had been constructed by May 1858. Other licencees included local figures Catherine Hanrahan, James Torpy...