04 July 2023

Is Cremorne the most beautiful Queenslander home in 2023?


Cremorne House in Hamilton Brisbane
built in 1905, expanded since
news.com.au

Queenslander Houses were built in an architectural style very popular throughout Queensland, from Brisbane in the south to the tip of Cape York. The style was common from the 1840s until the post-WW2 era and was mainly used in residential build­ings. Plus I have seen some very beautiful Queenslander Pubs with gorgeous wrought iron lace work/filigree wrapped around the balconies.

Two elements best differ­entiated the Queenslanders from homes in the southern, cooler states: a] they had wide and long verandas, and large double doors which opened onto these verandas. And b] they were typically raised on vertical timber stumps. The use of timber stumps went into disfavour in the post–WW2 era bec­ause any new stumps or any replacements for old stumps must now be steel or concrete. Being built on stumps prevented the homes being inundated in flood prone areas, particularly in the older suburbs.

In pre-air conditioning days, Queenslander Homes made the most of passive climate control. Any breeze that arrived in the summer ev­enings blew underneath the raised houses and increased the ventil­ation. Internally the large doors and windows were lined up inter­nally, once again to increase any natural ventilation, and windows were often louvered to allow for air circulation. The breezeway fretwork design, above the doorways, allowed for moving breezes

Roofs were generally made of corrugated iron or tin, and external walls were clad with timber. The verandas were as wide as possible, to protect against the over­head summer sun and to increase shade. Very often subtropical trees were planted close to the outer walls. The space under the house, raised high on stumps, created space for children to use on days when it was too rainy to go out­side.

The biggest building boom was after soldiers return­ed from WW1. By the time they had returned to civilian life in 1919, then entered studies and marriage, many new houses were needed thr­oughout the 1920s-early 1930s. Families with money built more extr­avagant Queenslanders, still with the wide verandas and under house playing space, but with gazebos, corner bays and exotic roof lines.

Queenslanders were not identical in shape. Asymmetry could be used and the gable could be placed to one side of the main roof. There were usually 2 ver­andas but they too could be asymmetrical; one was at the front, and the second ran down one side of the home.

Overlooking the beautiful Brisbane River
Real Estate Conversation

Now let me look at a luxury Queenslander I'd never seen before, in the very affluent Brisbane suburb of Hamilton and in one of the city’s most expensive streets. Cremorne is a heritage-listed mansion that was designed by Eaton & Bates, and built in 1905-6 for Brisbane publican James O’Connor. The original home fea­tured Colonial-era architecture, including a veranda complete with octag­onal rotundas, beautifully overlooking the Brisbane River with am­azing 180-degree views from up on Hamilton Hill.

Brisbane's architectural history was might have been destroyed in the 1960s-80s with the demolition of important cultural build­ings and the removal of c1000 Queens­lander homes per year. I clearly re­member the Nov 1982 crisis when the destroyers moved in to wipe out Brisbane’s iconic Cloudland. I won­d­ered back then if there was any heritage overlay for surviving Queenslanders but fortunately Cremorne was added to the Register in Oct 1992.

Luckily Cremorne survived and for three generations it remained in the family. In 1998 former Bretts Wharf restaurant co-owner Genny Nielson bought it. During her tenure, Nielson lovingly restored the home to its former glory and added a modern extension with archit­ect Brian Donovan, retaining the charm and character of the Queens­lander but adding modern luxury essentials eg a wine cellar.

Then it was bought for $6.6 mill by Fonezone co-founder David Mc­Mahon in 2015 and was ren­ovated  and ext­ended to re-create a glam­orous residence. Set on 2400 sq m, the property spans two lev­els, has many large livingrooms, 3.8m high ceilings, intricate cornices and ceiling roses, stained-glass windows, original fire­places and chandeliers.

A loungeroom with original ceiling decoration, stained glass windows and fireplace.
Real Estate Conversation

 Then Galen and Lynda Gunn paid $6 mill for the pro­p­erty in 2017. Ga­l­en came from a Qld gr­azing dynasty; grand­father Sir William Gunn was a ren­owned wool and cattle identity. La­t­er the Gunns co-founded an av­iat­ion company that uses technology to prov­ide aerial survey serv­ices to the pow­erline and utility sec­t­ors ac­ross the country. The grand colonial resid­ence has a very recent con­temporary archit­ectural extension and ...did I say the views from the sweeping ver­an­das are incredible?

This historic house sold for $8m in June 2023.




16 comments:

roentare said...

roentare said...
I observed a lot of houses built in that style when I locumed in Northern NSW and Queensland.

Joe said...

It looks as though the external architecture of Cremorne has Indian influences.

mem said...

I grew up in a Queenslander although not as grand as this one . I did my exams at Cloudland and went to undergraduate balls there . It was a wonderful space . I couldn't believe it when it was pulled down . Queensland seemed to breed a certain sort of philistines who was into progress . They were usually fat white blokes and full of the certainty of being right . There were several who who genuflected to good ol Joe . That atmosphere was one of the reasons I fled to Victoria which seemed to me way ahead in its attitude on so many things .
Now though Queenslanders on the whole have come to their senses and appreciate the history and architecture that they have . So many old houses are now being sold a historic opportunities . Its good to see.

Our house was " modernized " by my parents who took out the French doors and lowered the ceilings but the VJ boards stayed as did the the layout of the rooms and the ventilation fretwork. I have many happy memories of sitting on the wide verandah as the rain thundered down in the afternoons .

Hels said...

roentare

I hadn't ever thought of Queenslanders in NSW or any other state, but you are quite right! I looked at real estate advertisements for north NSW and found Queenslanders exactly like the ones I saw in Queensland. Look what you learn from blog comments :)

Hels said...

Joe

The original bungalow derived from British Army buildings in India and later introduced by army officers, civil servants and traders who returned to the UK. Only then did they realise that India had a similar climate to Queensland, so India's tropical architecture (high under-house stumps, sloped roof etc) was also suitable for Australia's tropical regions. But why did it take until 1900 to become popular in Qld?

Hels said...

mem

when Bjelke-Petersen became Premier of Queensland in 1968, everyone expected horrible things to happen, but pulling down heritage architecture was appalling, even by his standards. I agree that Queensland citizens are far more aware of their precious treasures today, and since climate change isn't going to make the state become cooler or drier, Queenslander homes will be even more in demand!

I wouldn't leave Melbourne during summer, but I would happily spend June-August inclusive in S.E Queensland.

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, I just looked at your earlier article, and perhaps I like the simpler Queenslander houses better. In those houses, and especially in the Cremorne house you are featuring today there seems to be some link with the late Victorian version of American Queen Ann and Colonial Revivals, especially the way the porches are arranged around the end bays. Probably this was part of a world-wide trend. I wish that people who buy historic houses were required to take an architecture appreciation course. That way there would not be so much "updated for modern convenience" at the expense of the original appearance and fabric. That interior view looks like an ad for a modern furniture company green-screened onto a historic backdrop.
--Jim
p.s. My spell checker is not very loyal. It kept trying to change "Queenslander" into "Queen slander".

jabblog said...

A very graceful building, well designed for the climate - such a pity when 'people of vision' are given their heads and pull down historic buildings..

My name is Erika. said...

This is a gorgeous old home, and I'm not familiar with this style at all. That made this post very interesting to read, and I learned a lot too. I don't live in a warm place so our homes are built more the winter cold than the summer heat.

Hels said...

Parnassus

I am not sure what changes can be made to a house with heritage protection. In my state, all it says is that changes can be made to the property to improve, update or renovate it, as long as approval is received from Heritage Victoria first. In Cremorne the expansions in the front architecture seem to be made from the same building material (timber), same design and same external facilities as originally used. The inside rooms clearly do not.

Hels said...

jabblog

using architecture to protect families from local climate issues is both protective healthwise and cheaper financially. So I also don't understand why locals pull down Queenslanders and build fully sealed, double-brick blocks of flats cooled down 24 hours a day by air conditioners.

Hels said...

Erika

Of course. Every region must design architecture to suit their temperature, humidity, vegetation, rainfall, land stability etc. Families of course will make their own choices, but they need to be sensible choices.

Andrew said...

The house looks like the one owned by Gina R....I'd better read on.

Not Gina's. It doesn't really like a typical Queenslander and I am reminded of the Indian Tea Rooms at Perth's Cottesloe Beach. I normally like great balance with architecture but perhaps this one is just too balanced. Not sure I really like it, but I could stay there for a week and test it out.

Hels said...

Andrew

well done for spotting the connection with the Indiana Tea House in Cottesloe Beach. I lived in Perth for a few years, but the original structure wasn't restored until c15 years ago.
Cremorne in Qld looks softer because it was made from timber with simple balustrading, whereas Indiana Tea House was made from concrete with sharp rooflines.

Before you invest your $8 million, check out the house first *nod*. Bugger... it was sold already :(

Palm Beach Tutoring said...

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Student said...

Palm Beach Tutoring,

Helen asks if you tutor in architecture? And tropical architecture in particular?