As part of my Cultural Heritage studies and my focus on Victorian asylums, I visited Caloola - Sunbury Asylum. Of all the Victoria asylums, I've always had oxymoron feelings of the site.
My first experience was reading about its earliest beginnings as Sunbury Slaughterhouse (link below) but I also think it is ‘prettier’ than the other asylums. Thanks to Julie - operator of Sunbury Historical Tours - I have learnt that ‘pretty’ couldn’t be further from the truth. I came away extremely impressed by the years of dedicated research Julie has conducted in all areas of the sites history and heritage and thank her for her work.
photographs are my own
Caloola, Sunbury consists of buildings set in extensive grounds with plantings of mature trees and remnant farmland. Caloola commenced in 1864 as an Industrial School, was redeveloped in 1879 as a Lunatic Asylum, substantially enlarged in the period 1891 to 1914 and was maintained in use as a psychiatric hospital (1879-1968) and later a training centre for the intellectually disabled (1962-1992). Part of the site became a Victoria University campus from 1994 to 2011 and the remainder is in use by the Department of Education.
Caloola is historically significant for the former Industrial School buildings constructed mainly from 1865-66. The school operated from 1865 to 1879 as the first purpose-built Industrial School in Victoria. The buildings at Sunbury are demonstrative of the harsh conditions which characterised such schools for neglected or delinquent children. The former Industrial School hospital (1865) is amongst the earliest hospital buildings surviving in the state.
Caloola is architecturally significant as a former lunatic asylum, one of several surviving in the state. It demonstrates typical characteristics such as formal planning, use of sunken walls (ha ha walls), airing courts and a diverse range of building types to cater for the patient and staff population. They gain their architectural significance from the unity of materials, overall cohesiveness of design, consistent and distinctive detailing (especially in the unusual use of buttresses and steep roofs in the former hospital wards), impressive site planning and spacious setting.
The Caloola complex is of aesthetic significance for the quality and range of its architecture and garden elements, consistent use of basalt, red brick and terra cotta tiles, its consistency of architectural styles and materials within the two major building phases, for its landscape planning and plantings and for its prominent siting on the hill with views to and from the site.
Caloola is of social significance especially to past patients and their families as a reminder of past practices in mental health care.
The Caloola site is on the traditional land of the Wurundjeri people.
Other site details can be located here:
vhd.heritagecou...
Sunbury Slaughterhouse
en.wikipedia.o...
Sunbury Historical Tours
www.sunburyhist...
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