South Yarra Victorian with on the market after a Peter Carmichael redesign: Title Tattle

South Yarra Victorian with on the market after a Peter Carmichael redesign: Title Tattle
Jonathan ChancellorFeb 14, 2012

It was in 1996 when a pretty, double-fronted Victorian then unrenovated eight-room Caroline Street, South Yarra brick-and-timber house last sold.

Its selling agent Philippe Batters was just about to knock the hammer down the house when a woman stopped the auction to ask the highest $645,000 bidder, “Are you going to develop it? We are neighbours, and we want to know".

The answer was duly given and now the lovely time capsule has returned to the market with its Peter Carmichael redesign by the Liberman family for all to inspect. The light-filled house, with open-plan living and dining areas and adjacent outdoor entertaining spaces, comes with many modern features including Scandinavian myrtle floors and hydronic heating.

Offers are due on the house, which sits on an 895-square-metre block, by February 28 through Darren Lewenberg and Gowan Stubbings at Kay & Burton.

The modern home behind its Victorian façade was briefly listed last July through Justin Long at Marshall White with $4 million-plus hopes, which were revised to $3.75 million plus.

Set on an 1840 subdivision, the lot first sold in 1854 for £200. The 1870s the brick additions to the earlier cottage were made for grocer George Walker, who’d purchased the property for £600 in 1870. It’s believed Walker also added the Italianate front wing with its polychromatic brick and twin bay windows.

The house was bought by Major-General Walter Adams Coxen before World War II, and he gave it the name it still bears in honour of his birthplace in Surrey, England. It was his daughter, Adelaide ``Marmie" Coxen, 85, who was its 1996 vendor, having set a reserve of $500,000.

Walter Adams Coxen was educated in Australia and had a distinguished record, being ADC to the King between 1920 and 1927, the Chief of Artillery from 1921 to 1924, 2nd Chief of the General's Staff from 1930 to 1934, Quartermaster-General from 1925 to 1930, and chief of the General's Staff from 1930 1931. He commanded the greatest aggregation of artillery of any war in history with 1,083 guns.

“It is as if this house was locked up after World War II and recently unlocked again. The owner's everyday utensils are collector's items," the agents said at the time.

During its 1996 marketing it was noted an old brick bakery, connected to the house by a rusty, corrugated walkway, pre-dated the house. According to a local historian, the bakery building appears on one of South Yarra's earliest maps.

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.