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Hotel:United Kingdom Hotel
199 Queen's Parade, (formerly Heidelberg Road)
Clifton Hill 3068
Australia
Map It
Clifton Hill
United Kingdom Hotel (1878 - 1988)
N/A
199 Queen's Parade, (formerly Heidelberg Road)
Clifton Hill 3068
Australia
Map It
By 1878
1988
MacDonald's Family Restaurant
According to the Collingwood Conservation Study, the Victorian century hotel was demolished and replaced between 1906 and 1909, although CHS has not located concrete evidence of this; re-built 1937/38; additions facing Queen's Parade 1957-58; additions facing Heidelberg Road 1966.
VHR H0684
B5806
Part B, pp. 485-487
Volume 3, Appendix B, individually listed under precinct
HO 92
Kearney 1855: N/A ; Hodgkinson 1858: N/A ; MMBW: Detail Plan 1264, 1904
Both the Victorian style and the Moderne style hotel made notable architectural statements in this prominent triangular position at the junction of the roads leading from Clifton Hill to Heidelberg and Northcote. The old hotel was a substantial cement-rendered two storey building with a slate roof and an elaborate verandah and is reputed to have been used as a staging-post where coaches changed horses. This may be the only hotel in Collingwood which retains a horse trough outside; these troughs were once a fixture at most hotels. In 1882 the hotel was purchased by Theodore Sabelberg and remained in the ownership of the Sabelberg family for many decades.
The current building was designed by James H Wardrop, an architect noted for his role in the development of the European-based Moderne architectural style in Melbourne, and built by Hansen and Yuncken Pty. Ltd. As Robin Grow says: 'The suburbs of Melbourne also boasted a number of new hotels, none better than the United Kingdom Hotel... the site provided the perfect setting for its ocean liner appearance. With a front section finished in terracotta and sweeping balconies, the two-storey hotel also featured windows with distinctive geometric designs.' ( Melbourne Art Deco, p. 40 ). While supervising the construction of the hotel, Wardrop was asked to design a new garage on an adjacent site and asked to carry on the distinctive architecture of the hotel. ( Melbourne Art Deco, p. 100 ). Because of the status of the building, McDonald's was obliged to be very careful in any work they did in turning the notable building into a restaurant.