| STAGE 1 VOLUME 2 HOME STAGE 1 VOLUME 2 CONTENTS Frankston and the Bay The Town Centre
Mechanics Institute
Law Courts And Police Churches Town Hall And Civic Centre Street Memorial Hospital Parks Conclusion |
2.0 Agriculture Industry Housing2.1 Agriculture and Housing 2.2 Housing At the same time the quality of many of the houses in Frankston (especially those architect-designed holiday homes in the south of the present city) have given the place a distinctive character. More extensive and innovative holiday designs followed the building of holiday mansions. These later designs were often shaped by the principles of the modern school of architects. After the Second World War an expanse of cheap housing for commuters was built in Frankston, especially in the area to the north of the commercial centre. The fine houses were often restricted to the heights of Oliver's Hill and Mt. Eliza. In the north of the present city, holiday accommodation often meant cheap shacks, many of them condemned by health inspectors. These were often surrounded by equally cheap and rough permanent housing especially after 1945. Eventually in the later 1950s and 1960s some more regulated, and from a planning perspective, more innovative estates were built in the east of the city. |
