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Activ Foundation Workshop

Author

City of Fremantle

Place Number

01040
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Location

98 Stirling Hwy North Fremantle

Location Details

Other Name(s)

North Fremantle Infants School (fmr),
North Fremantle State School
USN Public Works Office

Local Government

Fremantle

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1942, Constructed from 1900

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents More information
Heritage List YES 08 Mar 2007
Heritage Agreement YES 09 Jun 1999 Text of the Heritage Agreement
Heritage Council
State Register Registered 02 Sep 1998 Register Entry
Assessment Documentation
Heritage Council

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
(no listings)

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management More information
Category Description
Municipal Inventory Adopted 18 Sep 2000 Level 1A

Level 1A

The City of Fremantle has identified this place as being of exceptional cultural heritage significance in its own right within the context of Fremantle. This place is entered onto the Heritage Council of Western Australia’s Register of Heritage Places. All development applications must be referred to the Heritage Council for approval.

Aboriginal Heritage Sites Register Recorded

Heritage Council

Statement of Significance

Refer to HCWA Register of Heritage Places - Assessment Documentation: Activ Foundation Workshop (Former North Fremantle Infants School)

Activ Foundation Workshop, comprising the former North Fremantle Infants’
School, a single-storey stone and iron building built in 1900, and the former
Army Workshop, a single-storey brick, stone and asbestos building built in
1942, has cultural heritage significance for the following reasons:

the place is important for its role in education in the district, for its use
during World War Two by the Australian and US armed forces, and
for its later associations with technical education and the Activ
Foundation's work with intellectually disabled persons;

the Workshop is an unusual building, particularly for the style and
construction techniques of the street facade and interior detailing. The
Workshop was built by apprentices and records part of the educational
technique of the period;

the place was occupied by the United States Navy during World War
Two, and was known as the U.S.N. Public Works Office; and,
the two buildings, located on a curve in Stirling Highway directly
opposite the North Fremantle Railway Station, contribute to the
streetscape.

The internal stud dividing wall in the former hall, the landscaping, the paving,
the toilet block, the loading bay and the pergolas and shelters are of little
heritage significance. The metal sheds, the paving and the internal stud walls
in the Workshop are considered intrusive.

Physical Description

Refer to HCWA Register of Heritage Places - Assessment Documentation: Activ Foundation Workshop (Former North Fremantle Infants School)

The site is on the east side of Stirling Highway and faces the North Fremantle
Railway Station to the west. To the east is a group of recent Homeswest
medium density houses. To the north and south are buildings with
predominantly mixed commercial uses.
There are no contemporary buildings in the immediate vicinity. The former
North Fremantle Primary School is about 100 metres to the south on the other
side of Stirling Highway. There is no precinct involved.
RELATIONSHIPS ON SITE:
The following structures are currently located on the site:
• The former Infants’ School, a stone and corrugated iron building of 250
square metres built in 1900.
• A small wood shed on the northern boundary completed in 1901.
• A drinking trough immediately east of the classroom gable. (undated)
• The Workshop (fmr Military Workshop) of 150 square metres built in
1942 in brick, stone and asbestos roof.
• A limestone retaining wall and bituminised ramp to the rear of the site.
• A male and female toilet block central to the rear of the site.
• Shed structures to the east of the former Infants’ School.
• The remains of a garden centre to the north-east corner of the site,
1980s.
• A modern steel shed of 170 square metres, c1993, to the east of the
Workshop.
• A domestic steel shed, 1997, to the south of the Workshop.
There is very little in the way of existing landscaping. The grounds are in a
functional but Spartan state. More than half the site is bituminised. The
raised rear section to the south east of the site is partially grassed and planted.
There is a Eucalyptus ficafolia to the west of the toilet block, which is large
enough to be about 25 years old.
There is a hedge to the street alignment a little older (There is little evidence of
detailed landscaping in a 1968 aerial photograph. The E.ficafolia is not to be
seen, but the hedge is evident.)
EXTERNAL FORM AND STYLE OF THE BUILDINGS:
The former Infants’ School was built to a modified standard plan signed by
PWD Architect Hillson Beasley.
The twin gable roof is clad in corrugated iron, has lined eaves overhangs of
about 600mm on all sides and a box gutter between. There is a sectioned
triangular roof vent to each gable. The exterior walls are rock-faced limestone
in random stone size with a minimum dimension of approximately 120mm
and a maximum of about 600mm. A 100mm high painted rendered strip runs
around the building 170mm below floor level. Windowsills in the lean-to
sections are rendered with sloping tops that run 150mm to each side of the
openings. The west and east elevations of the classroom gables have blind
windows with small toplights and the south elevation has combination
double hung/toplight sashes. A rendered strip runs at sill level around full
height walls (without lean-to rooms). The form is typical of turn of the
century school buildings, but most similar examples are in brick rather than
stone. The west elevation presents awkwardly to the street, the lean-to
verandah and office giving the appearance of a rear elevation. The stone
walls of the lean-to entry porch, breaks the scale of the larger spaces within
the building and diminishes the visual clarity of the street elevation. The rear
elevation has no lean-to sections.
The Former Infant's School has had problems with leaking walls and damp
since it was built. Despite numerous calls for changes, no modifications were
carried out to eliminate the cause of the problems, namely, the porous stone
walls. The external stone walls are in an extremely exposed location and
wind and rain damage is widespread. A fundamental problem exists with the
type of stone and the exposed location. Recent repairs to the stonework
under the eaves are good and compatible with the original work. The roof is
generally sound, but the rain water pipes are in poor condition and need to be
replaced.
The Workshop is an unusual 1940s building. It has a limestone west
elevation, facing the street, with strong stylistic and detailing references to the
west elevation of the former Infants’ School. Such deference to style was not
common in free-standing buildings of the time and may have had as much to
do with on-site training for apprentice stone masons as it did with aesthetics.
The building is a rectangle with a gable to the street and hip and lean-to to the
rear. The roof and gutters are of asbestos and the 600mm eaves boxed and
lined with flat asbestos sheet. The side and rear walls are of State Reds bricks,
the north and south walls have a stone footing to 2 courses below floor level
and rendered strips at window sill and head levels. The eclectic street
elevation is in rock faced stone with an array of details that suggest exercises
for apprentices, realised in a building, rather than stylistic endeavour.
Mortar in the external brick walls of the Workshop is decomposing and there
is also widespread damage to the brick and stone sections of the walls due to
wind and rain. The use of asbestos in the roof, ceilings and claddings is a
health concern and the asbestos needs to be removed in line with current
regulations.
Although both of the buildings have been in public ownership since they
were built, there is little evidence of normal government standards of repairs
and maintenance having been applied to the place, nor is any regular
programme in place in early 1998.

INTERNAL LAYOUT AND DETAILS:
The Former Infants’ School form is of a gable-ended hall 8.53m by 15.24m and
two gable-ended classrooms each 6.71m by 7.92m immediately south of the
hall, sharing a common wall. The west wall of the classrooms is 3.96m west
of the corresponding wall of the hall. The rear offset of the two gables is
3.05m. A 3.05m wide lean-to abuts the north and west walls of the hall.
The Workshop building consists of two interconnected workshops with a
lean-to office and verandah to the rear. The details are shown in the plans
and internal elevations.

SUBSEQUENT ALTERATIONS:
The development of the buildings has been a very simple process. Neither the
former Infants’ School nor the Workshop have had additions and the
alterations have been minor.
After the former Infants’ School was completed and occupied in July 1900, a
woodshed (still standing) was added and seating for children added under
the school in 1901. The drains, not evident from the standard PWD plan
caused, problems as early a 1907. Given the fact that the drains were below
street level this not surprising. The existing surface drains are predominantly
of 1940s military type detail.
Waterproofing problems, which were reported in 1912, were a predictable
outcome of building without cavities in a very exposed location, as were
further drainage problems reported in 1921. The east elevation has been
modified by the addition of three double hung windows in the east wall of
the hall - date undocumented, but requested in a 1921 report. They are lower
than the windows in the classrooms, affording a view from within and have a
rendered reinforced lintel over.
The 1940 map shows the building and outbuildings almost unchanged from
their 1901 layout. The Army proposed changes to the place in 1941 but the
only substantial change was the addition of the stud wall dividing the hall
into two areas and the addition of the ablution block to the rear. The ablution
block has not been dated from the documentary evidence but details suggest
further changes c1965.
There have been no substantive alterations to the Workshop. A sawdust
hopper was added c1965 and a stud wall and storage loft was added to
workshop 1 in 1993.

PROGNOSIS, SETTING AND LOCATION:
Whilst the buildings have some substantial construction problems the
prognosis for their continued commercial usefulness is good. The Highway
frontage ensures an ongoing situation with a busy road and awkward access.
There is a plan for the continuation of West Coast Highway on the western
side of the railway reserve opposite but, whilst this might reduce traffic in
Stirling Highway, it is unlikely to substantially change the character of the
location.
There is little of note in the existing landscaping and the documentary
evidence fails to give light to any detailed information on the former state of
the site. In particular there are very few photographs of the site even over the
last 50 years.
Little of the fabric of the buildings in the place has changed and most parts of
the older buildings represent elements of the original uses.

History

The portion of Stirling Highway to the north of Queen Victoria Street was originally part of Perth Road. The area developed with mixed residential, commercial and industrial uses from the 1860s following the construction of the North Fremantle Traffic Bridge and the upgrading of Perth Road by convicts. The portion of Stirling Highway that runs between the Swan River and the junction with Queen Victoria Street was formerly called Bruce Street. It was named after Colonel Bruce, head of the Pensioner Guards. In the early days of North Fremantle’s development, the favoured residential area for settlement was slightly west of the North Fremantle oval and named ‘Brucetown’.

Settlement of North Fremantle began in earnest in the late 1890s and Bruce Street was characterised by a mix of building types. On the southern side of the street between Queen Victoria Street (formerly Perth Road) and Tydeman Road (formerly Pensioner Road and then John Street), the buildings were predominantly residential. Industrial use was more common on the northern side.

Stirling Bridge was constructed across the Swan River at the end of Bruce Street in 1974. As Bruce Street was now the major arterial link between the bridge and Stirling Highway, the street was widened and renamed as an extension of Stirling Highway.

In recent years, new high-density residential development of the areas adjacent to the river on either side of Stirling Highway has seen a significant change in the mix of buildings in the southern section of Stirling Highway. In 2004, the street continues to have a mix of residential, retail and industrial land use.

The site comprises the former North Fremantle Infants’ School (a single storey stone and iron building completed in 1900) and the former Army Workshop (a single storey brick, stone and asbestos building completed in 1942).

In 1898, a separate infants department was established in the grounds of North Fremantle Primary School (established in 1890 at 101 Stirling Highway). Conditions at the primary school soon became too cramped and it was decided to build an infants’ school on a separate site. Land at 98 Stirling Highway was selected and in 1900, a tender for the new school buildings was accepted. The school was completed and occupied in July 1900 and was officially opened by Cyril Jackson, Inspector General of Schools, on 26 September 1900. A contract for additions to the newly completed classrooms was awarded in December that year. North Fremantle Infants’ School appeared in the1900 annual school and staff lists as a Class V school with a headmistress and two teachers.

By 1913, the school was considerably overcrowded and the Senior Inspector of Schools recommended extensions to address the problem. It is not known what form these took. The school continued to operate until 1925, when it was listed for the last time in the annual school and staff lists as a Class IV school. The following year, the school amalgamated with the North Fremantle Primary School, which continued to use the old infant’s school site as a campus.

In 1941, the old infants’ school building was acquired for Army training purposes. The following year, army trainees constructed a timber workshop to the south of the older school building. In 1944, the Australian Military Forces took over the site, which was subsequently occupied by the United States Navy as their Public Works Office.

Following the end of World War II, the site reverted to the Education Department and the North Fremantle Primary School Parents and Friends’ Association requested that the infants be returned to their own school. However, Prime Minister John Tonkin intervened, stating that the premises were needed to train ex-servicemen under the Commonwealth Rehabilitation Scheme. The site took on a technical school function at this time, which continued until 1965, when the Health Department took on the workshop buildings for patient rehabilitative purposes. In 1900, ACTIV foundation (formerly the Slow Learning Children’s Group) took over operations of the workshop under a lease from the Minister for Health. The following year, the site was officially set aside as a workshop for intellectually disadvantaged persons.

For further information see Heritage Council of Western Australia, ‘Register of Heritage Places: Permanent Entry – ACTIV Foundation Workshops, 1998.

This place was included in the 'North Fremantle Heritage Study' (1994) as a place contributing to the development and heritage of North Fremantle. It was also included in the list of heritage places in the City of Fremantle identified by the Fremantle Society (1979/80) - RED -significant for contributing to the unique character of Fremantle.

Integrity/Authenticity

Refer to HCWA Register of Heritage Places - Assessment Documentation: Activ Foundation Workshop (Former North Fremantle Infants School)
INTEGRITY
The Former Infants’ School has a moderate level of integrity. It is no longer
used for the purpose for which it was designed and is highly unlikely to
return to that use. The current use (Sheltered Workshop) makes reasonable
use of the spaces except the office.
The Workshop has a moderate level of integrity. The Sheltered Workshop
makes good use of the spaces and its function is similar to that for which the
building was designed.
AUTHENTICITY
Both the buildings have a high level of authenticity, as there has been little
substantial change over time. The Former Infant's School has undergone
minor internal alterations while there is no evidence of substantial alterations
to the Workshop.
The grounds have a low level of authenticity, with only a woodshed from
1901 and part of a limestone retaining wall remaining from pre-1940.

Condition

Condition assessed as good (assessed from streetscape survey only).

Associations

Name Type Year From Year To
Public Works Department of Western Australia Architect - -

State Heritage Office library entries

Library Id Title Medium Year Of Publication
3353 ACTIV Foundation Workshop North Fremantle Conservation Plan Heritage Study {Cons'n Plan} 1998

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Other Use GOVERNMENTAL Office or Administration Bldg
Original Use EDUCATIONAL Pre-primary Centre
Present Use COMMERCIAL Other
Present Use HEALTH Other
Original Use EDUCATIONAL Primary School

Architectural Styles

Style
Federation Romanesque

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Roof ASBESTOS Fibrous Cement, corrugated
Roof METAL Corrugated Iron
Wall ASBESTOS Fibrous Cement, flat
Wall STONE Limestone

Historic Themes

General Specific
SOCIAL & CIVIC ACTIVITIES Education & science
OUTSIDE INFLUENCES World Wars & other wars
SOCIAL & CIVIC ACTIVITIES Community services & utilities

Creation Date

30 May 1989

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

21 Mar 2019

Disclaimer

This data is provided by the City of Fremantle. While every care is taken to ensure the accuracy of this data, the City of Fremantle makes no representations or warranties about its accuracy, reliability, completeness or suitability for any particular purpose and disclaims all responsibility and all liability (including without limitation, liability in negligence) for all expenses, losses, damages (including indirect or consequential damage) and costs which you might incur as a result of the data being inaccurate or incomplete in any way and for any reason. Under no circumstances should this data be used to carry out any work without first contacting the City of Fremantle for the appropriate confirmation and approval.