YNP Tram Cottage

Author

City of Wanneroo

Place Number

02679

Location

3499 Wanneroo Rd Yanchep

Location Details

Heritage Area

Local Government

Wanneroo

Region

Metropolitan

Construction Date

Constructed from 1913

Demolition Year

N/A

Statutory Heritage Listings

Type Status Date Documents
Heritage List Adopted 07 Nov 2016
State Register Registered 16 Jun 1992 HCWebsite.Listing+ListingDocument

Heritage Council Decisions and Deliberations

Type Status Date Documents
(no listings)

Other Heritage Listings and Surveys

Type Status Date Grading/Management
Category
Municipal Inventory Adopted 25 May 1994 Category 1A
Statewide Railway Heritage Surve Completed 01 Mar 1994
Classified by the National Trust Classified 06 Apr 1987

Statement of Significance

Refer to HCWA's Assessment Documentation of Places for Entry in the Register of Heritage Places.

Physical Description

The tram body has zinculume placed on the timber roof. Body is timber framed with lower sides clad with horizontal timber planking and the window line clad with galvanised iron cladding. Most of the windows on the sides have been replaced by aluminium framed windows but eh ends and doors still have original windows. Stonework (relocated from the old site in Boomerang Gorge) has been reused around the base of the tram. The early chimney was also moved. It is painted green, the colour it was in the first years of its park use. Only two remain, used jointly with a concrete floor between them and covered by an open timber frame with corrugated iron roof. Each tram has been set on a stone base, 12' x 18' high at the front and sides and considerably higher at the rear where the ground slopes steeply to the valley below. One tram has been adapted for sleeping accommodation, and the other for living. They stand in a pleasant bushland area with the ruins of a cultivated garden nearby.

History

Tram 57 is one of eight tram bodies transported to Yanchep in 1933 to be used as accommodation. It had been built in the Railway Workshops at Midland in 1913 in the first batch of trams to ever be completely built in WA. After initial use by sustenance workers it was soon used for general accommodation. By the mid 1980s only two trams remained due to bushfires. In 1990 the two trams were moved from Boomerang Gorge and the one that remained in the National Park was relocated next to Gloucester Lodge. There the tram was repaired including replacement of damaged 'roof sticks' (ribs). In 2004 CALM undertook the exterior restoration of the tram body and built a roof over the tram to protect it from damage by the weather.

Place Type

Individual Building or Group

Uses

Epoch General Specific
Original Use Transport\Communications Rail: Other
Present Use Transport\Communications Rail: Other

Construction Materials

Type General Specific
Other METAL Other Metal
Other TIMBER Other Timber
Roof METAL Zincalume
Other STONE Other Stone

Creation Date

30 May 1989

Publish place record online (inHerit):

Approved

Last Update

20 Apr 2021

Disclaimer

This information is provided voluntarily as a public service. The information provided is made available in good faith and is derived from sources believed to be reliable and accurate. However, the information is provided solely on the basis that readers will be responsible for making their own assessment of the matters discussed herein and are advised to verify all relevant representations, statements and information.