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City getaway guide: the best things to do and places to visit. Lorne is a very popular beach tourist resort town, located on one of the state's most scenic coastal routes, the Great Ocean Road, between Aireys Inlet and Wye River. Cafes and boutiques line the main foreshore thoroughfare of Mountjoy Parade, creating a Mediterranean feel to the area. Lorne's wide foreshore area extends from the shops on Mountjoy Parade down to the patrolled sandy beach areas.
Lorne is one of the first towns on the Great Ocean Road. Lorne is a popular destination for surfing, and when the population balloons in the summer season, it becomes a weekend getaway for the city dwellers in Melbourne. Popular activities include pier fishing, swimming, surfing, and camping. Events are held throughout the summer many being running races. The population grows to almost 15, people usually less than 1, people live in Lorne during the year celebrating the new year at the Falls Festival.
During that week, the Pier to Pub swim brings even more people to the town to watch as many as 4, people take a swim in the ocean and end in a pub! The swim is so popular it has the record in the Guinness Book of World Records. Built on the corner of Mountjoy Parade and Francis Street, Jura is a huge building with concrete columns "supporting two levels of veranda and a spreading orange tile roof above.
There is unseen interest behind its roughcast walls: they are made of Knitlock — a concrete block system patented by Walter Burley Griffin and used by him in some of his own designs; Jura is possibly the largest surviving example of its use.
Heritage Victoria points out that "The interior of Jura with its dark stained timber floors, skirtings, picture rails, ceilings beams and built-in window seats and unpainted finishes is a fine example of Klingender and Alsop's reputation for applying Arts and Crafts principles of truthfulness to structure and materials to produce an unpretentious and informal atmosphere entirely suited to the design of a beach house.
Wee-loo Built in at — Mountjoy Parade this Arts and Crafts holiday bungalow was built for Margaret Dennis of the Western District to a design by her brother. In , Wee-loo passed to the Presbyterian Church to be used as a holiday home for ministers and missionaries.
Divided inside, the two separate apartments have family names: Wee-loo and Willaring. It is now in private hands. It is situated at the tip of Point Grey and faces out onto the sea by the jetty.
It still enjoys one of the best views on the coast. It is central to the history of Lorne having started as a two-roomed house in In the owners, the Mountjoy Brothers, converted it into the Temperance Hotel. In it was being used as Lorne's first post office and the town's first church services were held here in It was bought by the state government in Erskine House is surrounded by 6 ha of manicured lawns and gardens and now operates as an accommodation centre with lawn bowls, croquet, tennis courts and a putting green.
Rudyard Kipling stayed here in The Heritage Listing of Erskine House notes: "Erskine House is historically and socially significant as the oldest and largest surviving guest house in the state. Through its fabric and siting, as well as through its documented history, Erskine House provides a reference to a long tradition of such establishments in Victoria, and more broadly to the history of the development of resort accommodation and leisure activities in the state.
Erskine House is also historically significant for its association with the history of Lorne and in particular with its development as one of the best-known seaside resorts in Victoria.
Erskine House is also of historical significance and has social values as a popular holiday destination for a wide cross-section of Victorian holidaymakers, and for the local Lorne community as a major institution and local employer. Other elements of particular interest include the driveway alignment, the landscaped character of the grounds with extensive recreational facilities, and a relationship with the beach.
The s extensions are relatively intact and are demonstrative of guest house design of the inter-war period, a time when Erskine House attracted record numbers of guests.
These buildings are also of architectural interest as relatively intact examples of the work of Geelong architects Laird and Buchan. Teddy's Lookout Located at the end of George Street, Teddy's Lookout , named after a ranger who went there to round up stray cattle, offers sublime, panoramic views over the town and coastline.
The rotunda which dates from the s and three short walks to other lookouts on the headland. It is an excellent place to learn about the construction of the Great Ocean Road. It is open the first Sunday of the month from 1. The website explains: "Qdos Arts is the epicentre of the vibrant arts scene in Lorne. What began as a studio, then a gallery, cafe and sculpture park to celebrate the visual, performing and gourmet arts has grown into a complete respite for creative souls with master classes, even Japanese-inspired treehouses to stay.
Light is also a theme in the gallery with lofty rooflines and glass to draw in the bushland views. The grounds form a natural amphitheatre watched over by the gallery and treehouses, in which major sculptural works blend with towering eucalyptus, a stillness pervades the 'Monet' style pond visited by a myriad of bird and wild life.
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