Bishopscourt, the Anglican Church’s 1850s trophy sandstone offering: He Said/She Said

Jonathan ChancellorDecember 7, 2020

Every Friday Jonathan Chancellor and Margie Blok go head to head discusssing the issue of the property week.

This week they discuss Bishopscourt, at 11 Greenoaks Avenue, one of Sydney's most historic mansions.

Property Observer recently reported that the Ray White Double Bay agency has been appointed to sell the Anglican Church's redundant Darling Point trophy home.

 


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The gothic sandstone home - especially the south-east facing wing - would just be too cold in winter. And the upkeep would be far too expensive - about $100,000 annually to keep the building in good repair.

The vast size of this mansion demands more cheques for a live-in housekeeper as well as several cleaning staff. The 6216 square metre grounds require a full-time gardener, as well as a gofer to do a daily sweep of leaves falling from the fig trees that line the gravel driveway and front garden. By the way overlooked by neighbouring blocks of flats. It would cost a bomb to renovate even if $2 million was spent recently on the chimneys and slate roofing.

It would also cost a motza to maintain the gorgeous leadlight-pane windows, let alone keep them clean - heaven knows how much the Moran family pay for window cleaning at their nearby historic mansion, The Swifts, which was previously owned by reclusive property investor, Carl Spies. I'd follow the approach of Spies who enjoyed a Howard Hughes-like reputation at The Swifts where he kept the front gates locked and the blinds drawn during his six-year ownership until 1992 when St George Bank took over as mortgagee-in-possession.

And let’s be honest, who needs a chapel in the house?

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For starters any Bishopscourt buyer will best revert it to one of its earlier names, either Percyville or Greenoaks. It really does rank among a handful of pioneer homes to have survived from the 1850s to now. Flowered in sandstone Gothic extravagances, its dates back to the pioneer Thomas Sutcliffe Mort, who built an empire on wool, dairy, meat, mining and shipping. A mansion that displays extraordinary self-made wealth.

Of course, mansions are the palaces and cathedrals of mortals desirous of emulating the enduring permanency of the church and state. This one is the Brideshead of Sydney and perfect for a modern-day family of Marchmain-esque wealth and devout religious sensibilities.

One of Sydney’s most palatial and historic mansions, this opulent sandstone residence is truly magnificent, especially the superbly proportioned formal rooms with intricately detailed ceilings - but the piece-de-résistance is the private chapel with its sandstone walls, elegant timber panelling and towering ceiling. An inspired designer, such as Thomas Hamel, could do wonders with the interiors of this palatial home and transform it for 21st centruy living.

Last traded 113 years ago for £6,750, the Bishopscourt estate presents a once in a generation opportunity to purchase a significant holding on Double Bay’s doorstep. The only other heritage eastern suburbs estate sold during recent times is Bellevue Hill’s Rona – it was snapped up for just $20 million in 2006 by property developer Terry Agnew, one’s of the shrewdest real estate players in Australia.

Nothing at Hunters Hill, the suburb famed for 19th century sandstone houses, holds a candle to Bishopscourt – and city commuting is much quicker from Darling Point than Hunters Hill. As far as privately owned historic mansions go, Bishopscourt is without peer in the eastern suburbs – apart from the Moran family’s The Swifts in Darling Point Road with its ballroom bigger than Government House.

I recall The Swifts came with the Tooth family's latin motto (Perseverantia Palman Obtinebit) cut into its façade which translated means "Perseverance yields the prize." And this is the prize that many have prayed for the opportunity to buy. The church contemplated selling it in 1963, 1982, 1991 2001, and most recently in 2010 when defeated in the synod by the narrowest of margins. Given John Schaeffer, a heritage mansion collector who sold Rona to Agnew, now directs his attention to towering harbourside apartments, there's at least one obvious contender out of the running for the Bishopscourt estate.

This heritage estate is unlikely to attract nouveau riche mining types with a penchant for glamour and glitz. I maintain they'd much prefer fake gothic architecture sans heritage authorities telling them what they can and can't do. This one is for property bluebloods.

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.

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