Historic Queenscliff Hotel listed, along with antique furnishings

The 1887 built Queenscliff Hotel on the western tip of Port Phillip bay has been listed for sale with all its antique furnishings in one line.

The heritage-listed hotel was designed by Melbourne architects Reed, Henderson Smart, the same architects responsible for the State Library of Victoria, Collins Street Baptist Church, Melbourne Trades Hall and a number of Melbourne university buildings.

It was built by NW Frogley in the English Queen Anne style for Martha Nugent and Joseph Goslin, wealthy local citizens at the time.

Heritage documents say the building is an extraordinary example of the architects’ work.

“The polygonal tower, with its coned roof and bellcast profile, and the Dutch gables, with steep slit openings, are of interest for their reflection of northern European Renaissance architecture, particularly from countries as such France and the Netherlands.”

Heritage documents celebrate the façade of the building for its “essentially intact exterior”.

“The Queenscliff Hotel is of social significance for its associations with wealthy Victorian society around the turn of the century, who regarded Queenscliff as a fashionable summer holiday resort, particularly as it was within easy reach of Melbourne after the opening of the Geelong-Queenscliff railway in 1879 and the introduction of paddle steamers to transfer passengers from Melbourne by sea.”

The 15-bedroom mansion has been run as a leisure property since it was built.

The current owners acquired the property about 10 years ago from restaurateur Patricia O’Donnell, sister of the now deceased Mietta O’Donnell, who ran the hotel as a fine dining hotel for a number of years.