ASHDOWN- ART DECO JEWEL

20 May 2021

In 1911 Aaron Bolot (1900-1989), architect of Ashdown, 96-98 Elizabeth Bay Road, fled from Crimea, a peninsula located on the northern coast of the Black Sea in Eastern Europe. He and his parents were fleeing the Russian anti-Jewish persecution pogrom. He was only 11 years-old at the time.

Apartment 3 is currently for sale through Penny Timothy and Luke McDonnell https://www.rwebay.com.au/6406379/

Like many other refugee families the Bolot family chose the farthest civilised country from Europe, Australia. At least in Brisbane the weather was better and more especially in Sydney’s Bondi, where they eventually settled. He started work as a clerk but left to win gold medals in architecture from Queensland’s Institute of Architects and an honours diploma. He was featured as “a young man of achievement” in the 1925 edition of The Hebrew Standard of Australasia. He was 25 years old.

He designed projects with Walter Burley Griffin, designer of Canberra. Bolot said he was a visionary and easy to work with.

During this period Art Deco design was in vogue, especially with cinemas, which promoted the “Hollywood” aesthetic. It also was often named the P & O style, after the fashionable P & O cruise shipping line, because some buildings featured porthole-style windows and rounded protruding fronts similar to a ship’s bow, just as Ashdown does.

Bolot designed the Ritz theatres in Randwick and Goulburn, the Brisbane Regent, the Regal Theatre in Gosford and Melbourne’s Liberty Theatre, one of the first in Australia to have a “gold fibre” screen suitable for 3-D pictures, a design novelty.

Moving to Sydney in 1930 he designed the Gosford Regal Theatre featuring avant-garde, streamlined Art Deco/Moderne-Style curves, a feature also later incorporated into Ashdown.

In 1938 he designed Ashdown, a graceful and chic curved window apartment block at 96-98 Elizabeth Bay Road. Use of glass bricks on the four-storey facade is a design highlight. It faced north east to capture light and harbour views from the top floors.

And 1948 he designed 17 Wylde Street, a north-easterly facing curved landmark building. Later, aged 66, he designed Woollahra’s Jewish Neuweg Synagogue of which he was a member.

Like 17 Wylde Street, Potts Point, Ashdown, has the touch of design genius. Its original main original outlook was north-east to capture and embrace morning light, tree-scapes and harbour aspects.

It was described by Art in Australia in August 1938 as “an excellent example of the dignity that comes from well-considered proportions and absolute simplicity”. Bolot said in an interview for the same magazine “light and trees should be as tangible a part of the design as the space enclosed for rooms.”

Apartment 3 features original Art Deco elements including minimalist pelmets and skirting boards and wide wooden floor boards.

 

 

By Andrew Woodhouse

Director

Heritage Solutions

ASHDOWN- ART DECO JEWEL