Here’s the latest on Labassa House based on recent public reporting:
- A May 2026 ABC News feature highlights Labassa as Melbourne’s Caulfield North mansion with a rich post-war history, including Jewish refugee stories and bohemian eras, and notes ongoing public access and volunteer-driven preservation efforts. This piece frames Labassa as a living archive rather than just a building.
- The National Trust of Australia (Victoria) page for Labassa confirms ongoing public open days and events in 2026, with schedule notes and themes, and mentions that most of the Victorian-era interiors remain intact despite its long history. This source also references recent collaborations and curated public experiences at Labassa.
- Additional context from Labassa-related materials indicates the property has shifted from private residence to apartments and back to heritage-listed status, with the National Trust publishing oral histories and scholarly work about Labassa’s social history, including the Labassa Lives project.
If you’d like, I can pull in more specifics like upcoming open days, event themes, or visitor tips from the National Trust calendar and the ABC feature, or summarize Labassa’s key historical chapters (owners, uses, architectural changes) with a short timeline.
Sources
From post-war Jewish refugees, who arrived with nothing but hope, to the bohemian artists and performers who took over in the 1970s, historic Melbourne mansion Labassa has more stories than rooms.
www.abc.net.auLabassa’s illustrious social history is familiar to many. From 1862-1920 it was the residence of a succession of enterprising and prosperous families. Following those boom years it was divided into apartments and became home to successive waves of residents of more modest means but not necessarily modest ambitions. Among Labassa’s
www.nationaltrust.org.auOn a quiet, tree-lined street in Caulfield North, a grand Victorian mansion prepares to host something unexpected. Hide and Reveal – a new collaboration between the Victoria Racing Club and Lexus – transforms the crumbling beauty of Labassa Mansion into a living gallery of art, fashion, technology and performance.
www.vrc.com.auFrom mansion to flats, Labassa has survived with its Victorian era decoration intact
www.nationaltrust.org.au