Now known as Heritage House, the project won both the Best Maintained Heritage Property and the Restoration and Development (Including Adaptive Reuse) categories.
Marketing manager Jane Smith says the property fits “seamlessly” into the club’s wider 2017 renovation and it is now utilised as an exhibition space.
“It’s a magnificent piece of real estate,” she said.
“We love the property and our CEO Bryn Miller was a strong influence in ensuring it was fully restored to its heritage glory.”
Accepting the Division Two Keeper Of The Stone: Children’s Heritage Award, nine-year-old Aleia Jaure told the Review the win was a complete shock.

“I never thought I would win, not in a million years,” she said.
“It’s my first award ever. I will keep it in my room.”
A Grade 3 student from Sacred Heart Primary School, she plans to use her prize to buy the ‘Pig the Pug’ books.
Highly commended award winners in the category also went to Nasslei Dimla, also from Sacred Heart, and Mena Nebhan and Haidar Muhammad, both from Amity College.
Ezel Hirlakoglu, a kindergarten student at Amity College, won the Division 1 Keeper of the Stone award, with highly commended awards also going to Grade 1 student Tasneem Soueid, and Grade 2 students Emily Ramirez and Daniel Broz, both from St Peter Chanel Primary School.

(Children’s Heritage Award) Aleia Jaure, 9, with mum Roanna.
The 2019 Writing Competition prize went to Rahed Nasseri, a Grade 5 student at Amity College, with Grade 6 student Mohammed Elmourad’s entry also highly commended.
A group entry from Westmead Christian Grammar School won the Artwork Competition for Kindergarten students Tuhi Kabir, Michael Chrysanthou, Rishik Apparla, and Janelle Adejoi Yeboah.
Other winners included the Holroyd Local History Research in the HistoResearch: Researching Our Local History category.