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Glorious gardens but the tip of the iceberg

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Picture: SUPPLIED

GLORIOUS gardens are the calling card for this expansive, flexible home at Blackmans Bay.

Throughout its colourful grounds green thumb gardeners will find everything from a Japanese maple to a classic lemon tree.

There are plum trees, a plethora of beautiful flowers and a gazebo to relax in — a real treat in spring and summer.

Split across two levels, the property offers a large family home upstairs and the bonus of a self-contained flat on the lower ground floor.

The flat could be used as a teenager’s retreat, a granny flat or perhaps — with permissions in place — it could generate a few extra dollars as an accommodation space.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

Huge water views.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

So much space.

The flat has a single bedroom with a built-in wardrobe, a bathroom and laundry, and an open plan kitchen and living room.

It is positioned alongside a garage, workshop and a storage area.

Upstairs, the home’s commanding location is revealed. North facing and slightly elevated, the property takes in sparkling water views.

The home has been superbly renovated and now boasts quality features like its bay windows, sunken spa bath in the main bathroom, gas cooking and external awnings on the north-facing windows.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

Perfect for big families.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

What’s for dinner?

The large, stylish, curved sundeck is the place to be when taking in a sunrise.

The main level features three bedrooms including a master with an ensuite. They are also positioned next to the family bathroom.

Located just 150 metres from the beach and a few hundred metres from Blackmans Bay’s beachside restaurants, the lifestyle on offer here is off the charts.

The Blackmans Bay shopping centre, Hill St Grocer, a baker, chemist, doctors surgery, dentist, bottle shop and take away food stores are about 1km from this home.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

Luxuriously appointed.

56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay. Fall.

The sunken tub.

No.56 Wells Parade, Blackmans Bay is listed with Fall Real Estate between $1.1m and $1.2m.

New realestate.com.au data show 22 units and 90 houses were sold in popular Blackmans Bay in the past 12 months.

The suburb’s median house price has grown by 5 per cent in that time and by a huge 49 per cent over the last five years. Unit values have also trended upward with 7 per cent and 32 per cent growth.

The median time on market is 64 days for houses and 59 for units.

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Point Lonsdale house short-listed for multiple awards quick to sell

Buyers have paid $2.3m for this architect designed house at 6 Deakin St, Point Lonsdale.

A modern Point Lonsdale house short-listed for multiple architecture awards has sold for $2.3m after less than two weeks on the market.

Keen buyers snapped up the ‘Hide and Seek’ house by Bower Architecture before expressions of interest on the property were due to close.

The sale was at the top end of Kerleys, Queenscliff agent Damian Cayzer’s $2.1-$2.3m price guide.

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A double-sided fireplace divides the living and dining areas.

The new owners will get to enjoy a contemporary three-bedroom beach house tucked away behind moonah trees at 6 Deakin Street.

The timber-clad home, designed around a central north-facing deck and lawn, has a dramatic double height living area with a two-way fireplace and its own library on the second level.

It was short-listed in the new houses category of the Australian Institute of Architects Victorian Architecture Awards, as well as the Australian Interior Design Awards.

A central passage overlooks the north-facing deck and yard.

There’s glimpses of the upper level’s library from the loungeroom, which features custom joinery.

The side entry offers privacy and views through the house.

“No 6. Deakin St is a stunning home, beautifully positioned in the heart of Point Lonsdale,” Mr Cayzer said.

“It was designed by Bower Architecture … needless to say it sold very quickly and I have a long list of disappointed clients who are now looking for something similar.”

Twin entries are a key feature of the design, with occupants having the choice to return home via an outdoor shower after beach visits.

The floorplan has the living zone at one end of the courtyard, with a bedroom wing at the other and the main bedroom upstairs.

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‘Radical’ way coronavirus has changed the way we want to live and the homes we will live in

More flexible living spaces will become the norm.

A dramatic shift in what Australians want our homes to be and how we interact with our surrounding communities is creating a new and reimagined lifestyle Zeitgeist.

COVID-19, and the copious amounts of time we have spent isolating at home, has served to hasten the pace of these changes and strengthen our desire to adapt them.

At its core is the re-emergence of the village at the heart of our daily lives, and also the desire for greater privacy or ‘me time’, including ‘the nude factor’.

New developments will feature more village-style living.

“The biggest issue COVID-19 has brought about is the rise of the village,” said Adam Haddow, architect and urban designer at SJB Architects.

“Modernism previously told us we couldn’t have working, living, sleeping and recreation all together but coronavirus is encouraging that. We are living more locally.

“It is radical in a way. The villages are prospering at the moment, suburban strips of shops are going gangbusters while in contrast the CBD sits empty.

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“Knowing about where you live and the community you live in has become much more important. You are getting amenity from your local goods and services, you know the man or woman who owns the local shop. You have a link with the dry cleaner.

“It does fundamentally change the way you live.”

The domino effect of this village-centre approach will be at the heart of new designs and developments.

Left-right: Architect and urban planner Adam Haddow of SJB Architects and Fabrizio Perilli, Fabrizio Perilli, CEO of TOGA, looking at the Surry Hills Village model. Picture: supplied

Architect and urban planner Adam Haddow (left) of SJB Architects and Fabrizio Perilli CEO of TOGA. Picture: supplied

“This all plays into the expectations of projects,” Mr Haddow said.

“People want diversity. They want some level of a supermarket, a coffee shop, a baker, a newsagent and a butcher and it becomes more about locally not nationally.

“It is not about gaining an income for the strata through mixed retail space, it is about adding to your life. Do you feel safe, healthy, that you are living a quality life? All of these things are very much front of mind now. That sense of amenity is vital. We realise now we don’t want to drive across town to get what we want.”

At an individual, couple or family level this has also led to a revision of our lifestyles.

“The COVID-19 scenario has meant a review of what living means to us, creating spaces that are meaningful and flexible and that can give that space where you can work quietly,” said

Fabrizio Perilli, CEO of TOGA Development and Construction.

The COVID-19 epidemic has taught us to demand more flexibility from our living spaces.

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“From an apartment block perspective that means reviewing that community space, those dedicated, shared spaces, Outdoor areas, common, landscape areas where you sit outside and reflect, to be a space of sufficient size, welcoming and providing privacy.

“That flexibility in the home itself can be equally provided for an apartment or a house.”

Time spent working from home has also challenged our ideas about what our home should provide.

“People now really appreciate that other room, or study room, they can close off,’ Mr Perilli said.

Mixed used commercial and residential hubs, such as this Sunshine Coast development, have become very sought after. Picture: Patrick Woods / Sunshine Coast Daily.

“They have also come to enjoy the privacy that an enclosed kitchen can provide and the more efficient use of storage space. There is also the usefulness of a multipurpose room. That’s not a living room or a bedroom but a flexible space that can change as you or your family does.”

More time at home and more time to ponder our lives, as a result of lockdown and isolation during the coronavirus epidemic, also means we know exactly what we want.

“People have now spent a lot of time at home and they are seeing the value in what they have and what they don’t have,” Mr Haddow said.

“They need a quiet spot where they can sit on the computer. They want to have a bit of a backyard so they don’t have to take the dog outside and around the block to pee.

“It is a more local way of living. It is more connected. You will see a return to more Juliette balconies, more communal living space in the bigger developments. People know what they want more than they ever did before. Before they wanted what was nice, now they want what is essential, what they are going to use.

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Hillside Crescent, Hamilton, Brisbane
Lochiel (1858), on the lower slopes of Hamilton Hill overlooking the river, is set on a 2344sqm block in a lovely garden with century-old trees. The six-bedroom mansion boasts gold-leaf cathedral ceilings, original 1850s fireplaces and Juliette balconies. As well as the pool, there's a putting green. Havig & Jackson, 0418 721 467. $8 million plus Picture: Captioned As

Juliette balconies are making a comeback.

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“In apartments people don’t want a big open space any more. That makes it difficult to live in. People want separation and visibility. Even recently we were designing with an amazing sequence of space. But it’s not longer one size fits all. It’s turning back to customised.

We also want a strong sense of privacy.

‘I call it ‘the nude factor’”, Mr Haddow said.

“People feel they should be able to walk around in the nude, they don’t want to have to be dressed and worry about what the neighbours think because they can see what they are doing.”

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Sydney housing market: 15 new suburbs now have $1 million-plus median price after strong growth

Aerial view of the Sydney CBD

Sydney has seen the median house price in another 15 suburbs surpass $1 million. John Feder/The Australian

Fifteen suburbs across Sydney have crossed the $1 million median price barrier for the first time.

The suburbs, located predominantly in Hornsby Shire, The Hills and Sutherland Shire, saw their median house price surge in the 12 months to June, thanks to record-low interest rates fuelling the market.

It brings the number of suburbs in Sydney with home values above $1 million to 209, following house prices growing by 13.3 per cent over the corresponding period.

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No. 17 Westbourne St sold last month in Bexley for $1.96 million.

Realestate.com.au data showed Bexley in the city’s south had the strongest growth of the new entrants, with prices growing $266,000 to $1.251 million. Neighbouring Bayside suburb Arncliffe also surpassed $1 million.

Raine and Horne Bexley director Sam Epsimos said buyers from the inner west and eastern suburbs have been the driving force behind the 21.26 per cent annual price growth seen in Bexley.

“These buyers are pushing the prices up, as they are finding the suburb offers far better value than what they would get in their area,” he said.

REA chief economist Nerida Conisbee.

“Bexley is also in a great location with not only the city on its doorstep, but the M5 and the new M8 pretty much connects this area to the rest of Sydney.”

Hornsby Shire had three suburbs surpass $1 million with Asquith, Mount Colah and Berowra Heights. The Hills had Glenwood, Winston Hills and The Ponds make the cut, while Wamberal on the Central Coast saw home values increase 7.89 per cent to $1.01 million.

Northmead was the sole Parramatta suburb to break $1 million, with the median house price now $1.01 million. Jannali, Menai and Yarrawarrah from Sutherland Shire along with Belmore and Picnic Point from the Canterbury-Bankstown area also saw house values surpass $1 million.

Strong demand from buyers has propelled the market in the past year.

REA chief economist Nerida Conisbee said suburbs with prices over $1 million have remained stable during the coronavirus pandemic due to the strong momentum of the past year.

“The property market is currently being supported by high levels of stimulus, a stable banking system, mortgage payment freezes and relative confidence among buyers,” she said.

Ms Conisbee said 15 new entrants in the million-dollar club highlighted how extreme some of Sydney’s house prices were, particularly near the city centre.

“With 15 new suburbs bringing the million-dollar club total to 209 million-dollar suburbs, it is becoming more difficult to find an inner or middle ring suburb for under $1 million,” she said.

Despite Sydney experiencing some of the best market conditions since the prolonged housing boom of 2014 to 2017, four suburbs were booted out of the million-dollar club.

Campsie in the inner west suffered the biggest fall with its median price dropping from $1.19 million to $985,000. Lidcombe, North Avoca and Sutherland also saw prices dip below $1 million.

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6 sales tips for agents who hate sales

As a new agent, you might be hating the sales process, worried to come across as pushy. But it doesn’t have to be scary or unethical. Instead, sales can be an enjoyable process for both you and your clients. Here’s how.

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A tale of two loans

“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” is how an article with this title should probably start. But when I compare getting a loan two years ago when I first bought a home to when I recently refinanced the same loan, it’s not fair to throw around words like “worst” or “best.”