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Three level extension hides behind historic Queenslander

This home at 16 Strath Street, Highgate Hill has undergone a major restoration and extension and is now for sale.

Brisbane’s earliest rail lines were being built when a railway surveyor moved in to 16 Strath Street, Highgate Hill.

BEFORE: 16 Strath Street, Highgate Hill.

Nearly 140 years later, rail lines have expanded and so has the house, but transport solutions for a growing city remain the focus of the current owner.

Michael Roth is a passenger and freight transport consultant who has lovingly restored the three-bedroom worker’s cottage and joined it to a three-storey extension that has tripled the house size and added three more bedrooms.

BEFORE: The rear sleep-out.

AFTER: No longer a sleep-out, this room has become the main bathroom.

“This is one of the beauties of Brisbane,” he said.

“It’s on top of a hill near South Bank, with views to the east and west and the city. We can see sunrise and sunset from the front veranda and the new deck.”

“What we know is that this was one of the three original houses on the street. We know it was built somewhere between 1881 when the land was subdivided and 1883 when it appears in the post office book.”

But despite the romance of its origins, the house was rundown when Michael and Susan Roth bought it in 2013.

“We rented it out for 18 months while we worked out what to do and then we took the plunge to start the renovation,” he said.

BEFORE: The old kitchen was added on to the original building in an extension that was demolished.

The design for the extension and renovation was completed in 2015 and then building approvals were sought with construction taking place between 2017 and 2020. “I’ve done about half a dozen renovations but this is the biggest job by far.

AFTER: The new kitchen is built in almost the same spot as the old one, as part of the new extension.

Mr Roth, who is a mechanical engineer, decided not to go with an architect, choosing to design the house himself in consultation with a building designer and draughtsman. He also had project manager Ben Kelly from Kelly Constructions oversee the build.

The house was raised slightly and built in underneath, demolishing a previous extension which had a kitchen and bathroom behind the home.

BEFORE: The previous extension.

AFTER: The new extension.

The original home now has three bedrooms and a lounge upstairs and a guest bedroom with an ensuite, laundry and garage on the ground floor.

A front sunroom in the original house has been converted into part of the front veranda and the rear sunroom has become the main bathroom on the first floor.

BEFORE: The front enclosed sunroom.

AFTER: The front sunroom is now part of the veranda.

The extension is barely visible from the front of the 549sq m property and has a self-contained granny flat on the ground level, while the main living, dining and kitchen areas are on the first floor with a rear deck.

AFTER: The property’s footprint as it looks today.

The second floor is taken up by the master bedroom.

Wide blackbutt floorboards have been laid throughout the house to link the old and new sections and instead of building cupboards in the bedrooms, extra storage space has been built into the attic.

AFTER: The central stairs and hallway represent the point where the original house meets the new extension.

AFTER: Another view of the join between the two buildings, with a pond that features bricks from the existing home.

A passive solar design underpins the home with a central corridor that sucks the air from the front to the back of the house, creating a sustained breeze and reducing the need for airconditioning.

And wherever possible the couple managed to recycle original materials.

“We recycled what we could in terms of some of the wood and the bricks, there was an old chimney that was falling down from 1900 and we took that apart carefully and used all those bricks for the pond that we built and the pathway.”

BEFORE AND AFTER: The same aspect as before but the city has changed.

But in making a multi-generational home, the couple, whose children have left home, say the house is now too big for their needs so they have put it on the market with Bettina Jude of Belle Property West End.

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Coffee abandoned as bidder mixes up auction start time

This four-bedroom house at 88 Raven Street, Camp Hill sold at auction for $895,000.

BEN Balderston was about to order coffee from a Stones Corner cafe before heading to the auction of 88 Raven Street at Camp Hill on Saturday when his phone rang.

Four kilometres away, Place Bulimba lead agent Joanna Gianniotis was trying to give away a bottle of French Champagne to the first person to bid on the four-bedroom worker’s cottage on 607sq m but no-one was taking the bait.

That had a lot to do with the fact that one of her star bidders wasn’t there.

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Auctioneer Paul Curtain outside 88 Raven Street, Camp Hill

“I thought the auction started at 10,” Mr Balderston said afterwards.

At 9.06am, and with nothing but a vendor bid of $800,000 and some creative talk passing from the lips of Place Bulimba joint-managing director and auctioneer Paul Curtain, the auction was paused.

While the crowd of 40 waited, a sales assistant called the absent bidder.

“How far away are you?” she asked.

The main front bedroom.

The investment property, which had been rented out for the past four years for $615 a week, was owned by a software engineer who was watching from the main front bedroom as Ms Gianniotis put down the bottle of champagne and started working the crowd to gauge the level of interest from the three registered bidders who were in attendance.

The rear deck.

“I thought it was about to be passed in,” the owner said.

Mr Balderston, a local investor who was interested in land banking the property, had abandoned his coffee and was racing down Old Cleveland Rd to get to the auction.

At 9.13am he arrived, brushing passed onlookers and registering to vote over the front fence just as Mr Curtain recommenced the auction after finally gaining a bid of $805,000 from a family of four who were looking to move closer in to the city.

The crowd had thinned to half by this time but those remaining saw a robust auction of 35 bids as the family struggled to shake their new competition.

Mr Balderston stands on the road after arriving at 88 Raven Street, Camp Hill. You can register to bid at any time before the hammer falls at an auction.

“There’s strong demand for bigger blocks,” Ms Gianniotis said after the auction. “ And a lot are first-home buyers recognising the value of the land.”

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At $895,000 the family bowed out of the auction and the property sold to Mr Balderston, but they did not leave empty-handed.

“I always give away a bottle of champagne to the first bidder at my auctions,” Ms Gianniotis said.

Champagne has been part of Joanna Gianniotis’s auction campaigns for 18 years.

Mr Balderston may have missed out on his flat white coffee but there was a bottle of champagne for him also as the winning bidder.

“Lucky I rocked up,” he said.

The house was one of more than 50 to go to auction across Brisbane yesterday.

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Badgerys Creek block on the doorstep of Western Sydney Airport for sale ahead of rezone

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No. 100 Martin Road at Badgerys Creek is on the market ahead of a rezone later this year.

Developers are circling a prized parcel of land on the door step of the Western Sydney Aerotropolis.

The 2.26ha site at 100 Martin Road, Badgerys Creek, is being offered to buyers, just months from it being rezoned from rural to enterprise use.

The development upside is drawing interest from builders, investors, developers and construction companies looking to cash in on the airport when it opens in 2026.

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No price guide has been made public, but comparable sales in the area have fetched in the range of $250 per sqm. This translates into a possible sale price close to $6 million.

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The 2.26ha site is right near Western Sydney Airport, which is under construction.

Listed with Colliers International agents Thomas Mosca, Nick Estephen and James Cowan, the landholding will go under the hammer on September 10.

Mr Estephen said 100 Martin Road will be the second property in Badgerys Creek to go to a public auction in recent memory.

“The last time a property in this suburb was sold via an onsite public auction it exceeded the last suburb record by 60 per cent,” he said.

Described as the third CBD of Greater Sydney, Western Sydney Aerotropolis has seen companies such as Suttons Automotive, Hanson, Adelaide Brighton and Mirvac purchase land.

An artists impression of the new Badgerys Creek airport to be built.

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Ideally located between the aerotropolis and the airport.

The area, which is set to accommodate a population of more than 1.5 million people by 2036, is experiencing immense growth, with the CSIRO also planning to build a research hub and Amazon committing to a 200,000sqm robotics fulfilment centre within the Aerotropolis.

When the site is rezoned for enterprise use, a number of different commercial and mixed employment uses will be able to be built including a warehouse complex.

“There is a lot of anticipation around the rezoning of the land in this precinct and developers are very keen to purchase land in the area,” Mr Cowan said.

Alan Walker and Andrew Lakomy of Cor Cordis are selling it in their capacity as receivers.

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Young buyers stepping onto the property ladder in favourable conditions

2/316 Pacific Highway, Lane Cove is due to go to auction this weekend.

Low interest rates, coupled with perceptions of a softer market due to the recession and COVID-19 conditions are inspiring young professionals to get off the rental roundabout or out of home and onto the property ownership ladder.

Agents are reporting higher numbers of buyers fitting this profile at apartments opened for inspections in the past few weeks.

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At the first open of 2/316 Pacific Highway, Lane Cove, Patrick Lang, of Belle Property Lane Cove, had 120 people through the front door – all socially distanced of course.

“It’s fantastic to see young professionals out there in their 20s and 30s buying property,” Mr Lang said.

“Money is so cheap and people are seeing that you can spend the same or a very similar amount each week on rent or a mortgage. They see rent as dead money.

“Bricks and mortar is becoming trendy again.”

And Lane Cove is shaping up as something of a hot spot, he said.

Last week he auctioned 8/557 Mowbray Rd, Lane Cove, a two-bedroom apartment with a price guide of $800,000.

It sold under the hammer for an undisclosed amount, understood to be well above the price guide.

The Pacific Highway apartment, which also has two bedrooms, has the same price guide and is due to go to auction on September 5.

2/316 Pacific Highway, Lane Cove.

Lane Cove has a median apartment sale price of $800,000, which represents a 12-month growth of 5.5 per cent.

Mr Lang said young professionals were mostly uninterested in buying apartments needing work or renovations, and were looking for trendy homes in boutique blocks or complexes with pools, tennis court and other shared facilities.

Some were either upgrading from a one-bedders or looking for their first home, and many were couples looking to form households together for the first time.

He said about 60 per cent of young buyers he was seeing at open homes and auctions were there with their parent or parents for moral and/or financial support.

“It really is good to see them out there and with less investors in the market, they have less competition,” Mr Lang said.

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