Domain Review Bayside & Port Phillip - August 28, 2024

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IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Troye Sivan:

The Pop Star Next Door

The Grammy-nominated Melbourne local gears up for his Brat summer

Domain Group is a leading property marketplace made-up of a portfolio of brands. We are united in our purpose to inspire confidence in life’s property decisions. Our brands offer products and solutions to consumers and agents interested in property across every step of their property journey. We are motivated to innovate in our industry and leverage our unique data, products, and technology to deliver solutions to our customers that are found only on Domain.

Domain Managing editor: Natalie Mortimer Senior producer: Hailey Coules Group picture editor: Kylie Thomson Senior designer: Colleen Chin Quan Graphic designer: Emma Drake Head of print & B2B content: Sarah Millar Group content director: Mark Roppolo Chief marketing officer: Rebecca Darley Chief executive officer: Jason Pellegrino

Residential sales: vicresidential@domain.com.au

New development sales: Andrew O’Brien, 0408 855 903

Retail and media sales: Caterina Costa, 0402 308 282

Contact: editorial@domain.com.au

Distribution enquiries: distribution@domainreview.com.au

Disclaimer: While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information in this publication, it is all subject to change.

This publication is published by Domain Holdings Australia Limited and Broadsheet Media Pty. Ltd. and is printed by IVE, 25-33 Fourth Avenue, Sunshine VIC 3020

Broadsheet is Australia’s leading independent publisher. Online and in print, we aim to keep you in the loop with the best Melbourne has to offer and enrich your life in the city. We won’t waste your time with anything you don’t need to know about – just the essentials in home & lifestyle, art & design, fashion & style, food & drink, entertainment and travel. Broadsheet also has a presence in Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.

Broadsheet Founder and publisher: Nick Shelton Managing director: Sian Whitaker Australia editor: Nick Connellan

Features editors: Michael Harry & Emma Joyce Melbourne food & drink editor: Audrey Payne Studio and strategy director: Chrissy Voss Senior media partnerships manager: Jessica Kirsopp

Broadsheet Editor: Jo Walker Assistant editor: Gitika Garg Design lead: Ben Siero

Designer: Ella Witchell Design intern: Chelsea Devon Sub editors: Miriam Kauppi, Kit Kriewaldt, Barnaby Smith, Adeline Teoh

Writers: Lucy Bell Bird, Gideon Cohen, Quincy Malesovas, Sasha Murray, Giselle Au-Nhien

Nguyen, Gemma Plunkett, James Williams

Photographers: Jamie Alexander, Parker Blain, Nicole Cooper, Pablo Diaz, Pete Dillon, Shelley Horan, Casey Horsfield, Kaede James Takamoto, Julian Kingma, Arianna Leggiero, Yusuke Oba, Belinda Richards, Mark Roper

Cover credits: Troye Sivan shot by Nicole Cooper, Mecca

Broadsheet Media acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and their connections to lands, waters and communities. We pay respect to Elders past and present and honour more than 60,000 years of storytelling, art and culture.

Is Troye Sivan Australia’s first internet-era superstar? The singer and actor’s fame was forged in the digital world – now he’s building a life in Melbourne and getting to know the city as a local. Between American stadium tours, Netflix acting roles and the launch of his fragrance brand, you’ll find him riding a bike around Carlton and watching home design shows on the ABC.

Jo Walker Broadsheet Editor

Melbourne: Level 4, 600 Church Street, Cremorne 3121, VIC Instagram: @domain.com.au Facebook.com/domain.com.au/

Sydney: 100 Harris Street, Pyrmont 2009, NSW Instagram: @domain.com.au Facebook.com/domain.com.au/ www.domain.com.au

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Sydney: 258A Crown Street, Surry Hills 2010, NSW Instagram: @broadsheet_syd Facebook.com/broadsheet.sydney

www.broadsheet.com.au

NOW OPEN

The Chapel

113 Chapel Street, Windsor

Forget you’re on Chapel Street and step into another world. That’s the idea behind The Chapel, according to Leo Theodoridis, who co-owns the new bar with his cousin Dimitri Degrenis. Inspired by Stockholm nightlife venues, that world looks like a futuristic cyberpunk land.

Lighting placements and colours (predominantly red and purple) were chosen based on how they would interact with the venue’s textures, and custom murals have been painted by local tattoo artist Mayonaize.

Contrasting with the decor is a menu mostly influenced by the owners’ Mediterranean heritage, served in the dining area and 30-person function room. Dishes include barbequed pumpkin with whipped feta, slow-roasted lamb shoulder with chermoula, and a spin on the Greek rice pudding rizogalo.

Former Ends and Means owner Marc Frew has overseen the cocktail program, with a changing list of specialty drinks. The music also changes depending on the day, with DJ sets on Thursday to Sunday nights. – QM

ADD TO CART

Short Talk cards

Most greeting cards are terrible. The contents are either too sappy or too rude, and designs are usually “meh”. Happily, Melbourne outfit Short Talk bucks the trend. Its tight card edit offers subtle visual puns and typographic motifs for a range of occasions (birthdays, friendship, new babies), with playful print techniques and punchy colourways to keep things interesting. Available singly or in packs, you’ll never have to buy a lame servo card again. — JW

Cards $8 each, packs from $32 / shorttalk.co

IN THE DIARY

Affordable Art Fair 2024

The Affordable Art Fair challenges the assumption that the art world has to be intimidating and expensive. This year’s fair will exhibit works from 55 boutique galleries, including Collingwood’s Sol Gallery, Fitzroy’s Outre Gallery and Plume Gallery from Lorne. Prices are clearly labelled, ranging from $100 to $10,000, with complimentary wrapping on-site. Aside from the art, there’ll also be a ceramics demonstration, live sketching and free face painting for kids. — BS

Aug 29–Sep 1 / Royal Exhibition Building, 9 Nicholson Street, Carlton / affordableartfair.com

SNACK BAR STREET STYLE

Bianchetto, Sicilian restaurant Mister Bianco’s sibling bar in Kew, is hosting a movie night every Wednesday and Thursday until September 26 For $33 50, watch Italian-language films and movies set in Italy, including The Italian Job and La Dolce Vita. Films are accompanied by a welcome drink, truffled popcorn, lasagne and a sweet. Bookings required. 26-28 Cotham Road, Kew /misterbianco.com.au/bianchetto

Hollywood-founded boutique hotel chain The Standard opened its first Aussie location earlier this month at the StandardX in Fitzroy. The new hotel is home to Thaiinspired ground-floor restaurant Bang, led by Melbourne chef Justin Dingle-Garciyya. Dishes include blue swimmer crab noodles with lobster sauce and a pig’s head that’s slowbraised, dried, barbequed and served whole with a heap of sesame, green onions, spring onions and coriander. 62 Rose Street, Fitzroy / bangrestaurants.com

Five Melbourne venues – Reine, La Rue, Amphora, Cecconi’s Toorak and Pastificio Sandro – have been shortlisted for the international Restaurant & Bar Design Awards. Winners are announced October 31 in Barcelona. restaurantandbardesignawards.com

Black Star Pastry, the chain of cake stores founded by pastry chef Christopher Thé in Sydney and best known for its strawberry watermelon cake, has closed all three of its Melbourne stores. The chain, which has been going since 2008, cited “rising costs, a tough economic climate and an industry-wide staffing shortage” as the primary reasons for closing its Melbourne stores. blackstarpastry.com

Attica chef Ben Shewry will be sitting down for a live interview with media personality Marieke Hardy at The Wheeler Centre on Tuesday October 15 to promote his forthcoming book Uses for Obsession: A (Chef’s) Memoir. Tickets are on sale now. wheelercentre.com

Victoria Market, CBD

Name: Young Hour Sor Age: 27 Occupation: Artist Tell us about your outfit today. The pants are from Aelfric Eden – what caught my eye was the star motif. On top is a shirt that I thrifted forever ago, and a dress from a cute womenswear store in the Kyoto train station. The bag and jewellery are also thrifted. The shoes are Windsor Smith. What’s a trend you love or hate? I’m a big fan of office wear coming back in. I also like quaint, cottagecore dressing because it’s very comfy, but pairing that with something that clashes with it.

Living in one of the world’s most liveable cities sure does have its perks, but actually dwelling amongst the hustle and bustle is another level. From the best restaurants, to the finest of architecture and free trams, what’s not to love?

SLICK CITY
Photo: Arianna Leggiero
Photo: Casey Horsfield
Photo: Yusuke Oba
Photo: Julian Kingma
Photo: Kaede James Takamoto

THE INTERVIEW

Leigh Sales Helps Young Journos Ask Big Questions

Have you ever wanted to know exactly how rich your favourite celebrity is? To interrogate an A-lister on their romantic history? Or maybe just spend 45 minutes asking the prime minister anything you want?

The Assembly, a new ABC show, puts this power in the hands of 15 journalism students with autism. Based on a popular French format, it follows students from Macquarie University’s autism-friendly journalism course and their mentor, Leigh Sales. Each week the group interviews some of Australia’s biggest names: figures like Sam Neill, Hamish Blake, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, Delta Goodrem, Adam Goodes and Amanda Keller.

The rules are simple – no subjects are out of bounds, no questions are off the table –and the result is a thought-provoking and highly entertaining show that challenges preconceptions of neurodiverse people and shows another side of their interview subjects.

We sat down with Sales to talk about stepping into a new role as a mentor, convincing the PM to commit to a no-holds-barred interview ahead of an election year, and the student who tried to set her up with Sam Neill.

Tell us about your involvement with The Assembly The ABC approached me last year and said, “We think we’re going to get the rights to this French format – we’d love for you to be involved. Here’s a link to the French version with President Emmanuel Macron.”

There were a couple of things that resonated with me when I saw it. When I was finishing up at 7 30, one of the reasons I felt like it was time for me to go was that it was really hard to get politicians to bust out of the spin … And when I watched this show, I felt like it makes it really difficult for people not to engage on an authentic level, because the questions are so unique and because the people asking them are so sincere.

Were there any aspects of interviewing you think came more naturally to the students because they’re neurodivergent? One of the main things you want to do in a celebrity interview is to come up with questions they haven’t been asked before that they might find engaging … The students were really adept at coming up with original, imaginative and unexpected questions, which means the talent is going to be more engaged.

It seems like all of the interviews were approached without any sort of agenda. Hamish [Blake] made an astute observation. Dylan asked him, “How much money do you have in dollars and cents?” And there’d be a million journalists who would want to know how much money Hamish and Zoë [Foster Blake] have. As Hamish said, “If a journalist asked me that, you’d just know there was an agenda, but Dylan said it with just genuine curiosity.” There was such a great bond between you and the students. They even tried to set you up with Sam Neill! That was Dale just dropping that out there! They’re meant to run the questions by me [beforehand], and then he dropped that one in. And, of course, for weeks after they were like, “Have you gone on a date with Sam yet? What’s happened with your date with Sam?”

Was it difficult convincing people to sign up for such a no-holds-barred interview? I feel like I absolutely owe the prime minister one, because you can imagine how that pitch is: “We’re going to have 15 neurodiverse people, they’ll all be in a room, they can ask anything they like and I’ll have limited control over what happens. How about it?” In an election year! What will you take away from the show? The most rewarding thing by far was watching the way the students evolved over the course of the project. They just blossomed and their confidence grew so much.

RECOMMENDED

Top Melbourne Florists for Luxe Bouquets and Blooms

AZALEA FLOWERS The Aussie natives and seasonal blooms of Azalea Flowers bring a botanical flush to the Coventry Street edge of South Melbourne Market. Founder Michael Pavlou wrote the book on Australian flowers and foliage (literally, he co-wrote Bush Flowers in 2023). Also: you can do a market shop in the same trip. South Melbourne Market / azaleaflowers.com.au

THE GREEN ROOM A bumblebee won’t know what to do with itself inside The Green Room. Here, you’ll find a kaleidoscope of colour and shades on the stands – and mixing and matching is encouraged. It’s a neighbourhood favourite for Albert Park locals, specialising in eclectic and colourful arrangements that will brighten any occasion. 91 Dundas Place, Albert Park / thegreenroomflowers.com.au

FLOWERS VASSETTE If the sunflower windmill on the shop awning doesn’t catch your eye, the jungle of stunning houseplants will. Since opening in 1989, Flowers Vasette has become renowned for elevated arrangements highlighting natural presentation over unnecessary frills and accompaniments. 247 Brunswick Street, Fitzroy / flowersvasette.com.au

BEAUTIFUL BUNCH This social enterprise delivers flowers with a difference: every purchase directly provides support to young women from a refugee background, giving them access to training and employment opportunities. Almost all the blooms are grown in Australia, and you can get a bottle of wine and a vase delivered too. 16a Linden Street, Brunswick East / thebeautifulbunch.com

FLOWERDOSE The stylish space at Flowerdose could double as a spa – but for now, it’s an ornate showcase for fun and girlie bouquets of roses, orchids and other delicate flowers. Many arrangements tend towards pretty pinks and reds, making it a good pick for when you want to say I love you with blooms. 501 Burke Road, Camberwell / flowerdose.com.au

THE BIG BUNCH Understated elegant bouquets reign supreme at The Big Bunch, where flowers are sourced daily from the growers. Understatement is optional, however. The Big Bunch is just as comfortable turning the usual floral suspects – such as hydrangeas, peonies and lilies – into statement pieces to brighten up a big room. 539 High Street, Prahran / thebigbunch.com.au

BUMPING INTO TROYE SIVAN

Just about everyone in Melbourne’s inner north has had a Troye Sivan sighting. At any given party there’s a story about seeing him shopping at Piedimonte’s supermarket, say, or sunning himself at Fitzroy pool, or working out at celebrity gym Saint Haven. Mine is when I met the pop star and his parents’ dog Bowie while walking my pointy-eared pup Spooky a few years ago. “Do you still go much?” Sivan asks when we meet again over a video call. Sometimes, I explain, but don’t get to that park very often these days.

Sivan’s speaking to me from a patch of grass near his internet-famous house in Carlton. It’s the first nice day at the end of winter, and he’s wearing a pink Acne tee. In case you missed it, the Rush singer is riding a massive career high right now. His Grammy-nominated album Something to Give Each Other has taken him to SNL-parodied heights (where he was impersonated by Timothée Chalamet), and across Europe for the first leg of his solo tour, which arrives in Australia this November.

It’s a supercharged moment for international pop music right now, with the “overnight” success of stars such as Sabrina Carpenter and Chappell Roan. Sivan is about to officially enter his own Brat summer, joining the internet’s favourite pop star, Charli XCX, for the Sweat Tour across the US in September and October. The pair are long-time collaborators, linking up on songs 1999 and follow-up track 2099. “[Her success] couldn’t be happening to a nicer person or to somebody who deserves it more,” Sivan gushes. “As a Charli fan, I’m like, ‘Oh yeah, this makes complete sense.’” For a generation of fans who have grown up online, the British singer-songwriter has soundtracked much of the last decade. But as the rest of the world finally latches onto her sixth studio album, Charli XCX “is not striving to capture the world,” Sivan says. “I think she’s just following her gut.”

The “sudden” stardom of artists such as XCX, Roan and Sivan himself has actually been years in the making. They’re acts forged in the digital world that traditional album schedules struggle to crack. And while the world meets its new stars, Sivan was into Chappell Roan way back in 2014 , when he wrote on Twitter, “I’ve had a 16-year-old girl on repeat for 2 months”. “We’ve caught up a few times since everything’s gotten crazy,” he says. “I am so excited to have Chappell Roan as a pop star

in the world. We have a superstar in our midst.”

Sivan says the influence of internet culture on his music cannot be overstated. “It’s really integral to who I am. I think especially as a queer person growing up not knowing any queer people, I really leant on the internet and an online community for a sense of place. I developed my identity online, and it’s still something that I take a lot of joy in.”

Long before surfing the Brat Summer waves, Sivan made his name in acting, not singing. He moved to Perth from Johannesburg at the age of two and became a child actor, starring in a trilogy of movies based on John van de Ruit’s Spud from 2010. He played 13-year-old Hugh Jackman in X-Men Origins: Wolverine, appeared alongside Nicole Kidman and Joel Edgerton in Boy Erased, and managed to emerge unscathed from HBO’s bomb The Idol with Lily-Rose Depp and The Weeknd.

Despite years of travelling back and forth to Los Angeles, he still considers himself “fully Australian”. “When something happens to me that’s, like, particularly Australian, I still get really nervous. I still get excited to be on The Project, you know?”

Sivan and his brother Steele Mellet recently launched their own fragrance brand, Tsu Lange Yor, which is now the first Australian fragrance brand sold by beauty behemoth Mecca. The collection includes fragrances inspired by life in Victoria, channelling locations like Sassafras and Fitzroy Pool. “That was such a foreign concept to me, because in Perth, we would go to the beach all the time,” he says. “[Now] I have a lot of really special memories with my siblings by the pool and then going for a wine afterwards.”

The star chats about his various projects like a neighbour talking about their office job. While Sivan seems like a long-time local, he explains he’s fairly new to the city. “My family moved here, so when Covid hit, I came to Melbourne … I didn’t grow up here so for me to find this city that I just fell so deeply in love with, I just really adore it here and it feels like it really aligns with the adult me.”

When we run out of time, Sivan says he wants to make the most of the unseasonably good weather. “Tell Spooky I say hi,” he quips as he logs off the call. Like the rest of the inner north, I’ll wait for our next Troye Sivan sighting.

SMALL TALK WITH TROYE SIVAN

WHAT DOES YOUR PERFECT MELBOURNE DAY LOOK LIKE?

I’m definitely riding my bike a lot. Getting some exercise, seeing my siblings, and maybe going to Florian for breakfast.

WHERE DO YOU SHOP?

I’ll always go in and check what’s up at Smith Street Bazaar or Castorina & Co – they’re my favourite furniture stores. And maybe go to At The Above [gallery] and see what’s on over there.

WHAT

ARE YOU LISTENING TO?

The new Clairo album [Charm], pretty much exclusively since it came out.

WHAT ARE YOU STREAMING?

I’ve been watching Restoration Australia on ABC iView. ANY LOCAL CARLTON TIPS?

I just went to Bar Olo for the first time. Delicious cocktails.

HOME OF THE WEEK

A rare beachfront beauty

Beachfront living is an enviable privilege in Melbourne. Being able to observe the bay’s changing moods at any time of day or night affords free and unfettered delights.

Poised prettily opposite the Elwood foreshore and spreading out over the top floor of its two-storey landmark 1920s building, this apartment delivers on that and more.

Updated with absolute respect to the original art deco form, the three-bedroom abode resounds with old-world glamour, impresses with over 200 square metres of internal space, sways with modernisation where it counts … then bowls you over with bay views.

Owner Trish Power bought the property in 2007. For almost two decades, she and her partner have relished the lifestyle while considering themselves fortunate custodians.

“Everyone who visits asks, “How did you find it?’ ” she says. “And we’re not short on visitors, with impromptu guests regularly, and 20 or more seated in the lounge room for our panoramic Christmas lunches.”

The circular driveway at the front distances the apartment from passing traffic. Up the entry staircase, a porch heralds

admission to the central foyer, off which living spaces run to the fore and bedrooms snuggle to the rear.

The lounge, living-dining room and kitchen-meals area branch out across the broad, bay-oriented frontage, each with wide windows for drinking in the scenery.

There are fireplaces in the lounge and the living-dining room. The latter puts on a fabulous show, with recessed lighting over the layered cornices creating a peach-gold glow.

Intricate ceiling flourishes surround a dramatic candela chandelier, the gas log fireplace resides on a marble ledge in a polished marble wall, and the deep-sill windows add diamond-leadlight detail.

Arched windows to the sides and archframed vistas to the fore of the dining area generate a connection between land and sea. Step into the kitchen and meals area for an array of integrated appliances and timber cabinetry in tones complimentary to the herringbone floorboards. Off the kitchen, you’ll find a laundry and a balcony.

Capacious and all the more comely due to not being quite square, the main bedroom

has built-in wardrobes and an en suite with a shower over a marble bath, and a marble double vanity.

Extras such as a Sonos sound system and C-Bus automation augment the luxe attitude.

Location-wise, life is the proverbial beach.

Traverse the esplanade, and you’ve got swimming, sailing, paddling, jogging, walking and seaside picnics sorted.

Saunter briefly inland, and Ormond Road village, schools and assorted amenities encourage living local.

Elwood

3/19-21 Ormond Esplanade

$2.48 million

3 2 2

Private sale Agent: McGrath, Nicole Prime 0418 940 962

Hover your camera over the code to see Domain listings in Elwood

WHAT THE AGENT SAYS

“Residences like this come up only once every 20 years for a reason. The breathtaking views from every living room, and the home’s grandeur, exude style and grace.”

NEED TO KNOW

This apartment last sold in 2007 for $1.42 million. The median price for a threebedroom apartment in Elwood is $1.258 million. RECENT SALES

$1.285 million

4/1 Goldsmith Street, August $1.68 million

3/96 Addison Street, April $3.1 million

7/65 Ormond Esplanade, November 2023

Nicole Prime McGrath

LIKE A LOCAL

Richmond

In some ways, Richmond is the heart of Melbourne. It’s walkable from the city and the ideal meeting point for those who live north or south of the Yarra. Given its proximity to the ’G, Richmond is also the suburb for footy and cricket fans. On game days (or following concerts), spectators flood nearby streets and pubs, and the energy is electric.

There’s a huge concentration of pubs in Richmond – in part thanks to its working-class history. Popular boozers include the heritage-listed Union House, which offers classic plates from the Marquis of Lorne crew; old-school favourite The Bridge Hotel; and neighbourhood haunt the Royston Hotel. Top breweries Mountain Goat, Brogan’s Way and Nice Guys are also in the area. But perhaps the most iconic drinking spot is the 800-person bandroom at the Corner Hotel, which plays regular host to top local and international rock bands. (Mick Jagger’s played there, as have Midnight Oil.)

Drinks aside, Richmond is home to plenty of well-loved eateries. For brunch, head to all-day cafe Friends of Mine for the best French toast in town; Top Paddock for iconic ricotta hotcakes; or Hector’s Deli for mortadella, provolone and mozzarella toasties. Swan Street is your best bet for anything delicious after 12pm. Come dinnertime, check out Clover for honey sourdough bread and natural wines; casual pasta bar Pastarami or low-key Italian restaurant Da Bruno; and New Quarter for fun takes on traditional Vietnamese dishes. The north end of Victoria Street is a hub for authentic and affordable Vietnamese food and groceries. Phuoc Thanh offers classic banh mis – including a pork salad number liberally loaded with cold-cuts – while I Love Pho offers steaming bowls of comforting beef pho.

Bridge Road is home to culinary gems like Japanese fine diner Minamishima, sleek wine bar Lene, South American spot Onda, and woodfired banh mi shop Ca Com – but it’s better known for furniture, homewares and outlet shopping. For fashion, find your way back to Church Street and thrift at Global Vintage Collective, or head to the backstreets for quality basics at Friends With Frank.

NEED TO KNOW

This coveted neighbourhood marries Melbourne’s great loves: footy and food. Old brick warehouses and workers’ cottages are turned over by cashed-up young professionals and creatives, and multi-million-dollar properties line the streets. Median house prices have increased just under 10 per cent in the past five years, and median weekly house rents nearly 18 per cent to $795. Median weekly rental prices for units have seen substantial growth too, at $550 –up almost 16 per cent year-on-year.

Average Age

34

Median Weekly income $2,245

Clockwise from top: Dimmeys clock tower, photo Casey Horsfield. Da Bruno, photo Jamie Alexander. City views and Corner Hotel, photos Casey Horsfield

“Richmond is abuzz with sensational cafes and restaurants whilst being close to the Yarra River and amazing parkland. A diverse selection of homes means there is something for everyone in this prime pocket.”

Top: Street art collab between Matt Adnate and David “Meggs” Hooke, photo Casey Horsfield.
Right: Hector’s Deli bagel, photo Pete Dillon. Pastarami, photo Pablo Diaz. Below: New Quarter, photo Parker Blain

OPEN FOR INSPECTION

Clearance Rate of 63%*

Source: Domain Group

WHAT OUR EXPERT SAYS LAST WEEKEND

“Gen X and older Millennials are leading profit-making but wealth growth is being delivered across a broad spectrum of income levels. Across Melbourne, 98 per cent of houses and 85 per cent of units resold for a profit.”

Source: Domain Profit and Loss Report 2024

Brighton East 2b Connor Street

$2.75 million-$3 million

4 3 2

Auction: 11.30am, September 7

Agent: Kay & Burton, Matthew Pillios 0408 145 982

$3.851 million Hawthorn

28 Mason Street Sold by Ray White*

*As reported on August 17, 2024

This “brand new, turnkey luxury residence has great accommodation”, the agent says of the floor plan that provides a potential fifth bedroom or office/second lounge for family flexibility. Soft neutrals, such as chevron oak parquetry and tundra limestone, complement strong contemporary lines over two light-filled, comprehensively appointed levels. It’s ideally located close to the beach.

Brighton 3/838 Hampton Street

$725,000-$775,000

3 1 1

Auction: 1.30pm, August 31

Agent: Buxton Real Estate, Tom Davidson 0488 017 500

Architect Andrew Reed designed this group of five units in 1978 and his use of space, rugged materials like exposed brick walls, light-filled interiors and tall windows still resonates today. This updated upper-level unit, with stairs to a private courtyard garden, includes a modernised bathroom, double glazing, solar panels and a custom-designed kitchen with topof-the-range appliances and terrazzo finishes. The floor plan gives the option of three bedrooms or two plus a dining room.

1/37 Mavho Street

$950,000-$1.04 million

Auction: 11am, August 31

Agent: Jellis Craig, Kon Galitos 0414 902 680

This tri-level one-of-five townhouse is close to Centre Road’s lifestyle amenities. Elevated bedrooms, over two levels, enjoy tree-top views, while a north-east wraparound terrace offers similar vistas from the open-plan living and dining area on the first floor. There are Smeg appliances in the kitchen, a groundfloor laundry, ducted reverse-cycle air-conditioning, home security and a video intercom.

11 Leslie Street

$2.2 million-$2.4 million

4 2 1

Auction: 1.30pm, August 31

Agent: Marshall White, Charlie Tostevin 0431 713 205

Behind its picture-perfect facade, this reinvented single-level Victorian house blends period features and contemporary comforts. The traditional sitting room with an open fireplace could be a fourth bedroom, but the star here is the open-plan living and dining zone. Bifold doors open to the north-facing al fresco area. Its location near shops, schools, trams and trains guarantees wide appeal.

Bentleigh
Hawthorn

$1.7

3 2 2

Auction: 1.30pm, August 24

Agent: Belle Property Albert Park, Stephanie Evans 0420 215 919

Classic monochrome defines this updated Victorian terrace in the Emerald Hill precinct. It has 3.2-metre ceilings, plenty of preserved period details and a rear brick-paved courtyard/off-street parking. The bedrooms (two with iron fireplaces) are on the traditionally split-level first floor.

Caulfield North 1b Edith Street $1.75

Auction: 5.30pm, August 29

Agent: Marshall White, Alan Crawford 0423 747 155

This meticulously maintained, solidly built townhouse sits in one of Caulfield North’s premier positions. The two-storey home features three-metre-high ceilings and a private rear courtyard. Caulfield Park is a short walk away, as are Caulfield Junior College and the bustling shops and cafes of Hawthorn Road.

South Yarra 6/55 Avoca Street

$820,000-$900,000

Auction: 11am, August 31

Agent: Kay & Burton, Dario Fazio 0452 241 398

Avoca Street is a cracking location, a short walk from Toorak Road, trams, Domain Road shops, the Royal Botanic Gardens and several schools. This two-bedroom apartment in a block of just 12 features stunning city views from the living room and balcony. It has secure undercover parking.

LUXURY

South Yarra

3/44 Murphy Street

$3 million-$3.3 million

4 2 2

Expressions of interest: Close noon, September 2

Agent: RT Edgar, Will Hocking 0451 065 565

Not many properties of this quality offer this much space, in this price range, in this neighbourhood. The mock Tudor facade of this 1930s solid brick, three-storey apartment conceals a beautifully remodelled modern home that makes the most of original features such as hardwood floors, exposed beams, and mullioned and leadlight windows. With ample storage, modern bathrooms, a contemporary kitchen, and a home office/rumpus area, this is a desirable family home.

Brighton East 43 Lucas Street

$3.6 million-$3.8 million

6 3 2

Auction: 11am, August 31

Agent: Marshall White, Campbell Butterss 0432 735 385

This house is located among green spaces, including Lucas Street Reserve, The Plantation Reserve and Dendy Park. It also sits in a tropical-inspired garden with a pool. There are five upstairs bedrooms, and a downstairs main bedroom with an en suite and walk-in wardrobe. The sixth bedroom can be an entirely self-contained zone with a kitchenette, en suite and access to a private deck. A study, cinema room and retreat area offer even more flexibility.

Bentleigh 10 Riddle Street

$3.3 million-$3.6 million

4 3 2

Auction: 5.30pm, August 29

Agent: Gary Peer, Yan Dosen 0452 661 029

The entrance to this house provides the first taste of its grandeur – spiral staircase, glass ceiling, full-height windows and an internal garden with water feature. The openplan kitchen-dining-living area extends – through curved glass doors – to a patio with a barbecue kitchen and infinity pool. The main bedroom has a private balcony, walk-in wardrobe and en suite, and the downstairs bedroom is perfect for guests, with an en suite that has direct access to the pool.

$4.2

5 2 2

Auction: 12.30pm, August 31

Agent: Marshall White, James Tostevin 0417 003 333

This c1920 house is well positioned to enjoy the natural surroundings of the Yarra Boulevard parklands and the urban bustle of Kew Junction. The marble fireplaces and high ceilings inside complement the timber fretwork and wraparound balcony outside, all adding to the period charm. The first floor has a deluxe main bedroom – with a walk-in wardrobe and en suite – plus a balcony, study and a retreat/library. An open-plan kitchen-living area opens to a garden with a pool.

Expressions of interest Close 3 September at 5pm

Viewing As advertised

Alex Schiavo 0419 239 549

Campbell Kilsby 0402 212 093

Shantelle Francis 0422 862 821

Bridport Street West, Albert Park

Inspect

TREBOR - CIRCA 1904

• Double garage via Ashworth St

• Exquisite Edwardian period detail throughout

• Ducted heating and reverse cycle cooling

• 150m to the beach and moments to public transport, lake and schools

• Land size – 416 sqm approx

Held by the one family for 120 years is tastefully updated whilst being

7 Burnett Street, St Kilda.

A historic St Kilda homestead with thoughtful modern upgrades

• A seamless marriage between the historic old and the luxurious new

• On a gorgeous 500 sqm (approx.) with origins dating back to 1850s

• Dual living zones easily access kitchen with ASKO/Smeg appliances

• Secluded & spacious master bedroom boasts WIR and ensuite

• Inviting rear terrace for summer meals plus landscaped front garden

Auction Saturday 7 September 12:30pm

The home comprises main bedroom with ensuite plus two further bedrooms, separate study and family bathroom. The formal lounge and dining rooms flow to modern family zone bathed in natural light with well-appointed kitchen and opening wide onto a spacious family sized garden with decked entertaining.

Kalimna Dr, 2 Caraar Creek Ln & 8 Caraar Creek Ln, Mornington 3931

Arguably one of Australia's premium land holdings. First time offered for public sale, to be Auctioned individually. Three titles comprising of 10,205m2 (approx) cliff front north facing land.

Auction Sunday 8th September at 12pm Open for inspection Saturday 3pm - 4pm & Wednesday 5pm - 5:30pm

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