Domain Review Bayside & Port Phillip - August 17, 2022

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CULINARYCOUPLE ANDREW M c CONNELL & JO M c GANN’S FOODIE DYNASTY SALLY SELTMANN HEART SONGS EDUCATION TOP TIPS FOR AN ACE ATAR ART HEIDE’SNEWGLOWINGEXHIBIT PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE AUGUST 17-23, 2022 BAYSIDE & PORT PHILLIP

Please

www.mentonegrammar.net 63 Venice Street Mentone T: +61 9584 4211

EXPERIENCE

HIGH HAPPY&ACHIEVINGHEALTHY

As Mentone Grammar has evolved over almost 100 years into a leading bayside independent school, we have remained steadfast in upholding the community values and positive school culture that is at the heart of our success. Our strength is, and always has been, our people; Our happy, healthy and high achieving students; Our research-based education delivered by specialist teaching and support staff; And our community of open-hearted and supportive families who share our vision for young people. MENTONE GRAMMAR at a SCHOOL TOUR, OPEN DAY or PRIVATE TOUR visit www.mentonegrammar.net for more details or to contact our friendly Enrolments Team.

DOMAIN REVIEW 3 Domain Review is published by Domain Holdings Australia Limited and is printed by IVE, 25-33 Fourth Avenue, Sunshine VIC 3020. All material is copyright. PHILLIPPORT&BAYSIDE THE EDIT STORIED SIPS \ The multi-award-winning Starward distillery is bringing its whiskys to city rooftop bar Fable for a three-course supper with superbly matched tipples on August 31. ● fablemelbourne.com.au GINGHAM STYLE \ The first run of Peek Neek’s picnic rugs hand-woven from 100 per cent recycled plastic bottles sold out in record time, so be quick to snap one up in its September restock. ● @peekneekpals FRESH START \ Whether it’s chia, cacao or Coyo, your alternative ingredient fix can be found at smoothie and acai bowl aficionado Green Cup’s newly opened shop on Balaclava Road, Caulfield. ● @green.cup SEASON FINALE \ Bid farewell to black truffle season in style at Mister Bianco in Kew on August 30. The fivecourse meal with matched beverages will be curated by chef Joe Vargetto. ● misterbianco.com.au Things we love about MelbourneALCORNLUCYSHIFFSIMON byCompiled COULESHAILEY REVIEW MORE TO LOVE ONLINE Go to Generaldomain.com.au/domain-reviewinquiries\ 1300 799 109 \ editorial@domain.com.au Editor \ Jemimah Clegg Editorial producer \ Hailey Coules Group picture editor \ Kylie Thomson Senior designer \ Colleen Chin Quan Graphic designer \ Nicole Gauci National magazine editor \ Natalie Mortimer National managing editor \ Alice Stolz Chief marketing officer \ Rebecca Darley Chief executive officer Domain Group \ Jason Pellegrino Real estate sales director \ Ray van Veenendaal \ 0438 279 870 ray.vanv@domain.com.au Retail sales \ retailsales@sales.domain.com.au Is your mag missing? Distribution \ distribution@domainreview.com.au Chefs in Melbourne have become just as celebrated as footy players and theatre stars. We all know the big names, and we love dining at their restaurants – of which there are usually a number dotted about the city. One is Andrew McConnell, whose stable includes Marion, Cumulus Inc. and Cutler & Co. But what we don’t often hear about are the people who work with these chefs to bring the experiences to life. In our cover story, McConnell's partner in work and life, Jo McGann, talks about the couple's newest venue, Morning Market, and the inspiration behind the restaurant empire. ● The editor’s desk OUR COVER \ Andrew McConnell and Jo McGann. Photographed by Kristoffer Paulsen

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living options include two and three-bedroom luxury apartments that are light and spacious, with balcony or patio options. To provide reassurance for the future, we will also offer assisted-living in one-bedroom serviced apartments, and a full range of residential aged care options, all within the same village community.

*Artist impressions may differ from final designs. Highe is the hidden gem of the Bayside area. Located only 15km from Melbourne’s CBD, the village will enjoy the convenience of having local shopping and restaurants close by, as well as having Southland nearby. Upon completion, the village will offer a wide variety of activities and events, so you can do the things you love. Enjoy a morning swim in the heated indoor pool, or meet friends for coffee at the onsite Independentcafé.

“It got me questioning why I was doing what I do.” These days, Seltmann lives in Sydney, with her husband Darren (The Avalanches) and their 13-yearold daughter Judy, who can belt out Lana Del Ray’s Venice Bitch on the harp, bringing her mother to tears. She returns to Melbourne this week as part of an east coast tour, and again in September for the Melbourne Writers Festival. Her fifth studio album, Early Moon , is everything you’d expect from the singer-songwriter who explores all shades of light and

“This new career path felt very hit and miss,” says the singer once known as New Buffalo. “It was quite nerve-wracking, to be honest.

MUSIC

● SALLY SELTMANN \ Northcote Social Club, August 19 & Melbourne Writers Festival, September 10. ● mwf.com.au

In 2013, she released her debut novel, Lovesome, a story about best friends set in the ’90s. It was also around this time that she was diagnosed with bipolar II disorder. “I became quite unwell and until I was properly diagnosed it was a difficult time for me,” she says. “I had my suspicions I might have had it, but I hope that by saying I do, [I] can help others.” She has fond memories of living in Melbourne for 13 years and recalls a sliding-door moment when looking to buy an apartment in East St Kilda. Sally Seltmann reveals raw emotion with her new album.

Words JANE ROCCA

The decision to move to Silverlake in Los Angeles was prompted by work opportunities and a chance to live there while close friends were there too. But it was also a time during which Seltmann discovered that, among the excitement of it all, she was prioritising the work of others over her own.

“I like writing emotional and raw songs because they touch people, and it’s nice to have that connection.” “I’ll never forget Darren telling me he was going to wear his Ken Done jumper to the auction and have everyone there ask, ‘who is this crazy guy?’” she laughs. They pulled out of the bidding in the middle of the auction after Seltmann had a “gut instinct” that the property was not for them. “That’s when a couple walked up to Darren because they liked his jumper. They told us they owned an apartment and offered to sell it to us privately. It was meant to be and yes, we bought it.”

New moon rising darkness with her harmonies and introspective lyrics. She discusses female friendships in Please Louise and questions her life direction in Feel the Senses, while Nightbird is downbeat in sound but leans into optimism. “I like writing emotional and raw songs because they touch people, and it’s nice to have that connection through music,” Seltmann says. Early Moon was produced by Darren in their home studio. “I was happy for him to be the producer again,” Seltmann says. “It was more about knowing when to give and take … I learnt how to collaborate better.”

DOMAIN REVIEW 5 W hen the song she co-wrote with Feist, 1234, became a worldwide hit in the late 2000s, Sally Seltmann’s life took some unexpected turns – including a stint living in LA to see if she’d hit more creative jackpots as a co-writer.

“You turn up to a writing session with people you’ve never met before and they’re talking to you like you’re their best friend and, from that, you make a full-on emotional piece of music that represents their life and“It’sfeelings.abeautiful thing when it works, but sometimes I didn’t connect as well with people and that can be a little disheartening.

“The bones of the building were telling you what it wanted there,” McGann says. “But with Gimlet we wanted to channel everything we love about New York, London and Paris. Those big-city restaurants.

“My relationship with Andrew works because we are both very considerate of each other,” McGann says. “Our lives are very social, but we always make time for just the two of us. “A priority for us is to stay connected despite the busyness of work and family life.

McGann is a professional photographer and snaps dishes from each restaurant for social media and marketing – with a 30-second window to get the right shot as the food comes out of the kitchen, hot andShe’ssteaming.McConnell’s confidante and, when you’re in their company, an unspoken understanding between their glances says it all. She’s tuned into what he’s thinking, and vice-versa.

Making a market

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● C ulinary couple Jo McGann and Andrew McConnell wanted to bring Parisian market life to Melbourne. As lockdowns taunted the city in 2020, they opened Morning Market – originally out of their Fitzroy restaurant Marion as the all-important “pivot” many venues made to survive – then as its own entity on Gertrude Street. The popularity of the Fitzroy store and cafe prompted the couple to open another location in Prahran last year. “We wanted to do something that was outside of the restaurant and accessible all day, every day,” McGann says. “It’s an expression of what we do in the restaurants, but more casually delivered.” You wouldn’t be alone if you hadn’t heard of McGann until now – even if you’ve frequented the slew of restaurants headed by McConnell –including Gimlet at Cavendish House, Cumulus Inc. Supernormal and Cutler & Co – under the couple’s Trader House umbrella. She prefers to operate behind the scenes, but as the wife of one of Melbourne’s most celebrated chefs, and having worked closely with him for more than 10 years, she’s more involved in the business than she is keen to take credit for.

“One of our kids is vegetarian so we quite often eat with him,” she says. “We also have a fussy eater as well so it means Andrew and I deliver lots of different meals on any given night.”

COVER STORY Words JANE ROCCA ● Photo KRISTOFFER PAULSEN

“We love the work of Vince and Caroline; they’re great friends. We briefed them and they told us what they had in mind with the design. It was a collaborative approach.”

As a teenager growing up in Melbourne’s southeast, McGann loved nothing more than to take her father’s camera outside to photograph the flowers in her mum’s garden. “My photography was always very focused on nature, garden, flowers and botanicals, but it was only a hobby until I went to study photography for two years,” she says. Her eye for detail is ever present in the restaurants too. At Gimlet, the couple worked closely with ACME architect Vince Alafaci and interior designer Caroline Choker to come up with the concept for the city restaurant.

When not at Gimlet enjoying her favourite starter of gnocco fritto and margaritas, McGann is at home cooking pasta for the family.

Morning Market is a serenade to the cities the couple have travelled to, but Melbourne is in its DNA – good coffee is a prerequisite, as are fresh-cut flowers, artisan-baked bread and pastries by Baker Bleu, and home-cooked meals-to-go. “We wanted to create a meeting place where everything is bountiful, beautiful, seasonal and changing,” McGann says. “I wanted it to be white, bright and crisp, and the lighting needed to have warmth. “Morning Market is an idea we both came up with; it’s something we had in the background for a while and talked about over the years.”

“I’m really proud of the way I’ve co-parented my older children with my ex-partner. We have a positive and respectful relationship, which, I think, has been very good for our kids.”

“And while not directly replicating any one particular place, it’s a celebration of our love of the finer details you find there.

They are a blended family; the pair have a child together, Henry, aged six. McConnell has an 18-year-old son from a former marriage.

With a background in hospitality (McGann worked for the Van Haandel Group, which owns restaurants such as Stokehouse in St Kilda and Fatto in the city), it was inevitable she’d find a way to merge her love of food and photography when she metHe’sMcConnell.aroundon shoot days, if only because he also has a clear vision of how he wants things to be. “I know if he’ll like something or not,” McGann says. “Andrew is very intuitive and in control of his emotions and it comes across in all aspects of our relationship – when we’re at work and in our private lives at home.”

Quiet achiever Jo McGann on building a dining empire with chef Andrew McConnell.

McGann, who has two children aged 20 and 16 from a previous marriage, says her marriage to McConnell works because they support one another in their creative pursuits.

The couple like to travel for inspiration – a recent trip to Europe included Venice and Barcelona. A trip to Japan is on the cards too. “We love the service and culture in Japan and always feel Zen after being there,” McGann says. “Andrew and I try to hold onto that as long as we can when we return to Melbourne.”

“We wanted to create a meeting place where everything is bountiful, beautiful, seasonal.” DOMAIN REVIEW 7

Balancing the books

Teachers and a top student share their tips for a top ATAR. which stopped her from getting too bored and losing motivation.

Leung gave herself plenty of variety in how she approached studying, EDUCATION

Dividing work into manageable chunks also helped. She says she saw many students fall into the trap of only finishing assessments when they absolutely had to. Leung says even if it wasn’t a huge project, she always found it better to get started early. “Students should try to say to themselves, ‘OK, if this is due Friday, then before Thursday, instead of playing video games or scrolling through social media, I’ll just start,’” she“Yousays.realise that, yes, it might be hard, but because you have more time to digest your work, you’re going to feel much better.” Leung’s VCE success got her into Monash University’s bachelor of engineering (honours)/master’s accelerated pathway, which will see her graduate with both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in engineering, in just five years. Finding balance is crucial, says Nizam Abdallah, head of VCE performance at Mentone Grammar. “It’s about setting small goals each week and creating a healthy balance between work, social activities and family life,” Abdallah says. He suggests students make a plan each week, adding activities such as sports training, birthdays and family occasions first, followed by study. “That way, students can readily identify any imbalances in their week between their studies and external commitments.”Whilestriking a balance is tricky, it helps enormously, says Ceri Lloyd, director of teaching and learning at St Catherine’s School. “We do see a strong connection between students who are involved in those hobbies and passions … and success,” Lloyd says. “The study shouldn’t preclude a student from forging success in their interests outside the classroom.”

● Words ANDERS

“From year 10 onwards, I didn’t really have the [thought] that, ‘When I hit the VCE, I’m going to have a really awesome plan on how I’m going to crush it,’” she says. “It was more about trial and error.”

“I feel that there’s a misconception about support networks – how, if you approach somebody, they’ll always tell you what you want. But they’re trying to use their own experience to helpTheyou.”former Caulfield Grammar School Wheelers Hill Campus student says pursuing outside interests and studying smarter, not harder, were also strategies that helped her succeed.

highLeung,AngelinaaVCEachiever.

BRIGGSGREG

Abdallah recommends using past examination papers from the Victorian Curriculum and Assessment Authority (VCAA) and using VCAA assessors’ reports to understand the expectations for eachUltimately,question.the common thread –from teachers and students alike is that wellbeing and academic performance are inextricably linked. As Leung says, “If you’re in a learning environment where you feel comfortable in expressing yourself, you’re going to be much more open to process the things that are taught.” FURZE

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“I’d change my workspaces … if I took myself to a different physical environment, then my mind would adapt to it and I could focus.”

St Catherine’s has recently embraced a study strategy called deliberate practice. Students slow down their revision, dividing information into manageable, bitesized pieces, practise, get teacher feedback, review their progress, thenThecontinue.schoolalso encourages study groups and interdependent learning, where students share their skills and knowledge with each other.

“It’s a cycle of deliberate, purposeful revision … [it] gives students the skills to study [that are] not just about rote learning but thinking,” Lloyd says. “If we encourage them to think deeply, then when they get to that exam, the recall will be less pressurised for them.”

W hen Angelina Leung graduated with an ATAR of 99.15 last year, she credited her support network for enabling her to succeed, even if their feedback was not always what she wanted to hear.

Into the light

T he artist behind the masterpiece Field of Light, which lights up Uluru National Park, has brought a new exhibition to Melbourne.

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From Sunrise Road brings light installations and 2D prints to the Bulleen museum.

ART Artist Bruce Munro’s latest exhibition illuminates at Heide.

Words JANE ROCCA

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“My interest in light has always been an emotional one,” Munro says. “It’s a medium that, for me, is best to express a feeling.”

MEREDITHCLYTIE

He says he didn’t seriously pursue light as a medium until later in his career.

English-Australian visual artist Bruce Munro creates fantastical expressions of light-work, and now the 63-year-old’s first Australian museum exhibition is open at Heide Museum of Modern Art.

“I always felt art was a very self-indulgent activity,” he says.

“I noticed a plastic extrusion that glowed in the window and discovered what made it glow was ultraviolet light,” Munro says. “I located the industrial estate in North Sydney that was importing it and got a bus out there and persuaded the fellow that I wanted to buy what he had and to experiment with it.”

● BRUCE MUNRO: FROM SUNRISE ROAD \ Heide Museum of Modern Art until October 16. Tickets are free with museum entry.

“There are many ways we can exist in the light space; mine is more emotional, and it connects to landscape,” Munro says. He has some advice for emerging artists trying to find their voice.

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“After my father passed away [in 1999], I realised it was actually a way to express exactly all the things I felt“Thatinside.became a powerful recognition, and I understood I could use it in a positive way. I am not trying to break new ground with light, but I am using it to connect people to themselves and with others and the world we live in.”

It was Munro’s literal light-bulb moment as a budding artist, but it would be decades later that he became recognised internationally for it.

From Light: Works from Tate’s Collection at ACMI to Lightscape at the Royal Botanic Gardens, what does Munro think about the increasing presence of light-focused exhibits in Melbourne right now? “Light has become a medium of expression like any other, and it will have its day ... then things will move on,” the artist says.

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“American artist James Turrell [who has some works on show at ACMI] is an incredible artist and he creates magic with light – it’s the essence of light that we gauge in his work.

Munro was born in London and arrived in Sydney in 1984 on a six-month working holiday, but remained for eight years and became an Australian citizen in 1988. It was during this time, as a 24-year-old, and working in illustration in the film industry, that he stumbled across a window installation at the Oswald Sealy decorative and display shop in Sydney.

Field of Light was conceived while on a camping trip to Uluru with his wife Serena in 1992 and took four years to make. The success of that show led him to meet Heide’s curator Kendrah Morgan and artistic director Lesley Harding. From Sunrise Road features a new outdoor work titled Candent Spring, which draws inspiration from Field of Light’s flower-like light-bulb cables.

There’s another work within this installation, Time and Again, in which abstract clock faces and stainless-steel water lilies prompt us to think about time as a visual concept.

“Don’t worry if ideas don’t come to you when you want them to because they often don’t. Mine came to me in my 40s, not my 20s as I would have hoped,” Munro says. “But when it does, you’re older, wiser and can really enjoy the process, which is where I am at now.”

Equipped with everything a family could want or need, this Hampton house offers stylish, comfortable living with a big fun element and an excellent level of amenity and convenience.Thefacade is white and fresh and this aesthetic continues indoors with oak floors, white walls and dark accents. At ground level, the main bedroom is at the front of the house. It has a large walk-in wardrobe and a white en suite with black tapware and trim, a deep, free-standing bath, oversized shower and twin hand basins. A second bedroom on this level includes a built-in desk. Multi-paned double doors with an arched fanlight lead from the hall into the exquisitely detailed kitchen, dining and livingHere,area.the kitchen, also with tongue-and-groove joinery, has a large, fitted butler’s pantry and stone bench tops. The suite of Siemens appliances includes two fridges, two dishwashers, twin ovens and an induction cooktop. The dining area has built-in cupboards and, in the lounge, another wall of joinery incorporates the fireplace and television. A long window seat with storage below looks out to the magnesium pool and spa with gas-boosted solar heating, and a large in-ground trampoline. An outdoor kitchen with a built-in barbecue makes casual entertaining a Abreeze.fineexample of efficiency, particularly when looking after a large family, this home has a laundry section opposite the kitchen. It comprises a mud room with access from the garage, a store room, a drying cupboard and a beautifully fitted laundry with tongue and groove cabinetry, shelves and hangingUpstairs,rails.all bedrooms have walk-in wardrobes and en suites and share two retreats. The house, on about 684 square metres of land, is close to the beach and to Hampton Street. It has zoned ducted heating and cooling, wool carpets in bedrooms, CCTV and an alarm system, a powder room, Zip tap and GarageSmart storage. JOHANSONproperty@domainreview.com.au

Agent: Nick Johnstone, Sarah Korbel 0415 393 898 $5 million-$5.5 million 2pm,

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Auction:

August 27 HAMPTON \ 19 THE AVENUE 6 5 Hover2 your camera over the code to see Domain listings in Hampton FINAL WORD “WHY BUILD, WHEN THIS LUXURIOUS THREE-YEAR-OLD FAMILY HOME IN HAMPTON’S BEST STREET IS ON THE MARKET. AN OPPORTUNITY RARELY SEEN.” SARAH KORBEL – AGENT

● BEVERLEY

Price:

● KAY KEIGHERY

While the facade might be described as angelic, the interior of the single-fronted, Victorian house proves it more than just a pretty face. Deceptively spacious, it offers three comely bedrooms, two swish bathrooms and roomy, open-plan living over two spruced-up storeys. Find one bedroom at the front of ground level, and two larger ones on the first floor. One on each floor, the bathrooms display designer fixtures offset by contemporary styling. Illuminated by a run of skylights, MIDDLE PARK \ 152 NEVILLE STREET 3 2 Agent: Jellis Craig, Simon Gowling 0422 234 644 Price: $2 million-$2.2 million Auction: 10.30am, August 27 the open-plan area presents a pristine kitchen flaunting marble splashbacks and dining and living areas giving on to the paved, rear courtyard. Hydronic heating, air conditioning and built-in speakers come on the house. Betwixt parklands and the beach, you get fresh-air bang for your buck here.

● BEVERLEY JOHANSON

PORT MELBOURNE \ 15 DUNSTAN PARADE 3 1 1

Agent: Belle Property, Margaret Duncan 0417 382 686 Price: $880,000-$920,000 Auction: 11.30am, August 20 the second bedroom. Graced with quality appliances, honey timber floors, soft carpet and defining bulkheads and abetted by storage and two secure car spaces, this airy domicile affords easy living in a prominent, convenient and indisputably lively location. ● KAY KEIGHERY Wake to parkland views in this semidetached, single-level abode. Heralded by a sunny font yard, the clinker-brick residence welcomes with solid character and a sensible floor plan. Two bedrooms at the front of the house look over Buckingham Reserve. Central and separate, the eat-in kitchen features a marbletopped island bench. The bathroom has a shower over a bath, and there’s enough space in the ensuing laundry to use it as a

Agent: Marshall White, Justin Holod 0411 669 161 Price: $1.5 million-$1.6 million Auction: 2.30pm, August 20 workshop. Bringing up the rear, the lounge and dining room has a slow combustion heater and glass sliders to the elevated, rear deck and the user-friendly backyard with shed and covered al fresco area. Close to buses, schools and Sandridge beach, families might flourish here, buoyed by the low-key, neighbourly, coastal vibe.

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Beautifully maintained and in near-original condition, this home will be a thrilling find for an aficionado of mid-century design. It is rich in the details and features of the period and filled with natural light. A gallery style entry, pale timber floors and grey and white walls are the perfect backdrop for 1950s furniture. The living area has floor-to-ceiling glass and double doors to the garden on two sides, a feature wall of wood panelling above shelves and a gas-log fireplace set in stacked stone. The BRIGHTON \ 2 EXON STREET 4 2 4 Agent: Marshall White, Matthew Pillios 0408 145 982 Price: $3.6 million-$3.9 million Private sale kitchen has contemporary appliances, but the original vinyl floor and splashbacks are in excellent condition. The land is about 735 square metres and close to Brighton Beach, transport, Church Street, Brighton Beach Primary School and independent schools.

● KAY KEIGHERY

It’s uncanny how many pads designed by Fender Katsalidis rock great views. No exception, this one boasts vistas of the bay and the city over a lake foreground. Along with bringing on the bird’s eye effect, the north-oriented, eleventh floor position has an interior blessed for light. Enter to openplan kitchen, dining and living, where a glass wall and long windows let the scenery shine. The main bedroom, with en suite, also dines out on the panorama. Pass the study and black-and-white bathroom for ST KILDA \ 1101/181 ST KILDA ROAD 2 2 2

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AUCTION Saturday Sept 3 at 11:30am VIEW See website for details ST KILDA EAST 54/9 Fulton Street John Manning 0416 101 201 Will Johnson 0449 131 648 Shar Claridge 0402 170 732 RENOVATED 2-BEDDER WITH POOL & TENNIS COURT www.belleproperty.com/st-kilda Smartly renovated to capture the essence of a modern home, this 2-bedroom apartment enjoys a rear setting in a resort-style complex with pool, court and barbecue. Walk to Windsor and Balaclava Stations, Chapel and Carlisle Streets, Alma Park and trams. 2a 1b 1v belleproperty.com/222P381739 Sited on a double-fronted block, this freestanding Edwardian has been superbly renovated and extended with uncompromised comfort throughout. With high ceilings carried throughout, this 4bedroom, 2-bathroom interior is perfectly attuned to modern lifestyle desires with show-stopping living/dining, gourmet kitchen, fitted study and north-facing deck and garden. Walk to schools, trams, Tennyson Village, Ripponlea Village and Station, St Kilda Botanical Gardens, and beach. PRIVATE SALE VIEW See website for details Andy Nasr 0422 029 324 Julian Cannata 0424 717 913 Moses Habib 0450 011 922 A PICTURESQUE FAÇADE TO A FULL-SCALE CONTEMPORARY FAMILY STUNNER ELWOOD 12 John Street 4 a 2 b 2 v B b c s S 18 DOMAIN REVIEW

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