Domain Review Bayside & Port Phillip - November 09, 2022

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PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE

NOVEMBER 9-15, 2022

THEATRE

PHANTOM STAR JOSH PITERMAN

FOOD

NEW NORDIC DINING AT FREYJA

PARENTING

ONE-STOP SHOP FOR ALL THINGS BABY

JACINTA PARSONS

TACK L E S A N AGE - OL D QU E ST ION B AY S I D E & P O R T P H I L L I P


A TRULY UNIQUE OUTDOOR HEATING SOLUTION HANDMADE IN HOLLAND

Quaruba XL

Mobile

Quercus Pizza Oven

Bijuga

S E E

Quaruba XL

O U R

C O L L E C T I O N

A T

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With Legs

R B 7 3 . C O M . A U


C o mp i l e d b y

HAILEY COULES

The editor’s desk

PAUL GOSNEY

Ageing never really concerned me much. I turned 30 without a lot of fuss, and when 35 came around, my first daughter was nearly two and soon I had another on the way. I felt young (enough). But as 40 begins to loom, and my family, my house and my work demand more and more of my mental and physical energy, the lines on my face become harder to ignore. Women in particular fall trap to society’s views about ageing, says our cover star Jacinta Parsons. We spoke to the radio presenter and journalist about her new book, which dives into what it is to age in a world obsessed with youth. ●

GOOD TIMES \ Bougie butcher and artisan grocer

SPOT OF TEA \ House of Lulu White in South Yarra –

Victor Churchill is turning one this week and, until

known for its bottomless brunch – and Ladybird Cakes

November 13, is welcoming shoppers with a free

have teamed up for a bottomless high tea on Sundays.

glass of champagne. ● victorchurchill.com

We'll drink to that! ● houseofluluwhite.com.au

THE EDIT Things we love about Melbourne

OUR COVER \ Jacinta Parsons. Photographed by Christopher Hopkins

MORE TO LOVE ONLINE Go to domain.com.au/domain-review General inquiries \ 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

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

REVIEW 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.

NIKOLE RAMSAY

Chief executive officer Domain Group \

IAN LAIDLAW

Chief marketing officer \ Rebecca Darley

B AY S I D E & P O R T P H I L L I P

National magazine editor \ Natalie Mortimer National managing editor \ Alice Stolz

SUMMER SERENADE \ Live at the Bowl is returning

SELF SOOTHING \ It’s around this time of year that life

to the Sidney Myer Music Bowl this year, with acts

starts to get a little hectic. Treat yourself to a relaxing

including Arctic Monkeys and the Teeny Tiny Stevies

treatment at the gorgeous Aurora Spa in Sorrento or

for the kiddos. ● artscentremelbourne.com.au

pick up a goodie to take home. ● auroraspa.com.au

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FOOD

‘New Nordic’ restaurant Freyja offers fine dining minus the pomp. S O F IA L E VI N

PARKER BLAIN

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Splendidly Scandi W e don’t have the Michelin Guide in Australia. What we do have is a full buffet of chefs with experience working in Michelin-starred kitchens. Jae Bang – who worked at Norway’s Re-naa, New York’s Daniel and Spain’s El Bulli – is one of them. You’ll find him at Freyja, a “new Nordic” fine diner that opened in the heritage-listed Olderfleet building in the city mid-year. The space, open only on weekdays, is nothing short of gorgeous. Seating 130 over two levels, cathedral windows overlook Collins Street, traced by sculptural timber slats that form arched waves across the ceiling. Staff take your coat at the door and escort you past a black-and-white marble bar to your seat. The

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best, in my opinion, is at the stainless steel counter overlooking the open kitchen. This is where Jae and his team pickle, preserve and cure local ingredients and cook with minimal waste. We opt out of the set menu ($180 per person) and choose our own adventure. The signature snack at Freyja sees a flowershaped buttermilk waffle and a tin of Yarra Valley trout roe on ice land in front of us. Beneath the caviar are layers of house-smoked sour cream and finely chopped herbs. The proportions are perfect: there’s enough to spread over the waffle segments and have a separate spoonful for kicks. Smoking (ingredients) is encouraged at Freyja. Our kingfish crudo is half-submerged in a green

cucumber pool that’s spiked with smoked blackcurrant oil, made from the branches of the plant. It lingers on the palate after the brightness of desert lime disperses. Smooth but springy stracciatella with eggplant, sorrel and garlic is a wonderful accompaniment to the house sourdough, while beef tartare with tarragon cream shows off native Australian ingredients. We could have ordered dry-aged, bone-in rib eye to share, but the other dishes are better displays of technique and creativity. Beneath crisped skin, supple Murray cod flakes into its satiny sherry cream at the slightest touch of a fork. Marron flesh still shines with the addition of sweet pumpkin and a slightly acidic, foamy passionfruit emulsion. I urge you not to overlook the potatoes. They’re slightly fermented and aged, which reduces moisture and enhances both flavour and crunch. We barely had space for dessert, but thank the Nordic gods we ordered one. It’s based on the Italian Mont Blanc dessert; sweetened chestnut puree noodles piped into a mountain and topped with cream. At Freyja, choux pastry is filled with cream and rum-and-raisin jam, squiggled with chestnut cream and drizzled with toasted kelp oil. The latter adds depth and umami, the same way salt enhances caramel, but better. Fine dining tends to underwhelm me. The design and menus can tend towards cookie-cutter replicas of each other the world over. Freyja is different. It’s welcoming and original without the snobbery. And, if you want to experience the charm without the price tag, you can pop in for smorrebrod open sandwiches during lunchtime. ● FREYJA \ 477 Collins Street, Melbourne. ● freyjarestaurant.com


JAKE TERREY

THEATRE Josh Piterman is

back on stage in The Phantom of the Opera.

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hen Melbourne musical theatre star Josh Piterman landed the West End role of a lifetime as the lead in The Phantom of the Opera in 2020, he relocated to London only to find the season cut short due to the global pandemic. Instead of returning home to Melbourne, he went to Sydney in the hope the Australian premiere of the iconic musical would follow shortly after. That wasn’t to be, either. “I waited 28 months to play the Phantom again,” Piterman says. “It’s been a long, wild ride and a roller coaster just to get back out playing the Phantom. I was in London the day before it closed down in March two years ago, and to be on stage performing eight days a week now isn’t lost on me. “I am soaking up every minute considering the lessons of the last few years reinforced just how much everything in life is impermanent.”

Behind the mask However, Piterman didn’t push against the adversity of the last few years; instead, he turned inward to work on himself at a deeper level when he couldn’t be on the stage. “I wanted to learn more about me as a person and how to build better coping strategies when dealing with adversity,” he says. “All the things that came up for me revolved around my identity as a performer and who you are when you’re not performing.” Now, he reunites with Australian-American soprano Amy Manford, who plays Christine Daae in the Australian season of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s

The Phantom of the Opera. The pair share the same management and have become good friends. They did six shows together in London, while Manford also played Christine in Athens. “What I love about the Phantom cast is that many of us have shared stages together over multiple occasions,” Piterman says. “You tend to foster great friendships with those who are in the industry; it’s inevitable.” Piterman made a name for himself touring as part of The Ten Tenors, in Hairspray the Musical and in West Side Story. He says musical theatre gives him the ultimate buzz and he would love to record a musical theatre album next year. He also reunites on stage with his good friends and singers Tod Strike and Ben Clarke, who were also part of the Australian touring group of The Ten Tenors. “We’re best friends, so it’s nice to come to work at Phantom and do that with friends who know you, too,” Piterman says. Other world-colliding moments are with Blake Bowden, who plays Raoul in The Phantom of the Opera – he was once Piterman’s understudy in West Side Story. “I have taken over from Blake in subsequent shows, too,” Piterman says. “All these friendships have history and gather history, and doing The Phantom of the Opera is so emotional on many levels for all of us because we’ve seen each other’s careers develop, too.” Piterman has returned to the bayside pad he calls home for the duration of the show’s Melbourne run. “I’d still love to do another stint in London, but for now, knowing I’ll be performing in my home town is going to be really special for me,” he says. “To know my family and friends can come and see me with ease is great, and we can finally get this show on the road.” ● THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA \ Now playing at the State Theatre, Arts Centre Melbourne.

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COVER STORY In a new book, ABC Melbourne presenter Jacinta Parsons questions Western society’s relationship with ageing – particularly for women.

“The whole culture of social media is caught up in the fact that it’s normal to say you don’t want to look old.”

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Age of self-discovery

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radio broadcaster walks into a pub and meets a younger woman who tells her that she wishes the broadcaster was her mother. The encounter prompted ABC Afternoons host Jacinta Parsons to write a comical take on being clocked as old enough to be someone’s maternal heroine. The article led to a book deal with ABC Books, who asked her to write about ageing – but the book is far from a comical expose. A Question of Age – a serenade to her younger self – is jam-packed with more questions than answers and a foray into the wild world of the tactics of marketing ageless beauty and how it makes women feel. “I didn’t expect the book to be so enraging,” Parsons says. “Meeting that young girl at the pub had me thinking I didn’t see myself as much older than her, but then I realised she did. “The book became more than the article, but it was a starting point. I started by reflecting on the comments that so many women make about feeling rage about ageing and why we feel like that. This book goes deep into what ageing is in a Western context – and what it means to be a woman,” she says. Parsons wrote her first memoir, Unseen, in 2020 about her Crohn’s disease diagnosis in her 20s. It was a debilitating and personal confrontation, but she admits that the new book taps into a far more haunting side of her. “I feel really different about ageing than I did when I started writing the book,” she says.

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“I know I should be really proud of myself, but at the same time I do like to make myself look good – it’s all those questions that we have, and I try to address them here with no clear-cut answer.” From being noticed as a teen in a country town – catching the attention of the male gaze without even trying – to not being noticed when entering a room with friends in their 40s, Parsons looks at the gamut of ageing. Mostly, she questions how we have managed to entrap ourselves into believing the hype that ageing is bad for you. Because it’s not, right? “Most of the time, women will report the experience of ageing as wonderful – but the world around us is off-key,” she says. “The advice I have received from older women is to lean into finding out who you are and make no apologies for it. “It’s a really beautiful time to actually explore that and be you.” And then there’s the fire pit that is social media, TikTok and face-tuning apps – a world of youth-obsessed millennials and Gen Zs (and clearly not them alone) who continue to erase any sign of ageing all in the hope nobody will notice. Parsons doesn’t judge – she floats in the middle, welcoming all ways of ageing gracefully. If you Botox, then so be it, she says; if you want to wear wrinkles as your stripes, go for it. She merges personal experiences and self-doubt with empowering anecdotes and cold, hard facts. “The whole culture of social media is caught up in the fact that it’s normal to say you don’t want to look old,” Parsons says. “How is that normal to feel like that? JA N E R O C CA ●

Ph o t o

“I feel we have normalised it to the point that it’s not even a question, and doing things like changing the ageing face is normal and almost expected. “It is also OK if people want to do that, but what has to happen alongside it is a massive shift in the way we hold up the ageing face. “There isn’t one type of ageing, and we should see it as being beautiful, even if it doesn’t fit into that mould of what beauty is sold to us as.” Parsons, a married mother of two – she has an 18-year-old daughter and 10-year-old son – says if she could turn back time, she’d have a conversation with her younger self. “I would tell her that she is beautiful,” Parsons says. “And, no matter what the world outside says, I’d tell her to reach in and connect with that. One of the revelations of the book was realising that the little girl is still inside me. “She has come on the whole journey and it’s a beautiful thing to feel that essence and connection to the internal self. We are told more often than not to connect with what is happening outside of us, when it’s what’s inside us that matters.” After two decades in the media, Parsons has certainly interviewed her share of empowering women, from Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon to actress Renee Zellweger and novelist Helen Garner. Talking to 72-year-old author Robin Davidson, who walked the desert with camels, was another reminder that ageing is an act of determination too. When time permits, Parsons is planning to go on an epic solo walk for some quiet time. “It’s something I dream about, getting out into the world and doing that and knowing you can manage it,” she says. “It’s that solo time where you aren’t a mum, a wife, a friend, just a person and having time to explore that really excites me.” And age will not weary her. ●

C H R I S T O PH E R H O PKI N S

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Baby love RETAIL A one-stop-shop for new parents

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leverly curated parenting and baby brand The Memo has added a joyful new addition to the family with the delivery of its first bricks-and-mortar boutique. The new store in High Street, Armadale, is a feel-good extension of the online pregnancy, postpartum and parenting destination that has fast become a cult go-to for the best brands and advice. Still in its infancy, The Memo was created in 2019 by Kate Casey and Phoebe Simmonds after seeing a gap in the fragmented baby market. “I had the idea for The Memo when I

was on maternity leave with my first child,” Casey says. “My experience at big-box baby retail left me with a lot of questions, but not a lot of answers.” She turned to a friend who had already been through the babyproduct buying experience, who gave her a comprehensive list of everything she needed. “She’d outlined line by line the products that worked, that you’d need, use and want daily. The ones that were worth the hype, the ones that weren’t and the ones that you should borrow from a friend,” Casey

See demand for your home Download the app

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Phoebe Simmonds and Kate Casey.

DAMIEN KOOK

has opened in Armadale.


says. “It was incredibly helpful and made me feel so much more confident and prepared in the leadup to my child’s birth. “The only problem? They weren’t all in one place.” It sparked the idea to create a destination that sold only the best and brightest brands; a curated edit of the essentials but with options to cater to price, lifestyle and taste. “A feel-good experience that would remove the clutter, judgment, the soapboxing, the assumed knowledge that I felt was way too prevalent in the baby industry,” Casey says. That’s where Simmonds stepped in with her marketing experience, as founder of The Blow hair bar and formerly in brand and marketing for Benefit Cosmetics. “It was interesting because I was single and didn’t have kids of my own at this stage, so I’d never had much involvement with the baby industry,” she says. “When I started looking

into it, I was shocked. It felt like a really outdated space.” “There was a huge opportunity to create a brand that would be a destination for parents, a place for inspiration, connection and education that would help them feel good about this time in their lives, [not] overwhelmed and confused.”

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The Memo has struck a chord with its product range of more than 4000 and its ability to connect with consumers. Its most popular items include Silverettes, Baby Shusher and Snotty Boss. “The hero is the Silverettes – silver nipple cups that are antibacterial, antifungal and use medical-grade KI M WI L S O N

silver to heal cracked, damaged nipples during breastfeeding,” Simmonds says. “They have worked miracles for countless women and we recommend them pre-emptively to anyone planning to try breastfeeding.” The Baby Shusher is a white-noise machine that emulates the “shhhhh” sound to calm your baby, while the Snotty Boss literally sucks snot out of a baby’s nose to help ease congestion. For its highly anticipated boutique, The Memo turned to renowned Melbourne architecture and interior design firm Cera Stribley and celebrated construction firm The Melbourne Builder. “What you’ll see is a bold and bright presence, tons of texture and curved edges,” Casey says. “We know that for many of our customers, it’s a super expensive time ... and it can be helpful actually seeing, feeling and talking through all the gear that you need, in one place.” ●

haileybury.com.au

More than a dance dynamo. Haileybury students are connected to their community and are always looking for ways to best serve them. Like Braya, who aside from having a strong love for dance and music — leading the School’s Pipes and Drums band — loves the fact she can help train Guide Dogs as part of ���������������������������������������������������������������������� our students, spreading that goodness beyond the school grounds.

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HOUSE OF THE WEEK BRIGHTON \ 39 SEACOMBE GROVE 5

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One of Melbourne’s iconic homes, famous for its superb location on Brighton’s golden mile and for the grandeur of its design, signals success like no other. The outlook is to the north-west, and the views don’t come any better. They stretch from the city skyline and beyond, across the Westgate Bridge to Williamstown, and over the blue expanse and golden sunsets of Port Phillip Bay. Set on about 1420 square metres of land and built over four levels, the European-inspired house has 18 main rooms accessible by lift or the grand curved staircase with a dome above. At ground level, living areas flow easily from one to another, and all are focused on that extraordinary view. Luxurious materials and features, such as the ornate, barrel-vaulted, pressed-metal ceiling in the formal dining room, a domed and decorated ceiling in one of the lounge areas, and honed marble and chevron parquetry floors, create a distinctive and international atmosphere. The custom-built kitchen has Gaggenau and Liebherr appliances, and there is a second kitchen and scullery in the entertainment lounge on the first floor. Also on this floor is a champagne room with a triangular balcony, the main bedroom suite with balcony, en suite and a vast walk-in wardrobe, and two additional bedrooms with en suites. A private apartment on the second floor comprises a bedroom and bathroom, a living area and a study that open to a terrace with a fireplace. The basement is massive. The garage, large enough for 12 cars, has a wash bay and workshop. Also on this level are a theatre, a wine room with its entrance guarded by stone cherubs on plinths, a bar room with food preparation area, and a gym that includes a steam room and opens directly to the beach. The house has a pool, sandstone and limestone-paved terraces, Castlemaine stone walls, motorised blinds, CBUS wiring, a monitored security system, Sonos surround sound, zoned climate control, ducted vacuum system, two laundries, garden irrigation and much more. It is close to Brighton’s independent schools, Bay and Church street shopping and cafes, and it’s just a few steps from the yacht club and Brighton Baths. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON property@domain.com.au

Agent: Buxton, David Hart 0417 541 933 Price: $30 million-$33 million Expressions of interest: Close 5pm, November 21

Hover your camera over the code to see Domain listings in Brighton DOM A IN REV IEW


TOP CHOICE \ YOU MAY ALSO LIKE …

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

BRIGHTON \ 1A ROSE STREET Agent: Buxton, Tamara Penno 0409 532 606 Price: $3.5 million-$3.85 million Auction: 10.30am, November 26

BRIGHTON \ 76 COLE STREET Agent: Buxton, Stefan Whiting 0411 473 153 Price: $6 million-$6.5 million Expressions of interest: Close 5pm, November 8

FINAL WORD “THIS IS MELBOURNE’S MOST EXCLUSIVE WATERFRONT ESTATE IN A LOCATION OF A LIFETIME WITH WORLD-CLASS AMENITIES.” DAVID HART – AGENT.

BRIGHTON \ 93-95 MALE STREET Agent: Buxton, Ben Vieth 0404 084 793 Price: $4.2 million-$4.6 million Private sale

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BRIGHTON EAST \ 14 EDRO AVENUE 5

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Three floors of sleek luxury, superb design and enviable amenity make this home ideal for a family looking for style and ease. At the basement level are a theatre, multipurpose room and a bedroom with an en suite and courtyard. Much of the ground floor level is living area with floor-toceiling windows and doors to the pool courtyard and the outdoor living area with a built-in barbecue kitchen. In the main kitchen, a butler’s pantry, marble island and Miele appliances add to the amenity. The main bedroom suite is stunning in its size and sophistication and shares the top floor with two bedrooms, bathrooms, and a retreat. This glamorous house has a Sonos audio system, Control 4 home automation, hydronic heating, air-conditioning and security with CCTV. The property is close to the beach, schools and Hampton Street. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON

Agent: Marshall White, Matthew Pillios 0408 145 982 Price: $5.6 million-$5.85 million Expressions of interest: Close 6pm, November 15

PORT MELBOURNE \ 89 DUNSTAN PARADE 4

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Award-winning architect Adam Dettrick doesn’t just design houses – he creates an interactive narrative between a dwelling and its environment. Originally a demure, singlestorey 1940s cottage, this pad is now a two-storey trailblazer due to his input. Sensible yet wild, earthy underfoot and overhead, and an indoor-outdoor affair at heart, the boldly presented, enviably equipped, four-bedroom home works as well for family living as it does for the camera. The front lounge has a fireplace. The adjacent study comes lined with bespoke joinery. Centred at ground level, the kitchen-diningliving hub opens broadly to a luxe, garden-fringed barbecue terrace. Beyond the hub, the main bedroom suite is swathed in green aspects. Upstairs, three bedrooms include one with an en suite and balcony. ● KAY KEIGHERY

Agent: Marshall White, Scott O’Halloran 0413 464 473 Price: $2.15 million-$2.3 million

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Auction: 1.30pm, November 26 DOM A IN REV IEW


BEAUMARIS \ 407 BEACH ROAD 5

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Prospective owners of this property had better buff up their boasting boots. Perched cliff-top on a big block, the pile enjoys wonderful water views, a decadently roomy floor plan and fixtures and fittings shaming the average fare. The three-level, main build matches indoor/outdoor living with four enticing bedrooms. Take the glass sliders at the front of the ground-level hub for a terrace affording al fresco appreciation of those bay vistas. Part the sliders at the rear for connection with the triple-phased deck and pool area. Adding idyllic in-law, teen or Airbnb circumstances, the self-contained, one-bedroom studio lacks for nothing. Lush gardens, a solar power system, bespoke joinery and heated, polished concrete floors speak of the complete attention to detail going on here. ● KAY KEIGHERY

Agent: Kay & Burton, Eleisha Doherty 0434 029 128 Price: $7 million-$7.7 million Expressions of interest: Close 5pm, November 21

BRIGHTON EAST \ 9A CHARLES STREET 4

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This new residence is fully prepped for a quality family lifestyle. Contemporary, surprisingly spacious and stylishly finished, the Loewe-Projects’ townhouse welcomes with a bluestone walkway and concludes with a no-fuss, all-fun backyard. The facade does modern-classic in charcoal. The lower-ground level comprises the double garage, a gym and a cellar. Ground and entry level stages the main bedroom (with huge walk-in wardrobe and oversized en suite), laundry, powder room and kitchen-dining-living hub. Glass sliders unite the hub with the vine-draped, entertainment terrace and azure-tiled pool. Centred by a retreat, the first floor adds three bedrooms (one with en suite) and the main bathroom. Double-glazing, automatic blinds and ducted vacuum figure among the inclusions and its close to Gardenvale Primary and Landcox Park. ● KAY KEIGHERY

Agent: Jellis Craig, Nick Renna 0411 551 190 Price: $2.1 million-$2.3 million Auction: 2pm, November 26 DOM A IN REV IEW

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MALVERN 3 Northbrook Avenue

4a 2b 2v 622r

Walter Summons 0438 576 233 Charmayne Dulley 0430 788 680 belleproperty.com

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A DESIGNER GEM IN THE HEART OF ST KILDA

FAMILY PERIOD HOME IN PRIZED SETTING Picturesque and tightly held 1930s English style brick four bedroom, two bathroom plus a study residence wrapped within private landscaped 622sqm (approx.) grounds with a north-west rear garden and separate bungalow set in a sought-after cul-desac.

ST KILDA 46/167 Fitzroy Street

AUCTION Saturday November 19 at 12.30pm VIEW As Advertised or By Appointment

Nestled in the iconic Alameda complex with its historic church, this spacious, light-filled apartment serves up the sun-soaked St Kilda lifestyle at your doorstep. The seamless living/dining area with openplan kitchen looks out onto enviable views of the city skyline, Lakeside Drive & Albert Park Lake.

Nicholas Peters 0422 393 709 Paul Hack 0418 328 055 Will Johnson 0449 131 648

www.belleproperty.com/st-kilda

AUCTION Saturday November 19 at 10:30am VIEW See website for details


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BRIGHTON 7 Kinane Street

3b

A BEACHSIDE BLANK CANVAS TO UPDATE OR RECREATE Changing hands for the first time in over 40 years, this substantially proportioned home is enviably positioned in one of Brighton's most exclusive streets. For those looking for a renovation project, the dearly loved residence provides a fabulous framework with multiple living zones, home office, 5 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms. Alternatively, the 750sqm approx. block will undoubtedly thrill land buyers/developers looking to make their mark with a luxurious architectural masterpiece (STCA) metres from the beach and close to elite private schools.

FOR SALE VIEW See website for details

4v

750 approx. r

Moses Habib 0450 011 922 Julian Cannata 0424 717 913 Sam Inan 0433 076 999

belleproperty.com/222P381731

3a

SOUTHBANK 11/77 Coventry Street SPLIT LEVEL APARTMENT LOCATED NEARBY THE NGV, TAN, MCG AND CBD Set in a small apartment block with a beautiful garden and quiet ambience, this apartment is crafted for a contemporary lifestyle. The innovative design of the lower floor with its high cathedral ceiling incorporates an open-plan living and dining room embracing a generous size kitchen with electric cooktop and plenty of storage, two bedrooms with built-in robes next to the central bathroom with laundry facilities, a separate W/C and a balcony to enjoy your morning coffee and large common courtyard.

AUCTION Saturday November 19 at 11:30am VIEW See website for details

2b

1v

Julian Cannata 0424 717 913 Moses Habib 0450 011 922 Sam Inan 0433 076 999

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56 Lyndhurst Street 3

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From Industrial To Irresistible Inspiring space and scale, a warehouse conversion of compelling quality. Architecturally designed to preserve much of the original character yet providing sophisticated comfort, flexible living and entertaining (or working) spaces. Close to shops, restaurants and within easy access to the CBD. EOI: Closing Tuesday 15th November at 5.30pm View: Strictly By Appointment Thursday 5pm - 5.30pm Saturday 12.30pm - 1pm 24/7 View: http://www.lynd56rich.com.au Contact: Jock Langley 0419 530 008 Ada Taylor 0428 058 880 Office 9864 5300

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Floor Services

TIMBER WORKS FLOORING 12563666-AV34-22

12572947-HC41-22

12438941-CG04-20

Electricians

s %XTENSIONS 2ENOVATIONS s 3WITCHBOARD 5PGRADES 3AFETY 3WITCHES 3PECIALISING IN ALL %LECTRICAL )NSTALLATIONS s (OUSE 2EWIRES &2%% 15/4%3 s 0HONE $ATA 46 ##46 .O *OB TOO BIG OR SMALL s /VEN (OT 0LATE 2EPAIRS s (OT 7ATER 3ERVICE 2EPAIRS WWW JLHUTTELECTRICAL COM AU s 3ECURITY !LARMS s !# )NSTALLATIONS

V

Motoring

General Classifieds

12561969-JC32-22

12571805-AI41-22

Commercial & Domestic • Shop / Factory fit outs • Home alterations Fully Insured | 25 years’ experience

J.L. Hutt Electrical

Buy & Sell in our

9720 5111

Carpenters

24 HOUR SERVICE 2EC

Leon 0409 637 712

• No Fuss • No Mess • No Stress

QUALIFIED CARPENTERS

V

Collector looking for front & top loading automatics, 40 years & older. Brands like Frigidaire, Bendix, Wilkins Servis, Inglis, Simpson & Pope Norge.

12479343-SN06-21

12575587-JC45-22

TREE SERVICES

• LARGE TREE SPECIALISTS • HEDGE TRIMMING EXPERTS • STUMP GRINDING • MULCH AVAILABLE • CONSULTING ARBORIST

Ask about our discounted ongoing advertising rates and how choosing more newspapers gives your advertising more impact and saves you money...

www.toyboxtales.com.au

G6133636AA-dc2Jul

Tree Lopping/Surgery

$20 MILLION INSURANCE

(1.5% credit card processing fee applies. Cheques and money orders can be posted.)

(03) 9521 6998

Call 0434 525 311

DAWSONS

(include your name, address and phone number)

@ToyboxTalesAU

Rubbish Removal

12496966-LB23-21

V

Pensioner Discounts | Free Quotes | Fully Insured 0406 007 263 | admasgardeningservices@gmail.com

The Victorian Equal Opportunity Act 1995 makes it unlawful for an advertiser to show any intention to discriminate on the basis of sex, pregnancy, race, age, marital status, political or religious belief or physical features, disability, lawful sexual activity/sexual orientation, HIV/AIDS status or on the basis of being associated with a person with one of the above characteristics, unless covered by an exception under the Act. As Network Classifieds could be legally liable if an unlawful advertisement is printed, Network Classifieds will not accept advertisements that appear to break the law. For more information about discrimination in advertising, contact your legal advisers or the Equal Opportunity Commission.

ADVERTISE with us and get better results

CALL 1300 666 808 DOM A IN REV IEW

23


SINCE 1978 BATHROOMS

FIREPLACES

KITCHEN

HARDWARE

DOORS

LIGHTING

FURNITURE

OUTDOORS

EXPLORE THE BENEFITS TODAY - IT’S FREE

RESTORING VALUE INTO HOMES SINCE 1978 as seen on The Block 2022 Tree Change MOORABBIN 03 9482 3207

|

CLIFTON

HILL

FLAGSHIP

03 9482 6400

OPEN 7 DAYS

|

GEELONG 03 8538 6898

TILES


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