PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE
JUNE 9-15, 2021
BOOKS
GROWING UP IN MELBOURNE
LOOKING BACK
REMEMBERING THE WAY WE WERE
BRODIE GRUNDY THE WAY FORWA RD
I VA N H O E & VA L L E Y
Exclusive to
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Tibbo Table & Rilly Armchairs by Dedon
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Glenaire Chair, Avoca Sofa & Otway Table by Kett
Senja Sofa, Nomad Chairs & Accessories by Tribu
Branch Table & Contour Armchairs by Tribu
C o mp i l e d b y
HAILEY COULES
The editor’s desk
PARKER BLAIN
MARTINA GEMMOLA
The most recent time at home has been tough and has undoubtedly prompted some deep thinking. For this week’s cover star, Collingwood player Brodie Grundy, last year’s lockdown did that just. He chats with us about resetting his goals and ambitions, as well as his home life. This week we also feature some things to do at home, as well as some particularly Melbourne books to take a look at. Stay safe. ●
CHECK MATE \ Bedding label The Sheet Society have
NEW LOCAL \ Matteo’s Delicatessen is the new kid in
just released their latest range in gorgeous tones –
the west. They offer freshly made paninis and coffees
perfect to snuggle into now it’s chilly out. Choose from
to take away, plus a range of boutique groceries when
sage, blush or beige. ● thesheetsociety.com.au
you feel like a treat. ● matteosdelicatessen.com.au
STAYING IN Things to do from home in Melbourne
OUR COVER \ Collingwood star Brodie Grundy. Photographed (pre-lockdown) at home in Abbotsford by Julian Kingma.
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SAMEE LAPHAM
Jason Pellegrino
I VA N H O E & VA L L E Y
Chief executive officer Domain Group \
HEALTH KICK \ Staying at home and in need of a pick-
MUST WATCH \ There is nothing like getting hooked
me-up? Order some healthy takeaway from Green Cup
into a new series, so look no further than Stan’s new
on Uber Eats or Deliveroo, or pop into their Armadale,
original series Eden, filmed in the Northern Rivers
South Yarra and Hawthorn stores. ● greencup.com.au
region of NSW. It launches on June 11. ● stan.com.au
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BOOKS
Labour of love
Karuna’s mother, and as the oldest child I had a lot of adult responsibilities. I was always anxious and on edge,” she says. “I had babies to look after and no idea how.” Now a mother of three, Pung also works as a public service lawyer based at the University of Melbourne in Parkville, with her husband Nick. She writes in her spare time. “When I am living life, that’s when I can write,” Pung says. “I have always written with kids and siblings around me. It’s a tricky balance, but you need many daydreaming hours to plot a book. That’s happened when I have been breastfeeding at 3am and nobody wants to go to sleep.” One Hundred Days, for all its serious undertones, comes with plenty of humour. There’s Karuna’s friend Tweezer [that’s Teresa], a Greek schoolgirl raised by a strict family whose closest brush with freedom is dreaming about it. “I didn’t want to write a didactic book about Australian multicultralism. My characters’ cultural aspects aren’t quirks, they integrate as part of their day-to-day life,” Pung says. “With Tweezer, it’s not that she’s Greek, it’s more that she’s anxious about everything, but her Greek background plays a part because her parents are fearful new migrants and highly religious. I try to make the characters as threedimensional as I can so they didn’t end up as stereotypes.” It has been 12 years since Growing up Asian in Australia was released. It included stories of prominent people such as Kylie Kwong, Anh Do and Jenny Kee, who opened up to Pung about their experiences. “Times are definitely changing,” Pung says. “The generation after me, they know their rights, identify as people of colour, know when racism happens.” ●
Alice Pung has delivered a powerful new novel inspired by friends’ teen pregnancies. Wo r d s
JA N E R O C CA
“When I am living life, that’s when I can write.”
SIMON SCHLUTER
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hen acclaimed Melbourne author Alice Pung started writing her latest novel, One Hundred Days, she turned to a series of events from her Braybrook high school to set the scene. “A few of my friends disappeared and I never saw them again. Turns out those girls were taken out of school to have babies and told they could only have the baby if it was raised as their sister,” she says. “It used to happen a lot in the ’80s, and it’s not that long ago. The girl was told it was so she could have a life, and not have the stigma of being a teenage mum. It formed the inspiration for this book.” The award-winning writer of Growing up Asian in Australia and bestselling memoirs Unpolished Gem and Her Father’s Daughter tells the story of 16-year-old Karuna who becomes pregnant and is confined to a housing commission flat – all in the name of family dignity. Pung explores the flaws and deep love between a mother and daughter; where one’s fight for independence is fiercely challenged. One Hundred Days is about complex love and maternal bonds, where staunch protectionism is presented as anything but and where cultural stigma, generational clashing and a coming-of-age story unlock deep fears on both sides of this tug of war. Pung channelled her nine-year-old self into the storyline, too. As the eldest in her family, she took on the responsibility of raising her siblings while her mother worked. “My mother was an outworker like
ONE HUNDRED DAYS \ Available now ● blackincbooks.com.au
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Wo rd s
JA N E R O C CA ●
Ph o t o
J U LIA N KI N G M A
Charting a new course
Collingwood’s Brodie Grundy at home in Alphington, with dogs Ava, left, and Sam, right.
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COVER STORY
Collingwood player Brodie Grundy turned the isolation of last year’s AFL hub in Queensland into an opportunity to take a new direction.
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t was a family trip to the Northern Territory that helped Brodie Grundy, Collingwood’s star ruckman and two-time best and fairest winner, see things differently. “I learned a lot about myself last year; it was a challenging one for footy and for me personally,” says Grundy, 27. “I wasn’t playing at the level people had come to expect of me, or that I had come to expect of myself. Once the season ended, I knew I had to centre myself again.” Grundy, who lives in Alphington with his partner Rachel – who works as a physiotherapist at the Northern Hospital – says a trip to Uluru this year was a release that worked on many levels. “I rang Mum and we hit the road,” Grundy says. “It was the best thing I could have done. To reconnect with nature and gain some perspective.” In light of Collingwood’s Do Better report released last December last year, and feeling the pressure that his club was under to report structural racism, Grundy turned to family. “We have a young playing group at Collingwood who want to do better and be involved in having meaningful change,” he explains. “We want to be part of an organisation and industry that is bestpractice and a safe place regardless of your race, religion, sex. We want this workplace to be a really fun, inclusive environment.” But he is the first to admit that starting a career in AFL is not for the faint-hearted. “I know when I started it could be really intimidating for a young person, so you want it to be as inclusive as possible, because that’s when you get the best out of people,” he says. “We see it [racism] and we have to now keep ourselves and the club accountable to these things. “People often misconstrue me as a serious bloke because I go to university, but we’ve all gotten up to mischief when we were younger and enjoyed being more relaxed. It’s knowing the values of the club and holding one another to account.”
Away from AFL, Grundy has spent the past seven years undertaking a Bachelor of Health Sciences at La Trobe University. “My philosophy has always been that I am more than a footballer,” Grundy says. “I have always been a curious person – keen to push myself when it comes to learning.” He momentarily entertained the idea of becoming a landscape architect when he was in year 11, but stuck with footy instead. An interest in anatomy and physics led to his degree choice. “I always ask myself what am I interested in? Where can I have impact? I know I have an extraordinary platform to use my voice now, and being an AFL footballer and combining this with real-life experiences is where I want to get to,” Grundy says.
find happiness with family and friends again has been a good thing,” Grundy says. “And in a world filled with so much negative stuff and still so much uncertainty, I’ve learned to take life in my stride and not worry about things I can’t control.” Grundy is also a newly-appointed ambassador with Wolf Blass, which felt like a natural coming together for the sportsman. “I don’t drink all the time because I’m a professional athlete, but when I do I want something that’s quality and good for a celebratory moment with family and friends,” he says. Grundy first moved to Melbourne from the Adelaide Hills when drafted to play for Collingwood as an 18-year-old. He moved in with his aunt in Alphington, and a few years later purchased his first home in the area. He lives there with Rachel and their two dogs, Ava and Sam. “I really like the area because it’s close enough to
“I learned a lot about myself last year; it was a challenging one for footy and for me personally.” Now he’s busy undertaking an MBA at Melbourne Business School, plotting a future beyond the field. “Being in the hub environment really challenges your identity,” Grundy says of his months on the Gold Coast last year. “It’s in part due to the fact we don’t have any releases away from the sport.” He took the hub experience in his stride and learned to surf, but spent most hours in his room wishing he was home. “I don’t play video games,” he says. “When I was out of the hub, I was surfing. And when I was back in the room, I was pretty flat, not having much to sink my teeth into. That’s when I had the idea to take my degree down a business path.” Being back on campus this year has done wonders for his wellbeing. “To be on campus and
the city but it’s not right in the hustle and bustle,” he says. “But I’d love to get a bit closer to nature with a big backyard, have somewhere to retreat without seeing other houses.” His home is filled with pop-art prints, while a canvas he painted with an artist friend sits in the entrance. A few other precious items on display include an Indigenous Round 1 football and an All-Stars State of Origin one as well. He’s got a passion for indoor plants and cosy rugs, and says his knack for home decorating comes from his mother. “I love a place that’s comfy and warm,” Grundy says. “Rachel leaves the decorating up to me, funnily enough. I like earthy and natural tones and like to check on my plants every day and see what’s grown and have a chat to them.” ●
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RETAIL A new book pays tribute to shops of yesteryear. Wo r d s
E M I LY WAT KI N S
Preserving our past S I L A E S PR E S S O, FIT Z R OY \ O PE N E D 1959
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DAVID WADELTON
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rtist David Wadelton began photographing the small businesses of Northcote in the mid-1970s when he was at art school. Nearly 40 years later, sorting through and scanning his black-and-white photos, thinking about what the suburban Melbourne streetscape was like in those days, he “realised there were a few survivors, but not many”. The high streets were no longer peppered with small, family-run tailors, butchers and milk bars. But there were some outliers. So he started documenting what was left of those businesses before they, too, disappeared. He shared the
“These small businesses are relics of something … they’re part of the fabric of our local communities.” images – old and new – on social media, eventually compiling some into his book Small Business. Wadelton found people connected with the images, recognising the shops they’d visited or walked or driven past for so many years. “We’re interested in this shared history, the often unique history of our local areas,” he says. The book captures the small, family-run businesses that feel like relics of a time long past. Alongside institutions such as Pellegrini’s Espresso Bar, Hopetoun Tea Rooms and Stalactites are the hole-in-the-wall cobblers, garages and barbers, among others. Most of them,
Wadelton says, were established in the 1960s and ’70s by post-war European migrants. About one-third of the businesses have closed since he started in about 2009. With some, he wishes he could go back and take more or better images, but it’s too late. One of those is Swanston Street’s Golden Tower American-style diner. “It used to be this little Americanstyle diner; they were all over the place,” Wadelton says. “I would’ve loved to have gone back … I didn’t know it was going to be in the book.” Most of the closures aren’t because of last year’s lockdown, he says, but because that generation of
FR AN K’ S HAIRD RE S SIN G S , N O R TH COTE \ O PE N E D 1975
shopkeepers and small business owners was getting older and retiring. “Sometimes they get ill, the shops close and just stay closed like little time machines,” Wadelton says. “These small businesses are relics of something … they’re part of the fabric of our local communities. Strip shopping and family businesses have been decimated by shopping plazas.” One common reaction from traders
when Wadelton asked to photograph their businesses was surprise. “One guy couldn’t understand why I wanted to take a photo of his garage, but he said, ‘Go for your life, knock yourself out.’ Mostly they’re just content and proud to be there.” ● SMALL BUSINESS BY DAVID WADELTON \ Available now ● wadelton.online
Ladies Boutique Selected stock Reduced to clear
Large selection of Mother of Bride in Store We also have a large selection of day wear
Lay-Buys Welcome All credit cards & Eftpos Accepted Gift Vouchers Available Trading Hours: Monday: Closed Tuesday to Friday: 9.00am to 4.00pm Saturday: 9.00am to 1.00pm MOSS AND SPY STYLE MATISSE GOWN 029016
Shop 14 Dennison Mall, Bundoora Square Bundoora 3083 | Ph 9467 5903 DOM A IN REV IEW
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BRIGHTON \ 5 YUILLE STREET 5
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In the heartland of Brighton’s family zone, this glamorous French-inspired home offers an enviable address and a welcoming, luxurious lifestyle. Warm parquetry flooring, high ceilings with deep cornices, panelled doors, marble finishes and a grand curved staircase all set the tone. On the ground floor, where each room has a garden view, the formal living room, with gas fireplace, and a formal dining room are at the front on the left side. A guest bedroom with en suite is on the other, followed by a study or bedroom. Across the rear, with northern orientation, are the living areas and a stunning kitchen. The family room and dining area open to a covered outdoor entertaining zone defined by pillars and to the solar-heated pool. In the family room, an open fireplace creates a cosy spot for winter. Upstairs, the main bedroom is palatial in scale, occupying more than a third of the layout and opening to a balcony. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON Agent: Hodges, Michael Cooney 0418 325 052 Price: $5.65 million-$5.95 million Expressions of interest: Close 1pm, June 22
SOUTH YARRA \ 3/262 DOMAIN ROAD 3
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Designed by the prestigious Wood Marsh firm of architects, this three-bedroom apartment in a dramatic and distinctive boutique block offers space, luxury and one of Melbourne’s best addresses. The living and dining area is full of light and sunshine, courtesy of the northern orientation, and opens to a nine-metre-long terrace. Gaggenau appliances and marble benchtops emphasise the luxurious design of the kitchen. The main bedroom has a deep walk-in wardrobe and the large en suite has an oval bath and twin hand basins. The second bedroom also has an en suite. The Royal Botanic Gardens, Toorak Road shopping and restaurants and the Yarra River are close by. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON
Agent: Kay & Burton, Ross Savas 0418 322 994 Price: $3.5 million-$3.75 million
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Expressions of interest: Close 5pm, June 23 DOM A IN REV IEW
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26 Through Road Camberwell Forming an integral part of the area’s history, “Grasmere” (c1933) is a grand yet stylish presence near Hartwell Primary School, trains and shops. Luxuriously large rooms hark back to a bygone era yet today this beautiful home is very much an achievement in contemporary comfort with stone kitchen/meals area, 2 home-offices and sun-bathed family spaces spilling onto decked outdoor areas perfect for indoor/outdoor entertaining.
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Auction Inspect Land Mark Pezzin Cherry Jia Hawthorn
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