Domain Review Moonee Valley - May 05, 2021

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PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE

MAY 5-11, 2021

COOL CHOICE ENTIRE STREET REVAMPED

ROAD TRIP

EXPLORING A GOLDEN CITY

TONY ARMSTRONG OPPORTU NIT Y K NOCKS

M O O N E E VA L L E Y


SI NCE 1978 BATHROOMS

FIREPLACES

HARDWARE

DOORS

LIGHTING

FURNITURE

OUTDOORS

TILES

FLOORING

HOMEWARES

HOME TO THE EXTRAORDINARY Clifton Hill 400 Hoddle Street 1300 774 774

Moorabbin 19 Cochranes Road 1300 694 694


C o mp i l e d b y

HAILEY COULES

The editor’s desk

I couldn’t stop laughing a few weeks ago – scrolling through my social media, up popped a video headlined “Tony's terrible news”. There was this week’s cover star – ABC presenter Tony Armstrong – being, frankly, gorgeous in an experiment for The Weekly on whether bad news would be more palatable if delivered by a handsome man in ridiculously attractive scenarios. (Spoiler: it is, and it’s incredibly amusing.) That’s just one of many strings Armstrong has added to his bow of late, as you'll read in this week’s cover story by Peter Barrett.  ●

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GOING PLACES Things to do & see in Melbourne

OUR COVER \ ABC sports broadcaster Tony Armstrong. Photographed by Julian Kingma.

MORE TO LOVE ONLINE Go to domain.com.au/domain-review General inquiries \ 9249 5226 \ editorial@domain.com.au Editor \ Jemimah Clegg Editorial producer \ Hailey Coules Group picture editor \ Vashti Newcomb Senior designer \ Colleen Chin Quan Graphic designer \ Emma Staughton Editorial director \ Adrian Lowe National managing editor \ Alice Stolz Group director, Consumer \ Jason Chuck Chief executive officer Domain Group \ Jason Pellegrino

ray.vanv@domain.com.au Retail sales \ retailsales@sales.domain.com.au

Is your mag missing? Distribution \ 1800 032 472 distribution@domainreview.com.au

REVIEW Domain Review is published by Domain Holdings Australia Limited and is printed by Elephant Group (Aust) Pty Ltd, 24c Victoria Street Windsor VIC 3181. All material is copyright.

THOMAS BROOKE

Ray van Veenendaal \ 0438 279 870

M O O N E E VA L L E Y

Real estate sales director \

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Another world Sculptor Emma Davies, who creates delicate woven vessels, appreciates the mix of arts, crafts and skills on the road. “I enjoy seeing boilermakers coming out in their old blue overalls that have black all over them because they’ve been welding all day,” she says. “Looking into their factory is like looking into another world.” After she mentioned her interest, the welder next door offered to teach her to weld. The award-winning artist says there are many advantages to working near different makers. “You get to catch up with other creative people and bounce ideas off them,” she says. “We’ve formed lovely longstanding friendships.” Davies, who taught children’s art classes for many years, was overwhelmed by the interest shown during the open studios day and says her work is continual experimentation.

Kate Sellars-Jones’ dog portraits, below left; artist

S C U L P T U R E S BY E M M A DAVI E S

Graeme Altmann, below.

Creative advantage ART An unlikely setting has

evolved into an inventive hub. Wo r d s

M A RY O ’ B RI E N

B

ehind the gritty industrial doors of Highett’s Advantage Road is a hidden community of creative types. In this unexpected setting, artists, sculptors and fashion designers are rubbing shoulders with welders, boilermakers and mechanics. Over the years, the road has evolved into an artistic hub. Drawn by reasonable rents and warehouses with space and light, artists have gradually moved in and set up studios. The list includes milliners, textile artists and printmakers and there are workshops for art and pottery.  ● Most Advantage Road studios open by appointment only. ● bayside.vic.gov.au/advantage-road

Doggy days

A bigger canvas

There’s a steady demand for studio space on the road, says designer Kate Sellars-Jones. “It can be quite a lonely pursuit being an artist and I’ve always been thankful I’ve been able to share a space.” Sellars-Jones says there’s a constant tug of war between commercial and purely artistic work. It was her fascination with the dog show scene and dog portraits that took off last year. “During the lockdown, people’s relationships with their pets flourished,” she says. As Highett becomes more gentrified and housing density increases, places such as Advantage Road may come under pressure. “I believe the semi-industrial part will move out and more boutique businesses will move in,” SellarsJones says. “We’re just waiting for a cafe to open.”

Artist Graeme Altmann was one of the early arrivals when he moved into a studio with friends about 10 years ago. “It’s a really nice place to be as it’s got that good, quiet little secret vibe,” Altmann says. Inspired by his love and fear of the sea, Altmann has been painting for 30 years. Advantage Road has allowed him to work on bigger canvases and invite clients into a commercial space. When he realised the road was home to so many other artists, he organised a group exhibition about five years ago. In 2019, Bayside Council held a successful open studios day, which was enthusiastically supported by the local community. The 2020 event was cancelled due to the pandemic. “The creative people ... they’re entrepreneurial, they take risks, they really have a crack at it.”

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The accidental commentator 6

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Wo r d s

PE T E R BA R R E T T ●

Ph o t o

J U LIA N KI N G M A

COVER STORY Tony Armstrong, the first Indigenous person to call

an AFL game on commercial radio, didn’t plan on a media career. Now a rising star at the ABC, he plans to make the most of opportunity.

T

ony Armstrong is looking sharp. Sporting a smart blue blazer, jeans, dressy shoes and a shirt with no tie, the ABC sports presenter is fresh from a photo shoot. Before that, he was busy being beamed around the country in his new (television) role on News Breakfast. “I can tell you, if I was on radio, I wouldn’t be caught dead wearing this any longer than I had to. I’d be in matching trackies,” he laughs, peering out through ABC Southbank’s huge foyer windows. “It’s a bit cold out there, so I’d have a hoodie on, too. I’d look like a real scumbag.” The 31-year-old ex-footballer is quick to joke at his own expense. Several times during our chat, colleagues are arrested by the cheeky handlebar moustache smile he flashes from across the room. But behind the good looks and friendly nature is a more serious side. Following the furore earlier this year over Eddie McGuire’s comments at a press conference about systemic racism at the Collingwood Football Club, Armstrong appeared as a guest on Raf Epstein’s Drive radio show. As a former player at Collingwood, a proud Barranbinya man and a sports media commentator, Armstrong was eminently qualified to speak. “We’re sick of hearing that they will change,” he said during the interview. “Everyone’s, I think, quite sick of that. We’re all pretty keen to see some action.” Armstrong has never met his Aboriginal father. He grew up in Cabramatta, in Sydney’s south-west; an only child going to the same school at which his mother, Margaret Armstrong, taught. His three best mates were Cambodian, Vietnamese and Croatian. “It was great,” he says of those early years. “I suppose I learned multiculturalism from a really young age. And mum used to take me to the Aboriginal Dance Theatre in Redfern. We used to go there on Saturdays, which was great. So [I] filled my cup a bit there as well.” Armstrong started playing Australian rules around age 10. “I took to it like a duck to water. I became, as all kids do, just so obsessed.” Fuelled by his natural talent, the obsession drew the small family closer to the code’s heartland, and they moved near Albury. Soon, Tony found himself boarding in Victoria at Assumption College,

nicknamed the “football factory” by some for its many AFL-playing alumni. As one of only three other Indigenous students, Armstrong felt for the first time what it was like to be an outsider. “But it was so great. I was a boarder, and I was good at footy. What more currency do you want at a joint like Assumption?” His entry into professional football happened at dizzying speed. Within two days of finishing his last exam, the 18-year-old had been drafted, moved to Adelaide, and started training with the Crows. But over the next nine years Armstrong – traded to Sydney in 2011 and then Collingwood in 2013 – would play only 35 games. The experience of not being picked for the senior side week after week was demoralising. Then he was delisted in 2015. “It’s tough. But also, it was about bloody time. I hadn’t really taken the next step. I was still playing footy and living in La La Land. I needed to get into the real world.” For Armstrong, that meant a couple of years taking stock of who he was and what he cared about. He worked a stint in advertising thanks to a friend who thought he might be good at it (he was). He dabbled in mentoring. Then, while hanging out with his friend, triple-premiership Brisbane legend Chris Johnson, Armstrong’s life changed. “As I was leaving, he was like, ‘Hey, brother, do you want to try doing some special comments on the National Indigenous Radio Service?’ I was like, f--it, why not?“ The exposure on NIRS led to Brian “BT” Taylor recommending him to Triple M. But only a select few make it in the world of special comments. And, with just an unremarkable three dozen games under his belt, Armstrong knew he was not one of them. “Triple M said, ‘Have you tried calling?’ And I said, ‘What’s that?’” Following the commercial station’s advice, he began commentating AFL games play-by-play for NIRS radio and, in 2018, called the West Coast-Collingwood grand final. The following year Triple M came knocking and Armstrong became the first Indigenous person to call an AFL game on commercial radio. Subsequent appearances on AFL website programs such as The Colour of Your Jumper and Yokayi Footy caught the attention

of the ABC, and when a sports presenter role became available in 2020, they snapped him up. “It’s just been a case of happy accidents, I guess,” says Armstrong of his path to Aunty, which has led to even more opportunities. In less than a year, Armstrong has co-hosted radio programs including Grand National with Catherine Murphy and Breakfast with Sammy J, hosted Summer Offsiders and, most recently, has been a regular sports presenter on News Breakfast, where he already goes by a nickname, “Mr Cuddles”. The day of our chat he was excited to see how his acting debut had come across in a comedy sketch for The Weekly with Charlie Pickering: “Is Tony Armstrong gorgeous enough to make bad news sound good?” (Short answer, absolutely.)

D

espite all these successes, there are still things that niggle. Like hearing casual racism in restaurants or the people who ask him “what percentage” he is. (“Come on, man. I’m a cup of tea. It doesn’t matter how much milk’s in me, you know?”) And, more seriously, he is consumed by the fact that, 30 years after the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody, successive governments have failed to implement most of the 339 recommendations (sadly, at least 474 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have died in custody since the report was handed down, in 1991). His media career may be an accident, but Armstrong carries his Aboriginality wherever he goes. “It’s everything,” he says. “I feel a real responsibility to keep doing everything that I’m doing and more: to increase opportunity, to increase visibility, to hopefully inspire, to kind of be the litmus test for networks so that they can trust Indigenous people behind the ink, behind the mic, in front of the camera. “I’ve got an opportunity where I’m across all of those mediums, and I’m getting a really great platform. So, I’d be asleep at the wheel if I wasn’t making the most of that opportunity, to try to do good things and try to progress.”  ●

NEWS BREAKFAST \ Weekdays 6am, ABC

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TRAVEL \ BENDIGO Yes, there’s grand architecture but now the trip comes with culinary treats aplenty.

Gourmet gold

A

GREG BRIGGS

B E N D I G O A R T G A L L E RY A N D CA F E

Wo r d s

Shortlist and share your favourite properties Tap the star to save properties you love, and invite someone to shortlist with you.

Download the app 8

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two-hour train trip or 90-minute drive to the regional city of Bendigo is the perfect segue to a slower pace of life, and now it comes packed with plenty of perks. Known for its heritage buildings, wide streets, burgeoning street art scene (check out Chancery Lane) and Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo has fast become a mecca for foodies, with restaurants and bars serving up a slice of city cool in the country. Named a city of gastronomy by UNESCO in 2019, it wears its food and culture passion on its sleeve. The speakeasy Ms Batterhams is

JA N E R O C CA

where you head for modern share plates, a slick cocktail menu and enjoy the lush green velvet seating. Set in the basement of a former school hall, its menu is impressive, with seared scallops with carrot puree and charred octopus with cucumber, radish and warrigal greens hitting the spot, while larger portions of chicken ballotine with farro, sweet corn and tarragon mayonnaise hit the spot. Next door, you’ll find the Victorian Gothic building Mackenzie Quarters. In this event and accommodation space, you’ll find five bedrooms, three bathrooms, a modern kitchen,


C H A N C E RY L A N E

a pool room, lounge and dining area with an office. It’s a hop and skip to the Bendigo Art Gallery. New restaurant Alium Dining delivers classy fare. The seasonal menu delicious, and the entrees are generous. The butternut pumpkin, smoked ricotta and burnt honey will have you asking for a second serve – and don’t ignore the scallops and oysters. Harvest Food and Wine is run by sommelier Lincoln Riley and

partner Marsha Busse, a Michelin star-trained pastry chef. They unveil the best of central Victorian food here. There are take-home meals and great wines to pair with food. A chia breakfast pudding will set you on your way, too. A trip to Bendigo is not complete without a cellar-door tasting. Ellis Wines shows off its whites and reds with a decadent option to pair your glasses with local cheese, quince and chocolate plates.  ●

Stay

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She Who Belongs. She Who Thrives. At Ave Maria College, every student is known and nurtured so they can belong, grow and thrive. We challege our students to strive for excellence from Year 7 to ensure they are prepared for their senior studies and future pathways.

Apply now for Year 7 in 2023 ��������������������������������������������������������������� www.avemaria.vic.edu.au

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EDUCATION

Out in the community Special programs encourage students beyond the school gate. Wo r d s

K AT E S TA N T O N

E

ISTOCK

very fortnight, year 9 students at Fintona Girls’ School close leave the confines of their Balwyn campus for the hustle and bustle of the real world. Students visit service organisations such as The Big Issue, Melbourne City Mission and the Refugee Council of Australia. They tour cultural and civic points of interest such as Chinatown, the Victorian Parliament and the Indigenous Heritage Walk at the Royal Botanic Gardens. They debate controversial

Life is Co-Ed and so are we from 2023

St Aloysius College, North Melbourne, one of the best performing inner-city Catholic schools is getting even better for families, we’re now accepting boys and girls from 2023. Learn more at

www.aloysius.vic.edu.au 10

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St Aloysius College 31 Curran Street, North Melbourne 3051 03 9325 9200 enquiry@aloysius.vic.edu.au Subject to VRQA approval


topics during United Nations day, and volunteer for causes that matter to them. It’s all part of Fintona’s Connections program, designed to help students familiarise themselves with the people, places and social forces that shape their community. “The program encourages the girls to see outside of their own world, outside of their own bubble,” says program head Chris Williams. Williams says his students walk away from the program with a greater sense of independence and an awareness about issues affecting the community. “They can put what they learn in the classroom into context, providing greater meaning to their classroom learning,” he says. Fintona and other independent schools are making community involvement a core part of the student experience, whether through fundraising, volunteering, work experience or excursions. Numerous studies have linked volunteering and community service to better mental health and professional outcomes. Research from the UK in 2021 found that community involvement

“They can put what they learn in the classroom into context, providing greater meaning to their classroom learning.” was particularly likely to benefit young people. At St Aloysius College, North Melbourne, students spend each year raising funds for Carnitas Australia’s Project Compassion. Girls at St Aloysius spend time raising funds and contributing to causes in step with the school’s Catholic values. They work with programs at local parishes and Sisters of Mercy-backed organisation McAuley Community Services for Women. Principal Mary Farah says community involvement improves student wellbeing and instils an understanding of the importance of community. “They get excited in wanting to do more and it stirs up a passion within them to bring ideas or programs back to the school community,” she says. At Ruyton Girls’ School in Kew, community involvement and service are integrated into the school’s leadership framework. Students are

encouraged to identify service organisations and charitable causes that interest them the most and problem-solve when things don’t go to plan. In early 2020, for example, Ruyton girls planned an outdoor cinema day, involving hampers and a raffle with 350 families, to support the Gippsland Emergency Relief Fund in the wake of Victoria’s bushfire crisis. When the pandemic put a stop to their plans, the girls had to redirect ticket sales to donate directly to the fund and to find alternative destinations for their food hampers, which they gave to local group Servants Community Housing. “They still did a lot to help more than one group, actually, and they had to go through problemsolving processes to get there,” says Ruyton principal Linda Douglas. “For us, it’s ... about understanding issues, seeing whether you can give up your time or other skills.”  ●

DISCOVER OPPORTUNITY “Academy is a learning community of young women embracing the certainty of change, and empowered by their achievements they take opportunities to lead in the evolution of our future.” Principal’s Address, Sr Mary Moloney

88 Nicholson St Fitzroy - opposite Melbourne Museum

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CARLTON \ 70 CARLTON STREET 3

1

1

Elegantly presented, double glazed and hydronically heated, this Victorian terrace house opposite Carlton Gardens exudes centenarian charisma. Think high ceilings, stained glass and rock-solid parameters. The interconnected lounge and dining rooms off the entrance hall have fireplaces. Past a powder room, the kitchen, meals and family area gives on to a pantry-laundry combo and a fitted study nook. Glass doors in the family area fold away to a deck and landscaped backyard cum car space. Enjoying pride of place at the front of the first floor, the super-sized main bedroom has a fireplace and step-through windows to a deep balcony drinking in the verdant vistas. Moments from trams, the Melbourne Museum and a myriad of eateries; life’s a walk in the park here. ● KAY KEIGHERY

Agent: Jellis Craig, Bev Adam 0422 396 477 Price: $3.4 million-$3.6 million Auction: 10am, May 8

PORT MELBOURNE \ 5 TARVER STREET 3

2

2

Designed by prestigious architectural firm Elenberg Fraser, is this dramatic townhouse in P.M. Residences is close to the beach and has excellent city and bay views. On the lower ground level, are a laundry, cellar and garage. The living and dining area, and the kitchen with 900-millimetre cooker are on the ground floor. On the first floor, the main bedroom has a luxurious en suite with oval bath and twin basins. Other bedrooms share the family bathroom and there is a study nook. The large rooftop terrace is designed for fun and has a spa and built-in barbecue. Shared facilities in the development include private dining rooms and lounges, a cinema, gymnasium and business centre. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON

Agent: The Agency, Michael Paproth 0488 300 800 Price: $1.8 million-$1.9 million

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Auction: 1.30pm, May 8 DOM A IN REV IEW


1 Hudson Court Avondale Heights

www.1hudsoncourtavondaleheights.com

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Receive 10% OFF when you mention this ad

Domestic, Commercial, Fully Qualified Interior, Exterior, Smash Repairs Free Quote • Pensioner Discount • All Work Guaranteed

AARON & JOHN’S DEMOLITION & RUBBISH REMOVALS • Demolition Specialists • Backyard Cleanups • Concrete Broken or Cut & Removed • Tree Lopping & Removal • Rental Cleanups • Deceased Estate Cleanups We Take Anything Away

Call 0434 525 311

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PETER'S PLASTERING SUPPLIES

s 'AS APPLIANCES SERVICE SPECIALISTS s #ARBON MONOXIDE TESTING s &ULLY LICENSED s 3ENIORS $ISCOUNTS

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Fully insured

Free Quotes

Steve - 0437 437 511

General Notices

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Public Notices and Event

15

REBLOCKING & UNDERPINNING GuaraYenatere MAINTENANCE WORKS TO A SMALL CELL AT FLEMINGTON RACECOURSE

12423837-SN32-19

Roller Shutters

OZTEC WINDOW SHUTTERS C915642-JM14-11

• 100% Australian Made & Owned • 10 years replacement warranty • Electric, manual or combination • Single and group remote controlled • Connected to smoke alarm (auto-lift) FOR FREE MEASURE & QUOTE PH: 9336 0005 JORDAN: 0413 708 238

Showroom @ 18 Quinn Drive, Keilor PArk, 3042

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12447720-LB18-20

Roofing

10 year Guarantee. Call now for a FREE quote: 0405 817 173

Find what your looking for in our

General Notices section of Network Classifieds.

• 500 Epsom Road FLEMINGTON VIC 3031 (Site 259166. RFNSA Site 3206021) 1. The works will involve: • The removal of the existing VRC light pole and its replacement with a new concrete monopole; • The re-installation of existing small cell antennas, radios and lights onto the new pole; and • The installation of ancillary equipment and associated minor works 2. The installations are deemed to be ‘Maintenance Activities’ pursuant to Division 4 of Schedule 3 of the Telecommunication Act 1997. Consent from council is not required in this instance. 3. The proposed infrastructure will comply with the ACMA EMR regulatory arrangements. 4. This consultation is undertaken in accordance with the requirements of Section 7 of the Mobile Phone Base Station Deployment Code C564:2020. 5. Further information and/or comments should be directed to: Community.Consultation@kordia.com.au or Kordia Solutions, 22 Taminga St Regency Park SA by 5pm Wednesday, 19th May 2021

12493783-NG19-21

RBP-24841

Ph: 0416 033 003 or 9338 3669 (AH)

One call, We do it all!

12400498-CG38-18

12372278-DJ47-17 12393815-SN30-18

All trees removed or Pruned All Stumps Removed Mulching & Mulch for sale!

FREE SMOKE ALARM

Roof Restoration Specialists

NEED NEW STAFF?

Get 10% Discount Use code: EMPDISC

Fill your position online ZZZ QHWZRUNFODVVL´HGV FRP DX

ZZZ QHWZRUNFODVVL´HGV FRP DX

WWW.MEDWEST.COM.AU

TREE & STUMPMASTERS

PH: 9360 5357 Mobile: 0412 378 193

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12415851-JV16-19

C & D Schroeder 9337 3695 or 0415 816 882

ALL SUBURBS ★ RAISING ★ LEVELLING ★ UNDERPINNING ★ RESTUMPING WITH CONCRETE OR REDGUM STUMPS ★ COUNCIL PERMIT ★ ALL WORK GUARANTEED

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TRUCK DRIVER

Established Co. in Western suburbs is looking for an experienced: s 4IPPER 4RUCK $RIVER WITH (# ,ICENCE s 2OAD 2ANGER EXPERIENCE s -UST HAVE EXPERIENCE KNOW HOW IN 4RUCK $OG QUARRY WORK 4HE SUITABLE PERSON MUST BE lT RELIABLE mEXIBLE TO WORK A DAY WEEK AND REQUIRED TO DO OVERTIME Excellent pay and penalty rates apply.

0412 273 217

Brian Stanton 0418 107 356

Trees Pruned Reshaped Grubbed out. All Foliage/Rubbish Removed Fully Insured $10m Pensioner Discount

NICK’S RE-BLOCKING SERVICE

Guaranteed to beat any genuine written quote

NATURAL PLUS

7 days, 9.30am - 9.30pm. 5 City Place, Sunshine. Phone 9311 0198.

Positions Vacant

TIPPER

PLACE YOUR

Tree Cutting Stump Removal Branch Trimming Commercial & Residential Fully Insured

Free Quote 7 Day Service 45 yrs exp.

MEMBER OF MASTER BUILDERS ASSOCIATION

s Computer Levelling s Council permits supplied s Stumps for new extension s Engineers plans s FULLY INSURED Free Quote and advice

RELAXATION 219 Ascot Vale Rd, 3032. Phone 9370 2208.

ANY TREES LOPPED

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Registered Building Practitioner

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Full Body Massage

www.cheapnneattreeservices.com.au Email: Stanton@cheapnneat.com.au

Reblocking/Underpinning

EXPERT

• • • • •

Health And Fitness

Garage Sales

12340308-HM08-17

WWW CRAIGSGAS COM

Tree Lopping/Surgery

FREE QUOTES A/H: 9374 4111

12432907-SG47-19

s 'ENERAL PLUMBING NO JOB TO SMALL s ,EAKING 4APS 4OILETS s "ATHROOM +ITCHEN ,AUNDRY s (OT 7ATER 2EPAIR 2EPLACEMENT

Reg No 8659

Open 7 days

48 Davies Avenue, Sunshine North 9364 0770 SWA6566B V

Servicing your area for over 20 years

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$100/ 30mins

Plasterers

Plumbing

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Rainbow Dolls

✮Plastering work including wall & ceiling repairs, internal & external ✮Will install & supply ceiling roses, cornices & archways ✮Free quotes Call Peter 9375 4931 or 0414 412 840 V

Adult Services

Employment

12400545-LB38-19

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Rubbish Removal

1235322622-PB22-17

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General Classifieds

HIFU HIGH FREQUENCY ULTRASOUND FACE LIFTING $440 FOR FULL FACE AND NECK 12493812-SN19-21

Target local candidates for your workplace Call our classified team on


Otway Lounge Chair

Otway Table & Armchairs Otway Sofa & Johanna Ottomans

Johanna Occasional Chair & Otway Side Table

Frame Living System (Wall) & Glenaire Chairs

Australian designed and made. Kett furniture exemplifies quality in design, craftsmanship and comfort. Tables in solid timber or with marble or ceramic top. Chairs and sofas upholstered in fabric or leather and the exceptional Frame Living entertainment system. Experience the best in Australian furniture. On sale now.

Exclusive to

Level 6, 600 Church Street, Richmond| 03 9281 1999 1/337 Bay Road, Cheltenham | 03 9532 0464 www.coshliving.com.au


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