Domain Review Stonnington & Boroondara - March 15, 2023

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PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE

MARCH 15-21, 2023

NGAIIRE

SINGING WITH THE ORCHESTRA

LIBBI GORR

ON TOUGH TALK & TOUGHER TIMES

SHOP HEAVEN

TAKING ON THE PROJECT GEORGIE TU N N Y & SA R A H H A RRIS

STONNINGTON & BOROONDARA

A NEW GEELONG POP-UP


C o mp i l e d b y J E M I M A H C L E G G

The editor’s desk

PARKER BLAIN

Taking over from someone who is almost synonymous with the role they do is no easy feat. Adam Lambert taking over from Freddie Mercury springs to mind, or perhaps Sarah Ferguson taking over from Leigh Sales. So, when Carrie Bickmore announced she was leaving The Project, all eyes were on the two women taking permanent seats on the panel. They are our cover stars, Georgie Tunny and Sarah Harris, two outstanding journalists who found they are more alike than they first realised. They told us about their friendship and how they are navigating their new roles. ●

TUSCAN LOVE \ Bonnie and Neil’s new collection,

STAY BALANCED \ Albert Park’s Filly’s Stable

Florence, is inspired by the Italian town’s colours and

has revamped its store and rebranded as Stable,

flora. The range includes linens as well as side tables,

showcasing brands such as By Far Official, Missoni and

glassware and tote bags. ● bonnieandneil.com.au

shoes by Victoria Beckham. ● fillysstable.com.au

THE EDIT Things we love about Melbourne

OUR COVER \ Georgie Tunny and Sarah Harris. Photographed by Kristoffer Paulsen

MORE TO LOVE ONLINE Go to domain.com.au/domain-review General inquiries \ editorial@domain.com.au Editor \ Jemimah Clegg 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

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.

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STONNINGTON & BOROONDARA

Editorial producer \ Hailey Coules

BENTO BLING \ Lunch shouldn’t be boring or break

WITH THE FLOW \ New Half Acre head chef Dean

the bank – and the team at Yakimono on Collins Street

Little brings Feast and Flow to South Melbourne, with a

knows it. You can grab a bento box for less than $30

buffet brunch or lunch and bottomless drinks. Available

during the work week. ● yakimono.com.au

on weekends for $98 a head. ● halfacre.com.au


SHOPPING

Feels like home

Emma Hawkins of Homegrown Kids.

A cosy pop-up shop featuring local online brands is set to open in Geelong. Wo r d s KI M WI L S O N

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nline shopping for beautiful, locally designed and crafted products boomed during the early days of COVID-19 and has continued to grow in popularity. Female-led Australian brands, in particular, resonated with shoppers stuck at home with time to stop and consider their shopping habits, the provenance of the products they were purchasing and the power of supporting local labels. Now a dynamic group of creatives is joining forces to give their loyal

customers – and a new audience – the chance to see, touch and experience their products in an immersive, home-like setting. Emma Hawkins’ stunning baby and children’s wear label Homegrown Kids has been available exclusively online for four years but will be available for the first time in the unique store in Geelong, which is open for two weeks from March 20. She will be joined by other brands: Iris & Wool, an Australian fashion brand producing luxury designs from

100 per cent merino wool; In Good Company, a high-end Armadale furniture and design company; Carlotta + Gee, offering high-quality linen, bedding, and homewares; PHYLLi Designs, creating boutique custom-made and ready-to-wear hats; and Nonna’s Grocer, a concept studio which has a range of fruitinspired candles. “We want people to feel excited to go shopping and be in the world again,” Hawkins says. “There’s nothing like being able to see and feel a product with your own hands and eyes and to hear insights directly from the people who made the item. “We’ve carefully curated this immersive experience and brought together our favourite like-minded

brands, in the name of reinvigorating IRL [in real life] shopping. “This is a group of female-led, small Australian brands that all have drive and all want to deliver the best and most unique products to their client base.” Georgie Cavanagh, co-founder of Carlotta + Gee, is responsible for bringing the brands together for the concept store at The KO Creative Studio in Geelong, just an hour from Melbourne. “We are an e-commerce business however it is so important we have a connection with our clients. This is why we have been so committed to bring this experience of a concept store to life,” Cavanagh says. PHYLLi design founder Laura Hall says visitors can book ahead to have a custom hat made on location. She says customers value sustainability “as well as how the product wears over time”. Iris + Wool creator Emily Riggs, says consumers are becoming more conscious of where they shop “The customer wants to know what they are wearing and where it has come from, and rural businesses like mine are in a great position to be able to do that,” Riggs says. The Concept Store is also collaborating with stylist Fleur Wood, child sleep consultant Bianca Burge and interior designer Rebecca Jansma to present a series of free workshops centred on the themes of comfort, style and home. “I will be hosting our baby sleep workshop with expert Bianca from Plan B Sleep Consulting,” Hawkins says. “I love that we are including workshops on top of our shopping experience ... it gives people a chance to connect, learn and take more than just our products home. “They take home an experience and knowledge, too.” ● THE CONCEPT STORE \ The KO Creative Studio Geelong, March 20 to April 2 ● theko.com.au

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DANIEL SEGAL

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t’s been a big couple of months for Ngaiire. Back in November, about 5000 punters packed into the Sydney Opera House forecourt to hear the singer perform with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. This month, she joins forces with the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra for a gala gig at The Arts Centre. Given this sudden shift in scale (Ngaiire is more used to playing intimate concerts with her modestsized band) you could forgive her the odd flash of nerves. “I don’t know if you’ve ever jumped out of a plane,” Ngaiire says. “But there’s a moment of you going, ‘oh my god, oh my god’, and then just surrendering to the free fall. That’s exactly how it felt, playing with the orchestra.” She is still buzzing from the November gig, which she describes as a “pinch me” moment. Certainly, there’s a dreamlike vibe to colliding the worlds of classical music with Ngaiire’s left-field brand of R&B. It’s the esoteric meets the establishment. “You’re taking these two different camps, melding them together and seeing if anything will stick,” she says. “You’ve got the orchestra, who are used to reading everything that’s in front of them, and then you have my band, who are very much play by feel and very groove orientated. You have to make those elements sing together.” Did Ngaiire – who is known for her spectacular stage outfits – feel the need to expand her presence, given the size of her new backing band? “I definitely feel like the orchestra commands something within me that I’d never really accessed before,” she says. “I almost respect what I’m doing a lot more.” It’s possible she is also finding a way to more easily be herself on stage. She was crippled by shyness as a child, she says, so much so that her mum had no idea her daughter could sing until she walked into Ngaiire’s first gig.

Her time to shine MUSIC Ngaiire is taking her soulful songs to

a new level, performing them with the MSO. Wo r d s M Y K E B A R T L E T T

To spend half an hour with Ngaiire today is to be taken with how free, frank and funny she is, which should be no surprise to anyone familiar with the lyrical honesty of her latest album, 3. But it is still a little jarring – and a little wonderful – to find someone so determinedly human behind the flamboyant performer. “I think at the start, I wanted my costumes to be bigger and louder and bolder, to be a kind of armour for me going out on stage. As I’ve gotten older and started performing songs like Him, it doesn’t matter what I’m wearing. I almost don’t want to have anything else other than me and a piano. It has to be honest and direct.” That directness might finally be connecting Ngaiire with a larger audience. The PNG-born star rose to fame on Australian Idol in 2004, but went on to make music that, unlike the usual post-reality TV pop, refused to be pigeon-holed. “It has had its challenges, being an artist who doesn’t like to be categorised. But I think that’s essentially what creativity should be. You should be able to experiment and discover and explore.” Does she feel, having fronted two state orchestras, like she might have finally broken through? “Yeah, after the Sydney Symphony show, I felt like I could die the next day and be happy,” she laughs. Ngaiire hopes her new audience gets a sense of how transformative these shows have been for her. “I hope that what they go away with is how much it means for someone like me as a Papua New Guinean … who has never felt like she’d fit into any kind of mould. “But on top of that, I hope that they go away feeling that life is a little lighter for them. If I can do that for a portion of the audience, then my job is done.” ● NGAIIRE X MSO \ Hamer Hall, Saturday March 18. ● mso.com.au


EVENTS

Broadcaster Libbi Gorr is back tackling tricky topics. Wo r d s JA N E R O C CA

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ibbi Gorr is talking and texting at the same time, sending me a photo of her bathroom wallpapered in a new palm tree Catherine Martin print. It’s the renovation the media personality has been able to focus on since departing the ABC Radio Melbourne and Victoria Weekend programs in December 2021, after a 15-year tenure. Gorr took a leap of faith to do what felt right when she quit the AM dial to pursue other creative outlets, but it also aligned with the sudden death of her brother in October of the same year. Now she’s easing her way back into the limelight, doing what she does best – starting conversations. As the host of Bold Conversations taking place at Malthouse Outdoor Stage, Gorr invites special guests to discuss everything from their career choices to life’s big questions. This week she turns to good friend Julia Zemiro to take part in a panel discussion titled My Favourite Failure, which also includes Australian philosopher Peter Singer, comedian He Huang and First Nations comic Dane Simpson. On March 28, she stirs the proverbial with an insightful discussion titled Young People Shit Me, Old People Shit Me. Panel guests include Osher Gunsberg, Gardening Australia presenter and author Mary Moody and new comedy talent Scout Boxall.

“Leaving the ABC as a contract broadcaster was a difficult thing to do, but it was time.”

Speaking boldly “The aim of the show is to work out who would I want to start a conversation with. I made a list of people I would want at a dinner party and it steamrolled from there,” Gorr says. “The guests had to be people who had something to say, who could provoke but with an outcome that was still uplifting and progressive.” Gorr says her departure from her ABC role forced her to practise what she frequently urged her listeners to do. “Sunday mornings revolved around a lot of conversations in how to empower yourself,” she says.

“Leaving the ABC as a contract broadcaster was a difficult thing to do, but it was time. When I look back at everything I have done in my career to this point, I feel proud and what had to come next had to be fulfilling, because I am not done yet. “I had my kids in my 40s, so there’s a good chance I’ll be working to the age of 73 like other Australians as we adapt to this contemporary work life,” Gorr says. She knows the power of a conversation and its ability to heal. But so, too, is taking time to do the other things that matter in life.

“We needed to finish the home renovation – we had never done that before,” she says. “I also had a lot of healing to be done after losing my brother. I see everything as a bonus in life, but the rupture that the loss of a sibling brings, you don’t get over these things. It is still fresh for me. “I discovered all the things I urged the listeners to do and to be resourceful over the years, that it was time for me to do that for myself. “You can’t be on the wireless and pretend to be Oprah on crack dishing out advice ... when shit hits the fan in your own world, you can’t pretend you don’t need to take the time – you need to do it.” ● LIBBI GORR’S BOLD CONVERSATIONS \ Malthouse Theatre, until March 28. ● malthousetheatre.com.au

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The start of a beautiful friendship Georgie Tunny and Sarah Harris have formed a close bond while working on The Project. Georgie Tunny and Sarah Harris.

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COVER STORY

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oining The Project as its newest panel host this year, Sarah Harris, formerly of Studio 10, has found her Melbourne family. She’s bonding over dinner and board games at co-host Waleed Aly’s house while also getting to know fellow Queenslander and millennial sidekick Georgie Tunny. While Tunny and Harris haven’t spent much time on set together, they bond at airports in between flights, the occasional wine in hand and a cheery vent about how they keep up the energy working such long days. “We hadn’t worked together before, and it’s one of my favourite times of life and career so far,” says Tunny, who moved back to Melbourne last year with her fiance, theatre star Robert Mills. “Sarah is such a beautiful human; so talented and generous with her time. We can chat about anything personal or work-related, and being a fellow Queenslander, we have this spiritual connection, and our bond is down pat.” Harris, a mother of two who commutes to Melbourne from Sydney every Thursday to Sunday, is getting used to the juggle. “I see Georgie as my little sister,” she says. “I am 10 years older than her, but we have the same news backgrounds and she’s such a gun at her job. I think the fact we’re both relaxed, hard-working and easy-going gals makes a sweet combination for a friendship too.” She has swapped a 4.45am alarm clock start for evening television, and is finally out of the jet-lag fog. “I used to do four-hour live television every morning, so switching the day and flipping my schedule wasn’t easy, but I am at the equaliser stage now,” Harris says.

Before working together on The Project, Harris and Tunny were social media friends. “I met Sarah at the Logies a few years ago; she’s good friends with my fiance,” Tunnny says. “We had known of each other and would always send messages to one another commenting that I loved what she did here or there, and she’d do the same back. Our friendship was always online, but now we get to do it real life, which is the best thing ever.” Tunny, is now a regular host on The Project and admits she’s living her best life, having recently interviewed Grammy Award-winning pop star Sam Smith while in Adelaide, and actor Orlando Bloom.

to pick up a cue when Tunny has forgotten a word mid-interview – which she says is usually as simple as an “and” or “then”. And, Tunny says, “The more that I am in a studio with Sam Taunton or Sarah, I know how to read their looks and it’s helpful when interviews don’t go well or timing is wrong. “There will be those heart-beating moments but it’s about trusting your co-hosts – and getting to know them before the show and outside of it.” Harris and Tunny are career journalists with a sixth sense for news that comes naturally to them. Tunny originally moved to Melbourne in 2017 to work on ABC News Breakfast, and it was during

“We hadn’t worked together before, and it’s one of my favourite times of life and career.” GEORGIE TUNNY

“The Sam Smith interview was a pinch me moment,” she says. “I was like, how is this my job? And Orlando Bloom, well I was such a Lord of the Rings nerd and loved Legolas, and love British crime shows ... to hear him say my name was weird but so cool at the same time.” Tunny says it’s her “people by proxy” approach to interviewing that makes her relatable on camera. “I treat my interviews like I am at the pub having lunch with them. In the case of Orlando Bloom, I’d be like, so tell me about the time you got murdered in Midsomer Murders.” Nothing is off limits between the hosts either. Harris is always there

this time that an avid television viewer got in touch. “Robert [Mills] slid into my DMs and told me he loved watching me on “brekkie”‘ and asked if I needed a tour guide,” Tunny says. “I had been in Melbourne for six months and didn’t know anyone, so I took him up on the offer.” Harris says being able to get into investigative news stories again is a thrill of the new gig. “The Project is snappier and a slicker show to be part of,” she says. “We cram a lot in an hour and it’s high energy and high stakes. “Being able to get back on the road and my teeth into stories to do juicy

interviews again is great; it’s a dream job for me.” Some say it’s a new era for The Project – a show that has tapped the youth market since 2009. But since the departure of big names such as Lisa Wilkinson, Carrie Bickmore and Peter Helliar, all eyes are watching what might happen next. “I know that the new team is often referred to as the changing of the guard, but I say it’s the audience that is changing,” Tunny says. “Nobody really knows what will appeal to younger audiences now, and I think it’s still a market we are all trying to figure out. “It’s the TikTok generation, but people continue to do them a disservice. Young people are still smart, they do have an attention span to look at long-form stories but they like news bites too. “I think critical analysis is key with the younger generation and our show does that well because we love to have a discussion about big topics. “I feel other news shows miss that boat entirely,” she adds. Back in Sydney, Harris’s sevenyear-old son just noticed Mum on a billboard and asked her if she was a celebrity now. “Being a parent has changed my focus in life. I want to make my boys proud but I don’t really think they know what I do,” Harris says. “I don’t get much from seeing myself on a billboard; I just want my kids to know their mum has worked her guts out to provide for them and make sure they are happy. “I am separated and, as any working mum in media knows, you don’t get to have it all, all at once. ● THE PROJECT \ 6.30pm weeknights and Sundays, Network Ten.

Wo r d s JA N E R O C CA ● Ph o t o K R I S T O F F E R PAU L S E N

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FEATURE HOUSE ARMADALE \ 5 BARKLY AVENUE 4

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A white picket fence, shady verandah, and decorative glass around the panelled front door … this home has all the warmth and grace of the Victorian era made contemporary by a clever design at the rear that takes advantage of northern light and sunshine. Period features emphasise the history of the home and add charm to the original section. Four bedrooms, the family bathroom and a study open off the hall, which has double arches with decorative corbels. Deep skirting boards, decorative cornices, ceiling roses and original pine floors also feature throughout these rooms. Attic storage is accessed from the hallway. Three of the bedrooms have open fireplaces with castiron inserts and decorative mantels, and three have built-in wardrobes. The main has a shower en suite. At the rear of the house, a clever stepped design brings in maximum light. The well-equipped fawn and white kitchen is opposite a decked courtyard, and sliding doors open wide for entertaining. The family area, with a gas log fireplace, opens to the rear paved terrace on one side and has a window to the decked courtyard on the other. The terrace steps up to a large and private garden shaded by two beautiful mature trees. This versatile home has heating and cooling, including heated floors in the two bathrooms, and a Euro laundry. The home is close to everything that makes Armadale one of Melbourne’s prized blue-chip areas. Like many early suburbs, development was slow until the railway line was

FINAL WORD

established in the 1870s, but then it was settled largely by Melbourne’s wealthy and middle class. Many of the

“AN ATTRACTIVE DOUBLE-FRONTED VICTORIAN IN THE HEART OF ARMADALE –

substantial homes and grand public structures survive in

IT DOESN’T GET MUCH BETTER.” CARLA FETTER – AGENT

handsome tree-lined streets. The cafes, restaurants and shopping of Glenferrie Road are nearby, and the address is zoned for Malvern Central School for prep to year 6, and also Auburn High School. Many of Melbourne’s prestigious independent schools are easily accessible. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON property@domain.com.au

Agent: Jellis Craig, Carla Fetter 0423 738 644 Price: $2.4 million-$2.6 million Auction: 1pm, March 25

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


HAWTHORN EAST \

walk-in wardrobe, and there are two more

160 VICTORIA ROAD

bedrooms on this level. Upstairs are two bedrooms, a bathroom and a study. The

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PRAHRAN \ 37 ST EDMONDS ROAD

across the three levels. Contemporary interiors include a Miele-appointed kitchen,

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contemporary section at the rear is large

oak flooring and European laundry. It is close to all the amenities of Chapel and

and glamorous, with a marble kitchen and

With a triple-level sky window void, this

Greville Streets, including public transport,

Grand and sophisticated, this large home

butler’s pantry, and the living and dining

light-filled oasis offers retreat living in a

and, unusually for the area, the property

is seriously appealing, with superb period

area is filled with light. An outdoor kitchen,

desirable lifestyle epicentre. It is wrapped

also has a tandem garage with additional

features and beautiful contemporary areas.

wide terrace and pool make entertaining

in a blanket of relaxing greenery, the

off-street parking for a third car. ●

For example, the sitting room’s bay window

easy. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON

facade is draped in climbing vines, which

and French doors to the return verandah

also adorn the first-floor terrace, which

are trimmed with delicate leadlight and

flows from the open-plan living, while the

JOANNE BROOKFIELD

unusual fretwork, and the room has four

Agent: Marshall White,

ground-floor bedroom has its own private

levels of cornice. In the dining room, the

Nikki Van Gulick 0419 325 911

garden. Another bedroom is on the mid-

Agent: Biggin & Scott,

fireplace is an alcove decorated with a

Price: $4.6 million-$4.8 million

level, while the main bedroom, with its own

Daniel Ashton 0408 078 515

fretwork arch. The main bedroom looks out

Expressions of interest: Close 6pm,

north-facing balcony, occupies the entire

Price: $1.7 million-$1.87 million

to the front garden and has an en suite and

March 20

top floor, creating zoned personal spaces

Auction: 10.30am, March 25

BURWOOD EAST \

undercover outdoor dining space, ground-

GLEN IRIS \ 11 BOYANDA ROAD

in pantry, Miele appliances and excellent

62 NEWHAVEN ROAD

floor theatre room and upstairs retreat provide additional living areas. The home is

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storage. The upstairs bedroom has built-in

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large enough to house a separate laundry.

wardrobes, an en suite and a balcony. The house has open fireplaces, storage and

The main bedroom includes a dressing

Built in the 1920s on about 1045 square

workshop in the garage, ducted heating,

Offering expansive family living with a

room and fully tiled dual-vanity en suite

metres of land, this sparkling elevated

air-conditioning and a ducted vacuum

touch of opulence is this double-storey

with a free-standing bath, while a double

home is large, light and impressive with

system. The house is close to schools,

house, close to several elite schools. With

auto garage has a workshop and internal

arched windows and art deco elements.

shopping and transport. ●

oak parquetry floors throughout and stone

entry. ● JOANNE BROOKFIELD

At the front of the home, the sitting

BEVERLEY JOHANSON

finishes, the generously sized floor plan is

room and reading room, both with open

enhanced by the three-metre-high ceilings

fireplaces, are on the right of the entry; the

on ground level, with a soaring double-

main bedroom with en suite and walk-in

height void filling the living and dining zones

wardrobe, and a study are on the left. The

Agent: Marshall White,

with natural light. Behind the kitchen lies

Agent: McGrath, Ellie Gong 0430 434 567

rumpus room, or bedroom, and living room

Hugh Tomlinson 0409 427 483

what is effectively a second concealed

Price: $1.9 million-$2.09 million

look out to the paved rear terrace and

Price: $3.7 million-$3.9 million

kitchen with a walk-in pantry, while an

Auction: 11am, March 25

garden. The large white kitchen has a walk-

Auction: 2pm, March 18

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9525 9222 204 Balaclava Road, Caulfield North 14

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www.rodneymorley.com.au

515 Toorak Road, Toorak

9826 0000


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Offering peace and beauty in the heart of Brighton, FiftyTwo Black is a collaboration of world-renowned designers including Nicholas Day and Jack Merlo, with New York’s Gregory Tuck and Meg Sharpe. With graciously house-like proportions, this unique collaboration has been designed with a private and elevated lifestyle in mind. RH branded furnished residences, the first in Australia. Only one available, enquire now to move in within 4 weeks. CONTACT Alex Bragilevsky 0478 401 247 | Kelgend Winters 0439 434 449

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6 Parslow Street, Malvern

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1

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550m2 Approx.

View – Wednesday and Saturday 12:00 – 12:30pm Stunning brand new family home built to the highest standards by luxury building specialists RK Developers showcases spectacular four bedroom, five bathroom accommodation full of Northern light with multiple living areas, seamless indoor/outdoor entertaining with pool, home office, gym, theatre room, high ceilings, private lift, excellent storage, sustainable technologies, smart control and basement garage for five cars. Perfectly positioned on a wide tree lined street surrounded by premier homes just a short stroll to Malvern Gardens and vibrant local cafes.

EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST Closing, Mon 3rd April at 1:00pm

Mark Wridgway – 0419 510 777 Yvette Laws – 0448 166 872 DOM A IN REV IEW

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2 Mountain Grove, Kew

5A

3B

4C

4D

1G

Sackville Ward prestige with no heritage overlay Auction: Saturday 1st April at 12pm Inspect: As advertised or by appointment 28

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Jonathon O'Donoghue Richard Winneke Maria Xu

0412 745 707 0418 136 858 0411 491 089


25 Empress Road, Surrey Hills

4A

2B

2C

3D

Poolside Entertaining in Prized Pocket Auction: Saturday 25th March at 12pm Inspect: As advertised or by appointment

David Banks Ross Stryker Allan Forde

0422 868 410 0401 318 772 0400 892 241 DOM A IN REV IEW

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6 Viewbank Road, Glen Iris

5A

3B

8C

A pinnacle of family living & entertaining Auction: Saturday, 25th March at 12:00pm Inspect: Thursday 11-11:30am & 6-6:30pm, Saturday 11-11:30am

John Morrisby Tim Bennison Will Bennison

0411 875 476 0418 332 865 0438 572 371

AUCTION THIS SATURDAY

31 Clive Road, Hawthorn East

4A

5B

4C

2D

1G

Contemporary luxury on a grand scale Auction: Saturday 18th March at 12:00pm Inspect: Inspect as advertised or by appointment 30

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Lachie Fraser-Smith Richard Winneke Gaby Carr

0418 399 182 0418 136 858 0407 465 548


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CLIFTON

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03 9482 6400

OPEN 7 DAYS

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GEELONG 03 8538 6898

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