Brisbane News Magazine June 21-27, 2017 ISSUE 1133

Page 1

PEOPLE EVENTS FOOD FASHION TRAVEL HOMES

JUNE 21-27 2017 ISSUE 1133 brisbanenews.com.au

STRIPE

FORCE Wardrobe staples to get you noticed

People

Artists capture city’s splendour

Food

Gabriel Gate’s French fancy

Home

Cool buys for kids

TAKE A PEEK INSIDE SOUTHEAST QUEENSLAND’S PRESTIGE PROPERTIES


WAREHOUSE & SAMPLE SALE MENS | WOMENS | KIDS

23rd - 25th June 2017 FRIDAY 7AM - 7PM

SATURDAY 7AM - 5PM

SUNDAY 9AM - 4PM

UP TO 80% OFF (%0  !1.&0  $&01 $%"&/ (/ * 1 (%/*0 %(( .1 *

SHED 9, RNA SHOWGROUNDS GREGORY TERRACE, BOWEN HILLS QLD 4006

PARKING AVAILABLE ONSITE RNA FEES APPLY . γθ ϕρκκ νιιι


HELLO 03

Tuesday (Jun 20) is the 25th birthday of South Bank Parklands. It’s hard for me to picture a Brisbane without this particular oasis proudly sunbaking itself on the banks of our wide, brown river. However, images such as the one on this page, dug from the State Library of Queensland’s archives, remind me that this city is a master of reinvention. It’s fascinating to read in Phil Brown’s feature (P12) how artists, over time, have interpreted and reflected back to us this constant process of adaptation. Tonya Turner has found a house in Paddington (P29) that is a harbinger of the future, designed completely around a new family paradigm. The glorious idea of never again ferrying neatly folded piles of clean laundry to a wardrobe ... bliss. Less time on housework means more time with the family, and I can recommend spending some of that watching Despicable Me 3 (reviews, P18). The film’s villain is a throwback to the 1980s and it’s rad fun to laugh heartily at how time has changed fashion, music, vocab – everything.

THEN & NOW 1890, city: One of the many incarnations of Victoria Bridge (above) connecting the CBD to South Bank, this 1874-built version replaced a wooden one that rotted and fell into the river in 1867. Three years after this image was taken, the bridge was washed away by floods. Another was opened in 1897 then demolished in 1969 to be replaced by the Victoria Bridge we know today (left). A plan was floated late last year to close it to general traffic. See the petition at http://bit.ly/2qOeC7J Picture: State Library of Queensland

editor@brisbanenews.com.au

CONTENTS

BRISBANE NEWS

EDITOR Amanda Horswill

ADVERTISING Ph: 3666 7441

THE LIST ...................................................... 6 LIFE .......................................................... 10 FEATURE ................................................... 12 GOING OUT ............................................... 15 RESTAURANT ............................................ 16 TRAVEL ...................................................... 19 FASHION ................................................... 24 AT HOME ................................................. 29 REAL ESTATE ........................................... 36

brisbanenews.com.au

editor@brisbanenews.com.au

advertisebrisbanenews@news.com.au REAL ESTATE Ph: 3666 6300

Cover image: David Kelly. Stylist: Annabel Falco. Full credits, P24.

DEPUTY EDITOR Leesa Maher

Instagram @BrisbaneNewsMagazine

leesa.maher@news.com.au

DELIVERY INQUIRIES

Facebook

Cnr Mayne Rd & Campbell St, Bowen Hills, Qld 4006 Ph: 3666 8888

For a map of where to find copies, go to brisbanenews.com.au

BrisbaneNewsMagazine

Ph: 3623 3828 distribution@qst.newsltd.com.au

This publication is bound by the Standards of Practice of the Australian Press Council. If you believe the standards may have been breached, you may approach Brisbane News itself or contact the council by email at info@presscouncil.org.au or by phone (02) 9261 1930. Brisbane News is committed to accurate and fair reporting. But it acknowledges and aims to correct errors promptly when they occur. If you are aware of an error, contact the editor at: editor@brisbane.news.com.au or phone (07) 3666 8888.

FURNITURE • HOMEWARE • FASHION

NOW OPEN 311 - 319 Gympie Rd Kedron, 4031 (Former Ellaways Piano Store)

OPEN 7 DAYS ON STREET PARKING

07 3359 3952 www.vogelhaus.com.au



THE CHAT

One step at a time Fiona Purdon At 24, Francesca Hayward has the world at her feet. The Londoner has been hailed as the next big thing in British ballet, and is on her way to Brisbane to star with The Royal Ballet on tour. It has taken 15 years to lure the ballet company, considered to be among the world’s best, back here for QPAC’s International Series. Francesca says she was “shocked” when she was upgraded to a lead role late last year. “I wouldn’t have believed I would be a principal at my age, it’s crazy,” she says. “My friends and family would not let me get big-headed – they make sure I stay grounded. “I have a strong mind, which has helped me stay focused and calm when I take a challenge like this. “I’ve had to learn not be freaked out by big roles … and to take it all one step at a time, quite literally.” Born in Kenya, she moved to Worthing in West Sussex, England, when she was two, where she was raised by her grandparents. It was in their lounge room that she watched her first ballet video, a clip from The Nutcracker. The young Francesca immediately got up and started to dance, using an armchair as her pretend partner. Within a year she was enrolled in dance classes and

YOUNG TALENT ... The Royal Ballet’s principal Francesca Hayward, who will perform in Brisbane. Picture: Rick Guest

when she was 11 she successfully auditioned for The Royal Ballet School in London. Now Francesca gets to partner some of the world’s best dancers including Australian principal Steven McRae, who will dance opposite her in the Brisbane production of Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale. Francesca will dance the role of Perdita, who is the daughter of Leontes, King of Sicilia, and his wife Hermione, who dies in childbirth. Perdita is given away by the heartbroken king and grows up unaware of her royal lineage. “It’s a great story,” she says. “Perdita grows up living with all the shepherds. She is living a simple life but she seems different from the rest. Then she finds out she is a princess.’’ Steven dances as her love interest Prince Florizel, who is the son of the King of Bohemia, Poixenes. “Steven is very intuitive, technically he is very strong, he helps his female partners to look and feel their best,” she says. Francesca will also feature in Woolf Works, based on writer Virginia Woolf’s most famous stories. Woolf Works, Jun 29-Jul 2, and The Winter’s Tale, Jul 5-9, $99-$249, The Royal Ballet, Lyric Theatre, QPAC, cnr Grey and Melbourne streets, South Brisbane. qpac.com.au

Brisbane’s largest selection of Hand woven Persian rugs, Afghani rugs, Kilim rugs, Tribal rugs, and Vintage rugs

at great prices

Buy direct from the importer

1/222 MONTAGUE ROAD, WEST END 4101 3846 2686 WESTENDCO.COM.AU OPEN TUES TO FRI 9:30 - 5:00PM, SAT 9:00 - 3:00PM & SUN 10:00 - 3:00PM

HAND WOVEN RUGS

05


06 THE LIST

1

HOMEWARES ANTIQUE AND COLLECTABLES FAIR, ALBION

Everything old is newly interesting again when dealers from around Australia get together for the second annual Albion antique fair.

Expect to find furniture, silver, jewellery, bric-a-brac and clocks. Don’t miss the world’s first showing of new Australian Design Moorcroft Pottery, and a chance to buy one of the limited edition pieces. Jun 23-25, $10, St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School hall, Ascot. albionantiquecollectablesfair.com.au

2

FUNDRAISER GALA DINNER, FORTITUDE VALLEY

3

LITERARY BOOKFEST, SOUTH BRISBANE

Eat, drink and raise funds for the Cancer Council Queensland at Cloudland. Hosted by Vince Sorrenti (above), and featuring comedian Jimeoin, this event is the brainchild of well-known entertainment booker Kev Somers, who is battling cancer. The $199 ticket covers a three-course meal and drinks. Raffle prizes include seats at sold-out shows, such as Ed Sheeran’s concert. Jul 1, 7pm.

Have the tome of your life at the state’s largest secondhand book sale. Browse the 4km of tables stacked with books on everything from fiction, history and travel to cookbooks and textbooks. And it isn’t just books – there are also magazines, records, puzzles, DVDs, CDs, vinyl records and board games. Don’t forget to take your own bags. On at the Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre, Jun 24-Jul 2.

moshtix.com.au

uccommunity.org.au/brisbane-bookfest


07

7 5

DRIVE EAT LOCAL WEEK, SCENIC RIM

Pick your own carrots at the state’s largest carrot farm, feed dairy cows and taste locally produced olives, wine and coffee from the Scenic Rim, 90 minutes drive from Brisbane, when the area’s producers open their gates for Eat Local Week, Jun 24-Jul 2. eatlocalweek.com.au

4 CRAFT MACRAME WORKSHOP, WOOLLOONGABBA

6 FOOD STONE AND WOOD LONG LUNCH, FORTITUDE VALLEY

Don’t tie yourself up in knots if you are new to macrame or not the crafty sort. This 2½-hour workshop on at Woolloongabba Antique Centre is suitable for beginners and you will walk away with your finished creation. The workshop covers the basics as well as how to apply the techniques in projects from jewellery to wall hangings. Two classes, Jun 25, $40, including materials.

Beer and barbecue are on the menu at a three-hour lunch at the Pig ’N’ Whistle Brunswick Street on Jun 24. Taste the 2017 Stone Beer, a winter brew made using ancient techniques. If you can’t get there, Clyde – Stone & Wood’s iconic Land Rover Defender, which has a tap system installed under its soft top – will be serving up ales in the beer garden, Jun 23-25.

woolloongabbaantiquecentre.com

pignwhistle.com.au/brunswick-street/

HISTORY GLADIATORS: HEROES OF THE COLOSSEUM, SOUTH BRISBANE

Step back in time for the Queensland Museum’s latest exhibition. This is an Australian exclusive international touring exhibition of more than 120 artefacts including actual pieces of the Colosseum and interactive games and displays that reveal who the gladiators were, where they lived and how they trained. $10.80-$18. Until Jan 28 next year. qm.qld.gov.au

your EOFY

Big car dealer discounts n PLUS youow could save every pay

benefits.remserv.com.au/car Things you need to know: This general information doesn’t take your personal circumstances into account. Please consider whether this information is right for you before making a decision and seek professional independent tax or financial advice. Conditions and fees apply, along with credit assessment criteria for lease and loan products. The availability of benefits is subject to your employer’s approval. RemServ may receive commissions in connection. Remuneration Services (Qld) Pty Ltd. | ABN 46 093 173 089 | Authorised Representative (No. 293159) of McMillan Shakespeare Limited (AFSL 299054).


AR Y HALF A YEARLY

ON SALE NOW!

2 DRAWERS IN FOOT-END

‘HALO’

QUEEN FABRIC BED WITH 2 DRAWERS HOT PRICE

$

649

• Soft, foam padded bedhead • Buttoned upholstery • Easy storage with full extension drawers • Available in Charcoal or Beige colours

‘CALIBRA’

SUPER PRICE

QUEEN BED FRAME

QUEEN BED FRAME

HOT PRICE

HOT PRICE

$

HOT PRICE

$

1499

1399

• Upholstered in Zepel ‘Expanding’ 09 Topiaca fabric • Features ‘Anegre’ veneer timber finish in Walnut colour • Choice of timber stains available

• Modern floating base • Unique spindle work bedhead • Rustic and handsome design

BUY ONE

UP

PILLOW FOR 19 GET ONE *3 FOR $1 $

In store only. Not to be used in conjunction with any other offer.

95

TO

% 50OFF

*2

AND

BATH TOWELS In store only. In stock only. Stock may vary from store to store.

FORTITUDE VALLEY, BRISBANE

Level 1, Homemaker The Valley, 1058 Ann St. 3620 6600 (Free underground parking)

354831_P01_FTV

‘SPINDLE’

Domayne ® stores are operated by independent franchisees. Ends 02/07/17. Some goods may not be on show or available at each Domayne ® franchised store. Accessories shown are not included. ^Lounges are upholstered in promotional leathers and fabrics. Other options may be available at an additional cost. . *1. Conditions of 50 Months Instalment Interest Free until July 2021: Available to approved GO MasterCard customers on transactions made between 26/05/17 and 02/07/17 where the amount financed is $750 or more. Offer available on purchases from Domayne franchises. Excludes gaming consoles, games, gift cards, Octopuss installation services, Microsoft Surface & Studio, Apple and Miele products. Excludes brands and other products that are offered for sale under agency agreements with Domayne franchises. Offer available on advertised or ticketed price. Total amount is payable by 50 approximate equal monthly instalments (exact amounts specified in your statement). If there is an outstanding balance after the interest free period ends in July 2021, interest will be charged at 29.49%. This notice is given under the GO MasterCard Conditions of Use, which specify all other conditions for thisoffer. A $25.00 Establishment Fee applies to new approved applicants. Account Service fee of $4.95 per month applies. Also available to existing CreditLine, Gem Visa and Buyer’s Edge customers. Refer to product websites for conditions, fees and charges. Credit is provided by Latitude Finance Australia (ABN 42 008 583 588). Australian Credit Licence 392145.


AY TH 26 D M LY N JU -2

2017

50 MONTHS INTEREST FREE

*1

MINIMUM FINANCED AMOUNT $750

• NO DEPOSIT • NO INTER EST

WITH 50 EQUAL MONTHLY

PAYMENTS UNTIL JULY 2021

Offer ends 02/07/17. Apply in store/online. Available for in-store and selected online purchases. Approved applicants only. Fees & charges apply. Interest applies if you do not comply with terms & conditions.

‘BYRON’

I CAN BE

EXPRESS DELIVERY *4 ON ALLOY OR COAL

CUSTOMISED

TO SUIT

HOT PRICE

$

789

3-SEATER FABRIC SOFA (W220 x H64 x D90cm)

HOT PRICE

$

SIZE | COLOUR | FABRIC

689

2-SEATER FABRIC SOFA (W160 x H64 x D90cm)

• Upholstered in Profile ‘Orion’ fabric Available in a range of colours and sizes^

‘MONACO’

GLASS TOP EXTENSION DINING TABLE

(W92 x H99 x D92-158cm) •Upholstered in genuine cowhide leather.

HOT PRICE

459ea

HOT PRICE

Available in White or Grey. ‘Fleur’ Chair with Timber Legs ONLY $169ea Also available: Extension Dining Table (W120-240 x H76 x D90) ONLY $599

PLUS SEE IN STORE FOR

UP TO

ELECTRIC RECLINING ACTION

LEATHER ELECTRIC RECLINER

(W90 x H76 x D90cm)

$

‘DUTCH’

COMPACT EXTENSION DINING TABLE!

$

989

Available in a range of leather colours^

60% OFF DISCONTINUED AND EX-DISPLAY OUTDOOR FURNITURE *2

IN STORE STOCK ONLY. HUGE RANGE TO CHOOSE FROM.

% 70OFF

*2

SCATTER CUSHIONS

Images are for illustrative purposes only. Styles may vary from store to store.

UP TO

% 60OFF

*2

SELECTED PRINTS & MIRRORS

Images are for illustrative purposes only. Styles may vary from store to store.

domay ne.com. au

354831_P02_FTV

UP TO

*2. Discounts are off the normal ticketed prices.*3. $1 items to be chosen from a selected range in store. Discounted item and full-priced item must be purchased in the same transaction. Terms and conditions apply. See in store for details.*4. Express delivery is normally within 7 working days on selected furniture orders only. Express delivery may be affected by material/configuration choice and freight delays. Terms and conditions apply, see in store for details.


10 LIFE

Phil Brown All I get when I imagine camping is people running into the bushes with toilet rolls I was talking to a taxi driver about camping the other day. Have you heard of this? People apparently voluntarily subject themselves to all sorts of discomfort, sleeping under canvas stretched on some sort of poles. Sounds ridiculous to me. You may gather that I am not a happy camper. The taxi driver, a German fellow with whom I have discussed the virtues of certain Teutonic sausages in the past, recounted his family camping trips to Italy and Denmark as a boy. He hasn’t camped since and I respect that. Discomfort is not something I seek out. I have friends who go camping all the time in all sorts of weather but I just don’t get it. They talk of it like it is some sort of romantic adventure but all I get when I imagine camping is images of people running into the bushes with toilet rolls. That’t not my idea of fun. I could probably put up with glamping. In fact I’d like to go on safari in Africa ... with a staff of say,

about 20 or so. I picture myself reclining in a deck chair (placed strategically in view of Mt Kilimanjaro) sipping tea while someone swats flies for me. In my fantasy I am, of course, wearing a pith helmet. This is probably a hangover from reading all those Ernest Hemingway stories when I was a teenager. We never camped as kids because my father was against it. Not on religious or ethical grounds. He just preferred hotels. Besides, he did enough camping in World War II in the jungles of Borneo. No wonder he didn’t like camping. The apple didn’t fall far from the tree with me because I’m a hotel guy too. Mind you, I have stayed in rustic wooden huts in the Himalayas and I once lived in a caravan at Monto for a couple of months. That’s nearly camping, right? I went on a camping trip when I was about 17, with a group of mates. It was a surfing safari to Angourie in

northern NSW. We pitched a few tents on the side of a hill and all I can remember is that when we woke up in the morning most of us seemed to have ended up outside the tents sleeping on the ground. The last camping trip I went on it rained so much that three of us ended up sleeping on top of our stuff in the back of my Holden station wagon, an old HD model that had a rusted tailgate which I eventually took to the wreckers. They gave me $50 for it. I once camped sitting up in the front seat of a car too, and woke in the morning unable to stand up. My wife occasionally makes noises about wanting to go camping but I look the other way and pretend that I haven’t heard. My son has been camping with school but he’s a lot like me. His idea of camping is staying in a four-star hotel rather than a five-star. It makes me so proud.

Belinda Seeney It’s often joked that winter in Brisbane only ever lasts about three days. Indeed, this envy-inducing climate of ours still has us in the pool in June, wearing T-shirts in July and cracking a sweat again by August. For those who missed it, I can confirm that winter this year fell on a Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Coincidentally, the same days I was loaned a stylish little convertible to zip around town. It may have been my imagination but it seemed that the sky darkened, rain threatened and the temperature dropped a full 10C the second the keys were placed in my eager little hands. On any of the 362 other days a year, the sleek soft-top sports car would seem custom-made for southeast Queensland. But on those three wintry days, it felt as though I’d wrapped myself in a sarong to stroll through a snowstorm. The best part about a convertible is driving with the top down – feeling the sun on your face, the wind in your

hair, and the jealous glares of other motorists. But shivering through my dark and dreary evening commute, I made a shrewd decision to keep my top on until the next day. The following morning I woke to discover the cold snap had stubbornly dug in its heels, greeting me with single-digit temperatures and a bitterly disappointed 11-year-old who desperately wanted to be dropped at school in a topless roadster. Tomorrow, I soothed, we’ll take the top down tomorrow. This is Brisbane, it’ll be balmy again in no time, I reassured her. Friday dawned frosty and frigid as I shuffled to the living room cloaked in a doona to check the Bureau of Meteorology. It declared the official temperature to be a crisp 8.8C but the fine print underneath admitted the icy truth: “Feels like 4.7,” it whispered. I bundled my dejected passenger into the sealed-up sports car,

promising her full control over the music selection as recompense. Here’s the funny thing about maternal love, though: When a child turns their puppy-dog eyes on you the icy exterior melts – metaphorically only, I was still frozen to my seat – and you find yourself doing the craziest things. In this instance it was tearing up the bitumen with the top down, buffeted by polar winds that froze my face and had me white-knuckling the steering wheel, prising my hands free at traffic lights to warm them by the car’s overworked heating vents. There were no jealous glares from fellow motorists that morning, just incredulous stares at the sight of a human ice sculpture and her beaming passenger braving the Siberian elements to the blaring battle cry of the Moana soundtrack.


BRADFORD SOLAR TESLA POWERWALL 2† SMART MONITORING

REVERSE CYCLE DUCTED AIR-CON* SINGLE OR DOUBLE STOREY FACADE RENDER #

FLOOR COVERINGS

+

TH E C H O I C E I S YO U RS

CARPET

&

TIMBER

OR / TILES

SINGLE STOREY $1,999^ DOUBLE STOREY $4,999^

LOVE WHERE YOU LIVE

Visit metricon.com.au for display locations or call 1300 metricon BN170621 ^The Designer ‘Luxury Living’ Powerwall, Air, Render, Flooring pack is not valid with any other promotion. Only available on new Designer by Metricon deposits from 30.03.17 for a limited time and is not redeemable for cash or credit at contract. †The Bradford Solar panels and Tesla Powerwall 2 battery offer only includes the products listed. Bradford reserves the right to replace products included in the package with new generation technology. All prices include the assignment of small scale technology certificates (STCs.) System purchase is eligible for STCs and Metricon Homes assign the rights to the STCs to Bradford Solar. *Air-con size, zones and outlets determined by home size and design. Size of unit, zones and outlets to be determined by Metricon. #Render to front facade of home as per standard plan only. Any structural extensions to the home may incur additional costs. +Exact floor areas for product allocation are dependent on home design, please refer to the floorplan guide for more information. For more information and full terms and conditions please visit www.metricon.com.au/ terms see ‘Queensland – Designer Luxury Living’. Image depicts items not supplied by Metricon namely landscaping and fencing. Image contains upgrade items not included in the Designer Living Pack. Offer includes items as listed above. For detailed home pricing, please speak to a New Home Consultant. Metricon Homes QLD Pty Ltd is licensed under the QBCC Act 1991 (QBCC Licence 40992), NSW Builders License 36654C.


12 FEATURE

Picture perfect

postcards From the colonial era to the present, an exhibition shows how artists have kept track of the city’s growth and colour Phil Brown

VIVID CANVAS … (From top) Maureen Hansen’s Perspective (1996); Vida Lahey’s Central Station 7am (1935); and Patrick Hockey’s Blue and white oriental vase (1984).

queensland, let’S keep talking Your comments, questions, and ideas help us improve and deliver a better service to Australians everywhere. Share your feedback, get the latest information and tips and help shape the future of Australia Post.

Visit community.auspost.com.au

If you’re an artist in Brisbane, you don’t have to look far for inspiration. The city offers rich subject matter and always has. If you dig into the Museum of Brisbane’s diverse collection you will find depictions of the city dating back to our colonial era and right through to the present. The museum’s current exhibition, Scenes of Our City, features works by 21 artists from the museum’s collection and another 20 from the collection of Gadens Lawyers, a Brisbane company that supports the museum and local artists. The result is an entertaining survey of Brisbane art by artists who have depicted the city in myriad ways. And by no means are all the works literal depictions of our city. Maureen Hansen is an award-winning and popular local artist who paints the cityscape. Her painting, Perspective, features colourful cushions, was done in 1996 and is a different take on life in Brisbane. “They are cushions collected in Brisbane op shops,” Maureen says. “They celebrate that kind of quirky Brisbane colour and they also

say something about the culture of making do, which is something we grew up with. It’s that countrytown mentality.” Brisbane, the big country town, has grown up though, and luckily contemporary artists such as Maureen have been chronicling that growth. Another of her paintings, Riparian 27 – which won her the Tattersall’s Club Landscape Art Prize in 2007 – was a view of the city from a high-rise tower. Recent works of hers, which featured in her exhibition at Heiser Gallery, depict the city viewed from her veranda at Everton Park. “These recent paintings are views framed by the arches on my veranda,” Maureen says. “From there I can see the city at night sparkling in the distance.” Maureen, 48, is one of “a little cluster” of artists who paint the city. That cluster includes Robert Brownhall, Nick Olsen, Jan Jorgensen, David Hinchliffe and Robyn Bauer, among others. Robert, Nick and Maureen all studied under the masterful William Robinson who gave Maureen some good advice. “Inspiration is always close at hand and Bill Robinson said that if you paint your life you can’t go


13

EVERYDAY EYE-OPENERS … (From top) New order (2009) by Karla Marchesi; artist Maureen Hansen, who says inspiration is always close at hand; Carroll’s Corner (2009) by Mel McRae; and He created a smokescreen to conceal his true identity (2008) by Sue Beyer.

wrong,” Maureen says. “I don’t have to look far for my inspiration.” In Scenes of Our City, Brisbane is interpreted in a variety of ways including portraiture, abstraction and more literal cityscapes. Robert Curtis’s Brisbane, Queensland, is a pencil-on-paper drawing of the city in 1928 and Margaret Olley’s Queensland Treasury Building is a 1947 painting of

an iconic city building. One of the hero pieces is Vida Lahey’s wonderful work, Central Station 7am (1935). Some substantial artists have painted our city over the years. Many cite the work of the great Lloyd Rees as a touchstone. Lloyd was born in Brisbane in 1895 and during his early working life in the city he recorded the Brisbane of his day in works considered a kind

of Holy Grail for local painters. Museum of Brisbane director Renai Grace, who curated Scenes of Our City, says the exhibition aims to give a historical and contemporary perspective and explores architectural and art history from the viewpoint of artists observing the hustle of daily life and changes to the urban landscape. “Brisbane has been shaped by our

subtropical climate, outdoor lifestyle and pivotal moments in its history,” Renai says. “The landscape has in turn provided an enduring source of inspiration for local and visiting artists. It’s interesting to see the works from Gadens and the works from the collection and how they interact.” Continued Page 14

Wine & Cheese Evening Join us for a glass of wine and meet our expert team of consultants. We will be joined by some of our key cruise and tour suppliers, so you will have the opportunity to speak directly to the representatives about their products.

When: Time: Where: rSVP:

THURSDAy 29TH JUnE 2017 5:30PM - 7:30PM GLOBAL JETSETTinG ASCOT OFFiCE, 3/31 ALExAnDRA ROAD, ASCOT 23RD JUnE 2017

Call Shelley on 3849 5268 or email shelley@globaljetsetting.com.au

ASCOT

MT GRAVATT

Shop 3, Oriel Park, 31 Alexandra Road, Ascot OLD 4007

Shop 6A, Mt Gravatt Plaza Cnr Logan & Creek Roads Mount Gravatt OLD 4122

Ph: 07 3849 5268

Ph: 07 3849 5268

Wendy McSwaine

Business Class, Luxury & Travel Specialist

Shelley Martin Cruise, Tour & Ski Specialist

Lyn Carter

European River Cruise, Tour & Ski Specialist

Valerie Ireland Family Holiday Specialist

Lilly Rutherford

Frequent Flyer Manager & Airfares Specialist

Sarah Ledwith Complex Round World Specialist

Visit us at www.globaljetsetting.com.au or call 07 3849 5268

Jaden-Leigh Parkes Luxury Travel & Honeymoon Specialist

Susie Cliff USA & Ski Specialist


14 FEATURE

From Page 13

SCENES OF OUR CITY Until Jul 16, Museum of Brisbane, Level 3, City Hall, King George Square, 10am-5pm daily, free. museumofbrisbane.com.au

STRUCTURAL MUSE … (From top) Robyn Bauer’s City and freeway (1979); Nick Olsen’s Pacific Highway north (2007); and Robert Curtis’s Brisbane, Queensland (1928).

RE FI LE RST A SE

Museum-goers are fascinated by the exhibition and Renai says 900 people a day have been viewing Scenes of Our City, which remains on show until next month. “People love it, “ Renai says. “They have their pictures taken in front of some works and I’ve taken pictures for people standing in front of paintings.” Everyone will have their favourites but by far the most popular work in the show is Mel McRae’s 2009 painting, Carroll’s Corner, a nostalgic painting of a spot in Fortitude Valley that speaks volumes about how Brisbane used to look before the advent of skyscrapers and motorways. But the advent of skyscrapers and motorways has given our artists new subject matter and inspiration. It took Jeffrey Smart’s famous 1962 painting, Cahill Expressway, to convince us that infrastructure could make good art. Brisbane painter Nick Olsen

recognises that too and in Scenes of Our City his painting, Pacific Highway north (2007), is a great example of how the seemingly prosaic can be transformed by an artist. “Even at art college I was fascinated by the industrial landscape around Brisbane,” Nick says. “I love warehouses and things like that. I love the light of Brisbane too. On some days we have this huge expanse of blue sky and the most amazing shadows.” Nick, 48, has painted quaint houses and streetscapes as well as freeways and says Lloyd Rees is an inspiration along with Margaret Olley and Vida Lahey and others who went before. We are lucky that we have a posse of painters here in Brisbane who are keeping the tradition of recording our city alive.

Your designer home set in a natural sanctuary awaits ...

STAGE 1 RELEASE

The beauty of nature and the convenience of modern amenities combine to create HIVE; a unique town home development in the heart of The Gap. Located just 10km from Brisbane’s CBD with a focus on community and the natural surrounds. · 3 and 4 Bedroom Town Homes priced from $599,000. · Located in a well established, village style residential suburb. · Set amongst a serene, protected nature reserve.

SALES DISPLAY NOW OPEN

62 Illowra Street, The Gap 10AM to 4PM, Wednesday to Saturday Or by Appointment

· Stunning open plan living flowing to private courtyards. · Short walk to local retail and convenient bus stops.

1300 108 502

hivethegap.com.au


15

REVIEW Thrilled to pizzas by family restaurant’s surprises

SNOW SHOW Enjoy winter wonderlands

Eyes on the prize Sarah Marshall “Are you a hugger or a shaker?” This disarming question is the first from gallery co-owner Robert Henderson. And if you say you’re a hugger, the 183cm artist, dressed in black and crowned with dreadlocks, will warmly oblige. It hasn’t always been this way for Robert. Born into a life of domestic violence and angst, he says he was following a very different trajectory. But he has chosen a particular path, and wants to use his energy for good. Last year, Robert, of the Wiradjuri people in NSW, opened The Henderson Gallery, at South Brisbane, a First Nations-owned, selffunded space that champions work by emerging artists and aims to help rehabilitate prisoners through art. “We wanted to create a safe space for people to experience and enjoy art regardless of their sexuality, cultural background or social status,” he says. Robert decided to pursue a fulltime career in art in 2011, after work in

DIFFERENT STROKES … Robert Henderson with his Archibald portrait entry of Cruel Sea’s Ken Gormly. Picture: Sarah Marshall

varied jobs such as prawn trawling and caring for terminally ill patients. In 2014, he started entering artworks in the Art Gallery of NSW Archibald Prize for portraiture, which earns the winner $100,000. This year, he is himself the subject of Brisbane artist Cameron Seymour’s Archibald entry, as well as having his own work, a portrait of Cruel Sea band member Ken Gormly, in the competition. Robert says he always admired

Ken’s work as a musician. “I used to play in bands, and (it’s only) when your rhythm section is solid that everything works. The music of that band was unusual, powerful and rich,” he says. Years later the two met through mutual friends and immediately became mates. “I really got to know different aspects of him,” Robert says. “He was candid and open with me and told me all sorts of personal stuff.

Be moved by outpourings of love and loss from Shostakovich and Rachmaninoff, Mendelssohn’s teenage exuberance, and Skipworth’s homage to the ‘pounding wave’. CONSERVATORIUM THEATRE, QUEENSLAND CONSERVATORIUM, GRIFFITH UNIVERSITY Thursday 6 July 7pm Concert presented in association with Queensland Music Festival

GET YOUR TICKETS musicaviva.com.au/sitkovetsky Call 1800 688 482 (no booking fees) qtix.com.au | 136 246

“It was really nice, I was in love immediately. When I’d finished the piece he said, ‘Nobody sees that part of me’. There’s a dark part of every clown that people never see.” The paintings will be revealed at the gallery on June 29, as part of a calendar of upcoming exhibitions. 2017 ARCHIBALD REVEAL, Jun 29, 6.30pm. The Henderson Gallery, 92 Ernest St, South Brisbane. Ph: 07 3844 2610, email suz@roberthenderson.com.au


16 FOOD

Streets ahead RESTAURANT Tony Harper If I never eat a slice of pizza again in my life, I’ll still die content. With that in mind, imagine my surprise at finding myself at Martha Street Kitchen confronted by a menu with pizzas holding pride of place. There’s a beef brisket pizza ($23) that has gained some notoriety and comes with some deep south trimmings – smoked tomato (what about smoking the brisket?), corn, chorizo and roast onion. It’s good in a kooky kind of way, but I suspect there are better pizzas, less notorious, to be had. There are basics – margherita, Hawaiian (it is a family restaurant), and some simple but interesting combinations such as mushroom, taleggio and truffle; bocconcini, fig, rocket and grape glaze. Beyond pizza there is a menu of broad appeal and easily shared which suits the suburban, family-friendly nature of the place. And it is family focused. The space, since its junior years as Rapide, has always been so, but I have a feeling this is more emphatically aimed at the locals. There’s an ease to the service that smells more of accessibility than clever food or urbane service. In the middle of the otherwise unerringly Italian menu is a dish of chicken wings, hot sauce and kohlrabi ($12) – surprising perhaps, but clever, not too spicy and delicious. A small plate of meatballs ($14) is a

MARTHA STREET KITCHEN 1/4 Martha St, Camp Hill Ph: 0431 295 102 Chef: Patrick Laws Dinner Tue–Sun, Breakfast/brunch weekends Vegetarian and gluten-free options On-street parking SCORES OUT OF 10 Food: 7.5 Drinks: 8 Vibe: 7.5 Service: 8

FAMILY GOLD … Imagination fuels the kitchen and the bar; (inset) mussels are terrific.

little more expected but just as good with a terrific tomato sauce, a base of quite decadent parmesan cream, shaved fennel, basil and a slice of toasted ciabatta. There is carbonara ($21), gnocchi with cauliflower, artichoke and truffle ($25), a terrific bowl of mussels, sobrassada, garlic and linguini ($26), bolognese ($22) and a vegetarian risotto ($25) with butternut, sage, smoked honey and gorgonzola. There’s more, but I’m sure you get the picture. It’s nicely crafted food, full of flavour and at times quite inventive.

There’s a good dose of imagination fuelling the kitchen and there’s even more hiding behind the bar. Green Beacon beers (bravo!) are aided by XXXX Gold, Peroni Leggera and Coopers. Cocktails include the likes of negroni, the old-fashioned standards and martini (bottled) plus a couple more that are made to order. Then there’s a bunch of left-field wines that I know well, and mostly love, but hardly expect to encounter at a Camp Hill bistro. Arfion, Gentle Folk, Luke Lambert’s Crudo and

Mention this ad and receive 15% off*

Tom Shobbrook’s Tommy Ruff make for an eclectic selection. The Peroni and XXXX drinkers might struggle to come to grips with a few of the wines, but reading that list makes me feel like Bilbo did finding the Ring. In short, Martha Street Kitchen is full of surprises: good ones. It’s not really pushing hard at the boundaries, reinventing cuisines or putting its patrons through shock therapy. But it is doing things with imagination and quirk, setting itself adrift from most suburban dining rooms.

SALE FRAMES IN STORE

OVER

5000

FINAL CLEARANCE

Book your Noosa Holiday today!

You deserve it

Contact us on: 1800 072078 or info@accomnoosa.com.au *not available at all properties, subject to availability for new low season bookings only made between 15/06/17 and 10/09/17

accomnoosa.com.au

CONSERVATION FRAMING MUSEUM ART GLASS MEMORABILIA FRAMING

44 YEARS EXPERIENCE OPEN: Mon-Fri 9am-5.15pm, Sat 9am-2.30pm

E: sales@framewarehouse.com.au • Poster • Photo • Artist Gift Certificates Available • Certificate frames 277 Waterworks Rd, ASHGROVE (OPPOSITE 7 ELEVEN) Mat cutting service available. p 3355 3377 or 3855 3377 Frames made to order. www.framewarehouse.com.au


FOOD 17

PM Factory 51, Coorparoo

AM Kiss the Berry, South Bank Join the activewear movement one of these crisp mornings and head here for a fix of Fonzie Abbott coffee (made with Maleny Dairies milk) and inventive acai bowls (pictured). Grab a rug and sit on a lawn in front of the cafe while enjoying the Snickers Delight bowl ($13.50). I have been assured this chocolate heaven is healthy, comprising acai, cacao, peanut butter and coconut yoghurt. Kiss the Berry is also at Burleigh and in the city. Open Mon–Sun 7am-5pm. Shop 65, 114 Grey St, South Bank, ph: 3846 6128. DARIEN BROWN

A refurbished red brick warehouse is home to Coorparoo’s new bar and bistro, Factory 51. The industrial aesthetic is on full display (left) with bare brick walls, exposed metal beams, dark timber and strings of naked bulbs crisscrossing a laneway dining area. Italian influences spike a menu clearly designed for sharing with the likes of wood-fired pizzas ($21-25), salads and share plates. Orange vinaigrette, fennel and capers bring zest to a rocket panzanella salad ($13) while two types of mushroom, mozzarella and pecorino enrich a serving of arancini ($13). If there’s any room left, I heartily endorse splitting a Nutella calzone ($14) injected with coconut, marshmallow and housemade ice-cream. Tue-Sun lunch 11.30am-5pm, dinner 5pmlate. 51 Holdsworth St, Coorparoo, ph: 3324 0844, factory51.com.au BELINDA SEENEY

Your community, elevated. Beyond the luxury of your apartment, enjoy sweeping city views at the rooftop lounge, host family BBQ’s within the private landscaped grounds, or dine with friends and family in the thriving Gasworks restaurant precinct. Built around community, it’s an uplifting example of modern retirement living in the heart of Newstead. Redefining retirement for all Australians. Call 13 28 36 or visit aveo.com.au to book your VIP appointment today.

Aveo Newstead Gasworks, Skyring Terrace, Newstead

BULLET AVE20452 BULLET_AVE20452

Aveo Newstead takes being part of a retirement community to new heights.


18 REVIEW

ROUGH NIGHT (MA15+) hhh

FILM Vicky Roach DESPICABLE ME 3 (PG) hhh Director: Kyle Balda, Pierre Coffin Starring: Steve Carell, Kristen Wiig, Trey Parker Running time: 90 minutes Minions might struggle to carry an entire movie (as the self-titled 2015 spin-off confirmed), but the googlyeyed little guys steal all their scenes in this workmanlike threequel. And their finger-clicking, black-

and-white stripes prison routine is a showstopper. The anarchic energy of the cute yellow critters is particularly important now that the formerly despicable Gru (Steve Carell) and his fearless new wife, Lucy (Kristen Wiig), have settled into cosy domesticity with their three girls – Margo (Miranda Cosgrove), Edith (Dana Gaier) and Agnes (Nev Scharrel). In Despicable Me 3, the filmmakers introduce a long-lost twin brother to further enliven the franchise. Dru’s candy-coloured Freedonian mansion provides a welcome change

of scenery for Gru after he is fired by the Anti-Villain League for letting Despicable Me 3’s new villain, Balthazar Bratt (Trey Parker), escape. After some serious brotherly bonding that involves fast cars, police chases and squealing porkers, the brothers team up, for dramatically different reasons, to steal the world’s biggest diamond back from the aforementioned Mr Bratt. The fourth film in the Despicable Me franchise is family friendly and sometimes inspired. But even with the best attempts, the characters and setup are starting to feel overfamiliar.

Director: Lucia Aniello Starring: Scarlett Johansson, Kate McKinnon, Jillian Bell Running time: 101 minutes Rough Night starts out as (another) female version of The Hangover when Jess (Scarlett Johansson, above right with Kate McKinnon) reluctantly interrupts her flagging senate campaign for a weekend with ex college friends before her marriage. Thankfully, the film departs its hard-partying trajectory quickly when an overenthusiastic Alice (Bell) accidentally kills the stripper. Rough? The night in question is dangerously splintered, and therein lies its intermittent charm.

Q U E E N S L A N D M U S I C F E S T I VA L A N D BRISBANE CITY COUNCIL PRESENT

DEBORAH CONWAY CLARE BOWDITCH HANNAH MACKLIN THE TIVOLI 7PM SUNDAY 16 JULY

QMF.ORG.AU #QMF17

This project has been assisted by the Australian Government through the Australia Council, its arts funding and advisory body. This project has received additional support from the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland’s Playing Queensland Fund.

Queensland Music Festival is an initiative of the Queensland Government through Arts Queensland, part of the Department of the Premier and Cabinet.


TRAVEL 19

Let it snow Australia’s winter wonderlands are all white now, so cosy up in the coolest alpine lodges while the chill thrills last

FROSTY TOPS … Peppers Cradle Mountain Lodge (left); The Eastern, Thredbo (above); QT Falls Creek (below).

NSW

Signature restaurant Bazaar is buzzing and drinks are flowing at the snug Stingray bar. Be pampered in the cosy cocoon of spaQ – its Snow Queen package includes a scrub with hibiscus and jasmine-scented rice powder, and full-body massages. QT’s ski concierge can hook you up with equipment hire, lift passes and lessons, or the hottest restaurants. Take a break from powder play to explore Falls Creek, with mountain biking, cycling, hiking and chairlift rides with views of the Bogong High Plains and Kiewa Valley.

Hygge – it’s the difficult-to-explain Scandinavian concept of cosiness that travellers will find embodied at Thredbo Village, where The Eastern’s Monique Easton has created a Scandi-chic escape for snow lovers. “I wanted to provide a beautiful option for design-focused travellers when they visit the snow – a place where they can unwind and rejuvenate,” she says. “Our view is the best in the village, hands down. We are set among Australian silvergums on the foothills of Mount Kosciuszko with an uninterrupted view of the mountain. “I find the mountain environment to be very meditative and I’ve tried to echo this in the apartment, creating a sense of beauty and calm. “The interiors are Nordic minimalist with lots of texture.” Tech-savvy touches include Apple TV and free wifi. Picture yourself waking up wrapped in Siberian goose down, then padding across heated floors. Whip up a romantic dinner in the kitchen, or try a cheeky vino and cheese plate in between ski runs via Kareela Hutte on the Supertrail. Go horse riding on the Alpine Way before lunch at the distillery and then apres-ski by the fire at Bernti’s or the Alpine Hotel. Hear top Australian music acts in Thredbo’s Village Concert series. “Watch the flare run on Saturday night with a glass of red,” Monique tips.

QT Falls Creek’s Snow Romance package, Jul 1-Sep 25, from $624 per night in a onebedroom apartment, includes a bottle of wine, two QT robes to take home, spaQ treatment for two and daily breakfast.

The Eastern’s peak winter rates are $550 per night Fri-Sat, $490pn Sun-Thu or $3060 per week. Off-peak winter rates: $350pn Fri-Sat, $300pn Sun-Thu, $1900pw.

Chantay Logan Winter and snow – they go together like hot chocolate and marshmallows. While skiers and snowboarders will be in their element, you don’t have to hit the slopes to enjoy some white magic. Romantic retreat, ski-bunny central or alpine designer dream, here are three of the best locations for snow:

PEPPERS CRADLE MOUNTAIN LODGE TASMANIA Cocooned in one of the world’s most precious parks, Peppers Cradle Mountain Lodge is at its most enchanting under winter’s cloak. General manager Mike Blank says the lodge typically receives about 10 days of snow each year . “And it snowed twice just last week,” he says. “Cradle Mountain will be snow-capped for most of winter.” Guests can soak up the snowy scene from the cosiest of vantages. “Highland Restaurant, Tavern Bar & Bistro and guest lounge areas all have roaring fires throughout most of the year and all cabins have either gas fires or log fires,” Mike says. “The lodge’s premium room type, the King Billy Suite, features a double-sided wood fire, which can be enjoyed from the couch or the kingsize bed.

“The private hot tub on the suite’s balcony is the ultimate stargazing position on a frosty winter’s night.” Enjoy the warm hospitality of Peppers Cradle Mountain Lodge with the Taste Tasmania special offer: stay two nights and save up to 15 per cent. The offer includes full buffet breakfast and a bottle of Tasmanian sparkling wine and is valid until Sep 30.

QT FALLS CREEK VICTORIA Baby it’s cold outside. If you fancy soaking up a view of the slopes from your own hot tub, check in to the skiin/ski-out QT Falls Creek. Victoria’s largest alpine resort has already seen some good snowfall, and the action is heating up off-piste too.

THE EASTERN


20 BOOKS

Inquiring mind Fiona Purdon

CEREBRAL HERO … Jeffery Deaver will be in Brisbane to talk about The Burial Hour; and (right) Denzel Washington and Angelina Jolie in the film adaptation of The Bone Collector.

When Jeffery Deaver made a commitment to set his next Lincoln Rhyme crime book in Italy, he knew he was going to do it tough. “It was a very difficult job going to Italy, drinking the wine, eating the food,” he jokes. “An astonishing number of people offered to carry my suitcases.” Jeffery, 67, had made the promise to the audience at Courmayeur, northwest Italy, when he received the Raymond Chandler Award in 2014, for his extensive body of work including the best-selling series featuring quadriplegic forensic criminalist Rhyme and his associate, special agent Amelia Sachs. The New York writer, who has travelled to Italy more than 20 times including twice to research his new book, The Burial Hour, knew the

perfect location for the novel would be Naples, in the country’s south, and not only because it is the home of an Italian mafia society, the Camorra. “There is a lot of street crime but it’s also a colourful place and it has its immigration issues which I was keen to write about,” Jeffery says. The Burial Hour starts with a kidnapping in broad daylight on the streets of New York, with psychotic villain The Composer leaving a calling card of a miniature noose on the

MEGA END OF FINANCIAL YEAR SALE SALE ENDS ON 30TH JUNE 2017 CURATOR OF QUALITY BATHROOM PRODUCTS LARGEST BATH RANGE IN AUSTRALIA

Dentistry Done Differently! Why put it off any longer? Does it hurt? Does it cost a lot? Perfect your smile today!

Take advantage of our services: • No Gap Check-ups and cleans • 10 min free dental assessments • Pain-free, automated anaesthetic! CALL NOW for an appointment Phone: (07) 3278 0580

LUCIA STONE 1500-1800mm from $3150

TERESA STONE 1400, 1550, 1650, 1780mm from $3150 9S Heated Towel Rail 450, 650, 850mm $199-269

MIA 1200-1800mm from $1540

PABLO BACK TO WALL 1500, 1700mm $1820

LORENZA STONE BASIN $434

2S RAIN SHOWER MATT BLACK $329

VIVIANA FREESTANDING BASIN $1540 ADELINE STONE BASIN $581

COSTA IN WALL GEBERIT PACKAGE $849

HAYTA TOILET ROLL COSTA 2S WALL MIXER HOLDER TOILET SUITE $159 MATT BLACK 9S BASIN MIXER CHROME/ $499 $329 MATT BLACK $269/359

Shop 3/365 Honour Ave (Cnr Bank Rd) GRACEVILLE

Fortitude Valley QLD Shop 2, 826 Ann Street, QLD 4006

OPEN TO PUBLIC


21

on the beat street. When the suspect gets away, and a similar kidnapping occurs on a dusty road outside Naples, Rhyme and Sachs do not hesitate to rejoin the hunt for The Composer. The search becomes a complex case of international co-operation with the author revealing it took much research to understand Italy’s extensive police and legal system. Jeffery, who has sold about 50 million copies of his books including his 2011 James Bond novel, Carte

Blanche, first started writing about wheelchair-bound Rhyme with The Bone Collector (1997), which was adapted into a 1999 movie starring Denzel Washington as Rhyme and Angelina Jolie as Sachs. “I wanted to create a hero who was cerebral ‌ a man who cannot move but who is so compelling intellectually, like Sherlock Holmes, (that he) really captivates people and they enjoy his mental arm wrestles with the villains.â€? Jeffery, who often comes up with story ideas while walking his dog, says he isn’t as smart as Rhyme which is why it takes him eight months to research and create detailed outlines for each novel, to rule out plot holes. He says he has more readers per capita in Australia than in the US and would be interested in setting a Lincoln Rhyme novel around The Great Barrier Reef. “I love Australian audiences

because they always ask good, perceptive questions,� he says. Jeffery never imagined he would be so successful when he published his first book, Voodoo, in 1988. Even though he had always wanted to be a writer, he was a lawyer and a folk singer before he focused full-time on writing in 1990. “I’ve always wanted to tell stories, to me there is nothing more enjoyable in the world,� he says. “I still feel it’s a miracle when I wake up each morning and to know I’m an author.�

JEFFERY DEAVER IN BRISBANE Jeffery Deaver book lunch: Jun 26, noon, Grand View Hotel, 49 North St, Cleveland, $45, includes two-course meal and glass of wine. Ph: 3884 3000. Jeffery Deaver in conversation with author Venero Armanno: Jun 26, 6-8.30pm, free event, at Dymocks Brisbane, 177 Albert St, Brisbane. For more info: dymocks.com.au/Events/ StoreEvents-Queensland The Burial Hour: Hachette Australia, $33

TenterďŹ eld New South Wales

The perfect weekend getaway for a true winter experience!

come up and feel

alÄąve

Wake up to a glistening frost, spend the day exploring all the region has to RäˆąHU WKHQ FXUO XS LQ IURQW RI D URDULQJ ORJ ÂżUH ZLWK D KHDUW\ UHG +RPH WR DPD]LQJ national parks and rivers, historic sights, PXVHXPV DQG GHOLFLRXV IRRG DQG ZLQH DQG RQO\ KRXUV IURP %ULVEDQH

ZZZ YLVLWWHQWHUÂżHOG FRP DX


GOING OUT

LET’S LOOK AT YOUR HEART

#BNSCENE EMPORIUM HOTEL CHAMPAGNE CLUB Fortitude Valley Champagne expert Bernadette O’Shea held court in the cocktail bar for this monthly gathering of wine lovers, steering guests through tastings of some great bubbles. The hotel was celebrating taking the title of Australia’s Leading Boutique Hotel at the 24th World Travel Awards in Shanghai.

BEFORE YOU HAVE A HEART ATTACK

Pictures: Supplied

Allison Inwood and Ivana Reich

Danielle Bailly and James Pound

Tracey Mynott and Tracey Brown

Irene Carter and Maree Chant

Mike and Sherry Skinner

Sally Smirk and Anneliese Klopper

Sarah Jewell and Nicole Ireland

Ian and Julie Wade

• Too many Australians die suddenly from heart attacks without ever knowing that they had coronary artery disease find out • Get your coronary artery calcium score whether you have calcium build-up in your coronary arteries • Exclude active coronary artery disease to a 95% certainty* *Budoff M et al. Assessment of Coronary Artery Disease by Cardiac Computer Tomography. Circulation. 2006;114:1761-1791.

• No referral required, 20 minute appointment and results while you wait can be done in your lunch hour All patients clinically assessed for suitability prior to scanning


FIND your photo on brisbanenews.com.au ... TAG with #BNSCENE on Facebook and Instagram: @brisbanenewsmagazine QLD's biggest and best

SERENAH EXHIBITION Brisbane city Dog lovers packed the foyer of city high-rise Waterfront Place for the launch of Serena Hodson’s photographic exhibition, It’s a Dog’s Life. ABC radio host Loretta Ryan interviewed Hodson about her career with the artist offering people tips on how to capture their own quirky pet snaps. Pictures: Josh Woning

Let us show you how to create your own mini garden bowl!

Paul and Monica Banister

Natalie and Bernie McKeering

Discover Qld's most comprehensive range of plants, trees and shrubs, 1000's of roses, highest quality fruit trees, flower and vege seedlings, best range of bromeliads and succulents to be found anywhere- We are the BIGGEST AND BEST - come and see for yourself!!!

Toby Lewis and Madeleine Walsh

Alex Kennison and Alicia Adamopoulos

Tracey Langfield and Julie Dearlove

Grant Dearlove and Wendy Walklate

Neil Southwell and Serena Hodson

Shelley Pershouse and Madeleine Warner

GOLD COAST SUPERSTORE

BRISBANE SUPERSTORE

300 Oxley Drive Runaway Bay QLD p. 0755 37 2244

2274 Moggill Rd Kenmore QLD p. 07 3378 5553

(Hope Island exit off M1)

(Corner Moggill & Rafting Ground Rds)

www.rossevansgardencentre.com.au


24 FASHION Kate Dress, $264.95 White Label Noba; Antonia headband, $99, Byzantine Empire earrings, $39, En Pointe Collective; Far-Ring-Don Ring, $79.95, Thistle Ring Stack, $79.95, Sanctum Ring Stack, $129, Mimco; Painted Muse Collar, $219, Chelsea De Luca Model: Grace Simmons Make-up: Misha Picture: David Kelly at Bacchus Restaurant, Rydges South Bank Brisbane Saba Bernie Ruffle Top, $179

Trenery Bold Spot Shirt, $129 Trenery Iris scarf, $59.95

DKNY Ellington 34mm Black Leather with Gold-Tone Watch, $182 NEUE BLVD Amore keyring in pale pink, $50

Oroton Marietta Sunglasses, $215

Witchery Camden Slipper, $139.95 Oroton Icon Small Belt, $125 STOCKISTS bul.com.au; chelsea-de-luca-jewellery.myshopify.com; decjuba.com.au; dkny.com/au/; enpointecollective.com; mimco.com.au; monpurse.com; najo.com.au; neueblvd.com.au; oroton.com.au; saba.com.au; shopdylankain.com; thirdform.com.au; trenery.com.au; whitelabelnoba.com; witchery.com


25

Najo Kaftan Ring, $109 Decjuba Izzy gathered sleeve knit, $119.95 Third Form Pull Through Vest dress, $279

Corporate chic top priority Smart money stays in the black with elegant figures and dots with dash By Annabel Falco

Bul Lesen coat, $380

Najo The Wanderer Cuff, $179

Dylan Kain The Bracelet pouch light gold bag, $200

Witchery Carson boots, $249.95

Elysium Skin Centre Cosmetic Medicine

Laser Therapy

Dermal Therapy

Dr Csilla Novak is a fellow of the Cosmetic Physicians College of Australasia and has more than 20 years experience in laser medicine and skin rejuvenation. “My new clinic, Elysium Skin Centre, is purpose built to provide a warm, welcoming and relaxing s”. environment, while my focus is on achieving the best possible experience and results for my patients”.

Call (07) 3214 1400 to book your consultation Injectables Fraxel Laser Laser Genesis Excel V Limelight IPL | Laser Vaginal Rejuvenation

17 Bowen Bridge Rd, Herston

elysiumskincentre.com.au

Dr Csilla Novakk

Mon Purse Scribe small saffiano vegan notebook, $35


26 26

BEAUTY, HEALTH AND WELLNESS: ADVERTISING FEATURE

Wellness benefits From small windowsill succulents to larger back yard buds, being around greenery is good for our wellbeing. It’s trendy too, getting out in the garden. Whether you’re growing your own vegetable patch, harvesting herbs or beautifying a patio with pot plants, our thirst for all things clean, green and healthy makes gardening a perfect pastime. Read on for the Nursery & Garden Industry Queensland’s (NGIQ) top four reasons why you should spend more time getting close to nature: 1 Relaxation in a garden sanctuary According to the NGIQ, research shows 73 per cent of Australians see their garden as a sanctuary for mental wellbeing, a place to relax, refresh and renew. “Contact with nature is found to have health and psychological benefits, including reducing stress, improving attention, having a positive

effect on mental restoration and increased longevity,” a NGIQ spokeswoman says. 2 Planting trees Everybody knows it is cooler in the shade. But, the NGIQ reminds people that shade is also valuable. For instance, it states that trees drop temperature by up to 8 degrees, reducing air conditioner use and carbon emissions by an estimated 12 to 15 per cent per annum. 3 Homegrown organic movement There is a worldwide movement to teach children how to grow vegetables and enjoy home grown food. “Combine veggie growing with a small chicken coop and teaching your children how to cook food turns the garden into an enjoyable classroom,” the spokeswoman says. 4 Community connection To connect with likeminded gardeners who love their garden as much as you do, the NGIQ recommends joining a local garden club, starting a community garden, visiting the Queensland Garden Expo from July 7-9 or connecting online with other gardening enthusiasts.

Lash lift wins fans The Brow Bar owner Chernae Silk says lash lifting is the newest lash treatment that is taking the beauty world by storm. “A lash lift gives your lashes the look you get from a lash curler, and it lasts for up to eight weeks,” she says. “The gentle services available at

Your unique brows The Brow Bar matches your brows to you. Using the exclusive Petite-Express technique the Arch Angels will create the perfect brows for your face.

$66 Petite-Express Brow for our loyal Brow Lift-Shapers! 1800 276 922 I BROWBAR.COM •

The Brow Bar give you darker, longer looking luscious lashes in a comfortable 40 minutes.” Chernae says everybody has a different face, so lashes as well as eyebrows need to be coloured and shaped accordingly. “Leave it up to the experts at The Brow Bar who know how to define, shape or rehab your lashes and brows based on your facial structure,” she says. PH: 1800 276 922 BROWBAR.COM


BEAUTY HEALTH AND WELLNESS: ADVERTISING FEATURE

27 27

Food for your eyes You’ve heard the expression, you eat with your eyes, but did you know you can also eat for your eyes? Optometrist Joe Maccarone from Hanks Optometrists by George & Matilda Eyecare in Ascot says certain foods may help to protect people from eye disease. “Eating spinach and kale may help prevent the most common form of glaucoma,” Joe says. “We also know that leafy greens are one of the dietary recommendations for reducing the risk of macular degeneration. “Although a healthy diet can help prevent vision problems, it doesn’t replace the need for regular eye tests; people over 40 should have a glaucoma test every two years.” In his 30 years’ experience in eye care, Joe (pictured with Mellisa Deguara of George & Matilda Eyecare)

has seen a shift in the way people see the role of an optometrist in the community. Where in the past, it was thought that optometrists dealt only with prescriptions, these days the job is more holistic, with a focus on prevention, and it’s not uncommon for him to offer advice about how to avoid vision problems through diet and lifestyle. “Optometrists are increasingly using their knowledge to help people

avoid vision problems altogether,” Joe says. Hanks Optometrists joined the George & Matilda Eyecare collective last year, with a commitment to delivering the best standard of eye care for the community.

“Drop in to say hello to the new team in store, give us a call or visit our website to book an appointment,” Joe says. PH: 3630 1466 GEORGEANDMATILDA.COM.AU

Hanks Optometrists (Formely Eyecare Plus) has joined George & Matilda Eyecare. George & Matilda Eyecare is Australian-owned and committed to local service, as well as premium eye care. We may look different, but the things you love about us aren’t changing. Come in and say hello to the team! ASCOT 145 Racecourse Rd 3630 1466


28 BEAUTY

SHELF LIFE IN STORE NOW

WASH AND GO Pack Klorane’s Colour Enhancing haircare duo. Each product is $7.95. klorane.com.au TUBE IT Seal the kisser with Ambush Rouge Unlimited lipstick ($45). shop.davidjones.com.au

Polished personal touch ROAD TEST Hammam Therapy Spa Ritual, 90 minutes, $185 WHERE Aquarius Health and Day Spa, 70D Mary St, city, ph: 3009 5111, facebook.com/AquariusHealthSpa THE LOWDOWN This ritual is the total pamper package and includes a full body papaya creme exfoliation, a whipped clay body wrap with the revitalising scent of lemongrass, hydration massage (with heavenly aromatic oils) and petit spa facial. Therapist Melinda says her favourite, the Hammam, is the most popular treatment for its healing, rejuvenation and relaxation qualities.

BEST BIT This is difficult. I loved the exfoliation – Melinda’s firm strokes left my skin feeling invigorated, but the temple and scalp massage was divine and her deft use of hot towels throughout the ritual was comforting and snug. Ingrid, Melinda and all the staff are genuinely warm and welcoming, making everyone feel as if they are special. VERDICT When I walked out on to Mary St, my skin felt nurtured, brighter, cleansed and polished. The rooms for the spa treatment are near a spacious bathroom and bathhouse so you can slip easily between them afterwards to fix your hair, makeup and attire before floating out on to the street.

ANYTHING ELSE? Aquarius Health and Day Spa is smack bang in the CBD, right next to Mantra on Mary hotel, so it’s ideal for workers, visitors and city dwellers. It’s part of medical spokeswoman and GP Dr Ingrid Tall’s Cosmetic Image Clinics and facilities include rooms for injectable and surgical procedures and physiotherapy, a fitness centre, bathhouse, as well as the day spa. EXTRA POINTS FOR … The range of facilities is second to none and you have the sense you are in good hands. I also like the small touches such as a welcoming offer of complementary champers or zazen water (filtered alkaline mineral water) on arrival. SANDRA KILLEN

GOOD OIL Neroli and Argan Body Oil ($34.95) leaves skin silky smooth. saltbyhendrix.com

BUT FIRST, COFFEE Tilley’s Coffee & Charcoal skincare range starts at $7.95 for exfoliating soap bars, $14.95 for body scrubs. tilleysoaps.com.au

NOMINATIONS NOW OPEN Quest Community News is recognising and celebrating the exceptional talents of our sporting community.

STATE PARTNERS

Tell us who they are and they could be in the running for a share of $17,000 in prizes to be won. With awards up for grabs at local, state and national levels, it’s game on!

TECH PARTNER

To nominate and get involved visit localsportsstars.com.au Nominations open Monday 6 March, 2017 and close 11.59pm 31, August 2017. NSW, QLD, VIC and WA residents only. Winners determined during the judging period 11 September, 2017 to 22 September, 2017. Publication and State winners names will be published following the award presentation events in October 2017 in all NewsLocal, Quest Community News, Gold Coast Bulletin, Leader Community News and Community Newspaper Group publications. National Winners will be announced week commencing 27 November, 2017. Total prize pool valued at $61,200 AUD. Full terms and conditions available at www.localsportsstars.com.au.


29

FLOOD OF IDEAS Pooling resources to create a new riverside garden at Chelmer

PERFECT PEARS A sweet treat with a French twist

Play and stay

together Pushing back against traditional house design, this large family have created an impressive, inclusive home


30 AT HOME

All for one …

one for all A couple with five children build on their experience to bring family members together in a hassle-free home Tonya Turner

PROBLEMS SOLVED … Architecture graduate Michaela Wolf and builder husband Steve Boyle with three of their five children who share their Paddington home.

House designs have changed a lot in recent years, and Michaela Wolf isn’t convinced they’re for the better. An architecture graduate and co-owner of SBUILT with her builder husband, Steve Boyle, Michaela has been using her own home in Paddington as a test lab for her ideas about how houses can better bring family members together and encourage connection rather than separation. With their five children aged one to 18 all living at home, there has been plenty of scope to see these ideas in action. Michaela, 45, started studying architecture when she was 40. It followed a career in events management in Sydney, which followed studies in anthropology. Intimidated by the artistic talent of her fellow architecture students, she gave up after six months but returned with renewed passion following a revelation. “Architecture is not just about drawing and building, it’s about people and how they live,” she says. “I absolutely fell in love with it. “Architecture is so much more than just the building, it’s what you do in it.”

The Victorian Gothic twobedroom cottage they purchased in 2013 has been transformed into a four-bedroom abode with a new extension at the back of the steep site. Although Michaela once thought it was important for each child to have their own bedroom, her beliefs have changed after seeing most of them go unused. “The kids were always hanging out together in the one room and we thought, ‘Why did we bother building these different bedrooms when nobody wants to use them?’ So we’ve just finished building the bunkhouse. They love this space,” she says. The “bunkhouse” is a small bedroom with nothing more than four long bunk beds up against two walls and a tall bookshelf filled with books and knick-knacks. “They only come here to sleep and read at night. For kids, the less they are in here the better,” she says. “I don’t want computers in here or

No one was putting their clothes away, so I thought: (why build) wardrobes?


31

SMOOTH OPERATOR … Open-plan design and a ‘bunkhouse’ bedroom without wardrobes cuts the mess and makes family living easier.

any of that sort of stuff. There’s a big thing at the moment with cyber bullying – you’ve got to keep it in the open. It’s about having really little in here, just their books and bare minimum clothes too.” In a genius move, Michaela decided to forgo wardrobes in the bunkhouse and instead keep the kids’ clothes in the laundry to save time and hassle. “No one was putting their clothes

away so I thought, ‘What’s the point of building wardrobes?’,” she says. “It’s about doing things differently. We’re pushed into these ideas about what houses should be, but they don’t have to be like that.” Downstairs, the open-plan design means no matter where family members are, they’re within sight. Even the pool, in a central courtyard, and a small playroomstudy, with windows offering views to

other rooms, invite engagement and interaction. In the kitchen, a square island bench creates a different dynamic to the traditional rectangular design. “I had an island bench and I felt like I was serving people. This idea was more like a farmhouse kitchen where we could all just hang out around it so everyone gets involved. “I didn’t want that barrier. I should try a circle one day.”

There is no extra living room or rumpus or media room in the house, just one large open-plan design. “We had a house with a second rumpus for the kids but we realised we just want to be together. You have such little time and those concepts of gathering and being together were always important to me.” Builder: SBUILT, ph: 0449 788 299. sbuilt.org


32 BOOKS

SURF SHACK Nina Freudenberger Hardie Grant Publishing, $50 US-based stylist Nina Freudenberger travelled the world sourcing bungalows, beach homes and shacks for this showcase of beautiful coastal interiors (left). After moving to California, she became intrigued by surf culture and the shacks that wave riders returned to after a day on the water. The result is this book – with photographs by Brittany Ambridge – which features homes from Sydney’s Avalon to Amagansett in New York. Wonderful anecdotes accompany the images, which resonate strongly with our own sunny existence and decorating philosophy in Queensland.

LUXE VINTAGE

ROPED IN

Tahn Scoon New Holland Publishers, $30

Gemma Patford Hardie Grant Publishing, $30

Brisbane stylist and interior designer Tahn Scoon is back with a new ode to vintage-inspired spaces. This time she takes inspiration from the delicate florals and glamorous furnishings of age-old France, with some minor adjustments for clean, relaxed, modern Australian living. As usual, there are plenty of projects to get excited about. Discover how to make your own vintage curtains, hang wallpaper, age metal furniture, create a kitchen garden and style a vintage afternoon tea. This guide to living more simply and authentically in your home includes recipes for “the perfect pot”, pecan tartlets, and Nana’s chocolate cake.

Get ready to be roped into the latest craft movement with Gemma Patford’s new how-to guide to making awesome things with rope. There are step-by-step instructions for friendship knot earrings, coasters, a lampshade, a macrame plant holder to spruce up your living room, and even an ombre rug. The Melbourne-based maker has a background in pattern making and garment construction and her rope accessories are stocked by more than 60 retailers in Australia, the US and the UK, so you know you’re in stylish hands. A cute buy for the crafter in your life.

THE ART OF THE NATURAL HOME Rebecca Sullivan Kyle Books, $40 You’re a committed recycler, have two-minute showers and flick lights off when you leave a room, but what else are you doing to save the planet? Reduce your carbon footprint even further with advice from Rebecca Sullivan, an Adelaide-based food writer, urban farmer and activist who is on a mission to safeguard “granny skills” passed down through the generations. Here she offers recipes for natural cleaning products, pickles and preserves, and DIY health and beauty potions – face masks, perfumes, even beard oil. A simpler life starts here. DARIEN BROWN

“Customers love our State of the Art Custom Designed moving trucks!” ❖ Moving Home

❖ Seachange

❖ Moving Apartment

❖ Greenchange

❖ Moving Office

❖ Storage

Need help with your next move?

Female Friendly

e: admin@moversonline.com.au

3265 5211

Ben, Michael & Josh Sievwright Proud owners of Moversonline

Senior / Assisted Moves

www.moversonline.com.au

Click Here


INSIDE 33

Classy kids Colour your life with pom poms, zigzags and the coolest of greys with Leesa Maher

MOOD Grace Table Lamp, $149.95, Salt&Pepper

Morgan & Finch Beaded Edge Framed Mirror in Silver, $149.95, Bed Bath N’ Table

Emily & Meritt Little Bandit Patchwork Quilted Bedding, $199 for single/double quilt, Pottery Barn Kids Emily & Meritt Woven Pom Pom Toy Dump, $99, Pottery Barn Kids

Diamond Rectangle Cushion, $12, Fantastic Furniture

ZONE Facade Mesh Face Wall Clock, $169.95, Salt&Pepper

Morgan & Finch Leaf Edge Photo Frame, $24.95, Bed Bath N’ Table

Stocksund armchair in Hovsten grey/white, $499, Ikea

bedbathntable.com.au; domo.com.au; fantasticfurniture.com.au; ikea.com/au; potterybarnkids.com.au; saltandpepper.com.au; typo.com.au

Call today 1300 137 081 • Patio and Pool Enclosures suncoastoutdoorliving.com.au • Pool Safe Screens

Create your own sanctuary at


34 OUTSIDE

Pool of talent Tonya Turner After the pool and terrace of this riverside home in Chelmer were destroyed in the 2011 floods, landscape architect Michael Mitchell of DDLA Landscape Architecture and Urban Design was brought in to conduct a rescue operation. “The owner wanted to redesign the existing flood-ravaged terraces and create a resort atmosphere that retained and, where possible, enhanced the connection with the Brisbane River,� Michael says. A seating niche, arbour, pool terrace, barbecue and sheltered builtin day bed on the western boundary provide privacy from neighbours and protection from unfavourable

weather. This orientation also maximises views to the river and increases the useable outdoor space. The upper terrace has been enlarged to create an improved, more flexible entertaining space with a barbecue, dining and lounge area. A sunken sun lounge deck was placed on top of the underground water tank between the pool terrace and the river, allowing the pool fence

to be moved to maximise views. A shallow pool area for children was also added to cater for the whole family. Other upgrades include an outdoor shower, water feature and pond and a small amphitheatre adjacent to the sun deck overlooking the lower grassy terrace with vegetable garden, fruit trees and sandstone stepper path to the jetty.

ddla.com.au

FINAL

DAYS!

WIN $10,000

ENDS 5PM MONDAY 26TH JULY

Buy a motor vehicle from any Carsguide Cash Drive participating dealership between May 17 and June 26, 2017 and you could WIN $10,000 cash!* All you need to do is enter via the validated entry form available from participating Carsguide Cash Drive dealerships when you buy your motor vehicle. See Carsguide in The Courier-Mail Saturday, The Sunday Mail or your local Quest Community Newspaper, each week from May 17 and June 26, 2017 for more information and the list of participating dealerships.

*Terms and conditions apply. See couriermail.com.au/competitions for full details.


RECIPE 35

Pears de résistance Celebrate an orchard favourite with this sweet idea from Gabriel Gate’s latest recipe collection PEARS BELLE HELENE

METHOD

This is one of the first classic French desserts I learned to make during my chef’s apprenticeship in the Anjou region of France. The region is famous for its pears and our back garden was ringed with at least 10 pear trees. You can use canned pear halves as a shortcut.

Combine 1.5 litres water, the sugar and vanilla pod in a saucepan. Bring to the boil, then reduce the heat and simmer for 5 mins. Peel the pears. If they begin to discolour, rub them with the lemon half and place them in a bowl of cold water. Add the peeled pears to the simmering syrup and simmer for 15 mins. Remove the pan from the heat and set aside for the pears to cool in the liquid. Bring

INGREDIENTS 200g sugar ½ vanilla pod, split lengthwise 6 pears ½ lemon (optional) 150ml cream 200g dark chocolate, chopped 1 litre vanilla ice cream (See recipe, right, or use store bought) 100g flaked almonds, toasted, to serve Icing (confectioners’) sugar, for dusting

the cream to the boil in a small saucepan. Remove from the heat and stir in the chocolate until smooth. Set aside to cool a little. Drain the pears and place in a bowl with one or two scoops of ice cream. Spoon a little chocolate sauce over the top, sprinkle with the toasted almonds and dust with icing sugar. Serve immediately. Serves 6.

VANILLA ICE CREAM The best way to make this ice cream is to use an ice cream maker. If you use fresh, free-range eggs, full-cream milk and a good-quality vanilla pod, the result is incomparable. You can halve the recipe if you wish.

INGREDIENTS 1 litre full-cream milk 1 vanilla pod 10 large egg yolks 310g caster (superfine) sugar 500ml cream, whipped until firm

METHOD Pour the milk into a large saucepan. Split the vanilla pod in half lengthwise and scrape seeds into the milk. Add vanilla pod to the milk and bring to the boil. Use electric beaters to beat egg yolks and sugar in a heatproof bowl for 8-10 mins or until mixture becomes lighter in colour and forms a ribbon. Slowly pour hot milk on to the egg mixture and whisk until well combined. Return the mixture to the pan and, using a wooden spatula, stir thoroughly over medium heat. Make sure the spatula reaches all around the edges of the pan to prevent the custard from sticking. Stir for a few minutes or until the mixture has thickened slightly and lightly coats the spatula. Don’t allow the custard to boil at any stage, as it will curdle. Remove from the heat and strain into a bowl, stirring for a further 10 secs. Set aside to cool. Gently stir the whipped cream into the cold custard. Churn in an ice cream maker until set. Transfer the ice cream to a two-litre mould, cover and store in the freezer. It keeps well for a week, but the fresher it is, the better it tastes. Makes approximately two litres.

This is an edited extract from So French So Sweet by Gabriel Gate (Hardie Grant Books, $30), available in stores nationally.

108,000

people are reading our magazine every week.*

That’s thousands of people discovering the best restaurants, shows, fashion, arts, homes and travel, right across Brisbane. Our readers love the good things in life, and when you advertise with us, they could love you too!

CONTACT US advertisebrisbanenews@news.com.au 3666 7441

BEAUTIFUL RUGS DESERVE

the best care IMMACULATE HANDWASHING for lustre, softness and brightness

www.rugwashqueensland.com.au

& DELIVERY

3375 9896


36

ADVERTORIAL

Stylish setting so

spacious Luxury details enhance this modern house This residence exudes a relaxed ambience that is enriched by extravagant finishes and multiple living areas. Entry at the ground floor passes a bedroom through which there is access to a double garage. A powder room and laundry sit down a side corridor off the main hallway. The open-plan living and

dining rooms have polished hardwood floors and there are ornate chandeliers hanging from the soaring ceilings. A media room is nearby. The kitchen is central in the living area and features stone benchtops, a breakfast bar, sleek white cabinetry and a butler’s pantry. Quality European appliances range from a five-burner gas cooktop and 900mm oven to a coffee machine and an integrated double-door fridge. Glass bi-fold doors in the dining room open to a covered deck, which

HAWTHORNE 45 Katoomba Ave Land: 601sq m Inspect: By appointment Agent: Frank Lombardi, Ray White East Brisbane; ph: 3906 2500 or 0402 132 182 Auction: Emporium Hotel, 1000 Ann St, Fortitude Valley, Sun, Jun 25, from 10am

overlooks a saltwater pool and established gardens. Inside, a floating timber staircase with a glass balustrade ascends to the first floor, which features a second living room. Spread across the floor are four bedrooms, including the main bedroom with walk-in wardrobe.
















Rural

Richmond River Grazing and Farming, 170km* Brisbane CBD ‘Cedar Point Stud’, Kyogle, Northern NSW • 41.4ha* (104* acres) on Summerland Way, 5km* from Kyogle, 100km* to the Gold Coast International Airport, 85km* to Byron Bay and 170km* Brisbane CBD • Admired turn of the century homestead with beautiful established gardens in an elevated position overlooking the picturesque country • 1.5km* Richmond River frontage, 61ML irrigation licence • Deep alluvial river flats and improved pastures, perfect for any farming and grazing pursuits Retirement creates the perfect opportunity to acquire Kyogle’s one of a kind.

raywhiterural.com

Andrew Summerville 0429 620 362 Mike Smith 0413 300 680 *approx.

Ray White Rural Casino

Rural

Rural

360° Panoramas to World Heritage National Parks

Who Needs to be a Millionaire!

‘Hillvale’, 101 Sweeney Road, Roadvale The perfect hobby farm or a tranquil weekender, all the hard work is done. • 1hr* Brisbane & 70min* Gold Coast • 40* acres of quality scrub soil • Lovely four bedroom home

‘Spicers Ridge’, 79 Spicer Cres, Mt Mee • 41* private acres in the hinterland between Brisbane & Sunshine Coast • Designed by well known architects Guymer Bailey, uninterrupted views View Sundays 10.30–11.30am

raywhiterural.com/qld

Auction Friday 7 July 2017 10.30am Level 26, 111 Eagle Street, Brisbane

Auction Friday 14 July 2017 10.30am Level 26, 111 Eagle Street, Brisbane Andrew Goodall 0412 093 551 Peter Douglas 0407 172 101 Ray White Rural Queensland *approx.

raywhiterural.com/qld

Auction Friday 14 July 2017 10.30am Level 26, 111 Eagle Street, Brisbane Barry Quinn 0409 828 342 Jez McNamara 0427 270 280 Ray White Rural Brisbane *approx.


52

Bold and bright Sitting on a hilltop block, this house has glass walls opening its living spaces towards the surrounding view of the Tarome valley and the lights of Kalbar in the evening. Raine & Horne Rural Brisbane agent Danny Bukowski describes this residence as non-conforming in every aspect. “Curved lines and the artful use of colour inspire creativity and command you to think outside the box,” Danny says. The residence spans two pavilions, linked by decking. The main pavilion has an open-plan design, consisting of kitchen, living and dining areas and a main bedroom, all extending out to a veranda. The glass walls that surround the living spaces and main bedroom are fully screened, with the added benefit of remote-controlled blinds. Two more bedrooms and a two-

way bathroom can be found in the second pavilion. Other features of the property include a machinery shed, established grounds, an organic vegetable garden and fully fenced orchard including a variety of common and exotic fruit trees, along with a chicken run. Water for stock is supplied by a dam, while there are two 8000L tanks connected to a pressurised water purifying system to supply the house.

Rural

raywhiterural.com

145 Ryan Rd Land: 5.48ha Inspect: By appointment Agent: Danny Bukowski, Raine & Horne Rural Brisbane; ph: 0427 007 116 Auction: 153 Racecourse Rd, Ascot; Fri, Jun 30, 11am

Rural

5

Will Sell at or Before Auction Cainbable Creek Road, via Beaudesert • 52ha* (130* acres) 70min* Brisbane or Gold Coast & 20min* Beaudesert • Abundant water & extensive improvements, fully fenced • 3 bedroom home, 2 huge sheds

TAROME

3

Auction Friday 7 July 2017 10.30am Level 26, 111 Eagle Street, Brisbane Ed Dalton 0418 186 880 Ray White Rural Beaudesert *approx.

The Dream Rural Property You Have Been Looking For Hillview 1831 Christmas Creek Road • 45.12ha*, suited to cattle & horses • Equipped bore, dam & tanks • Fenced, stables, shelters & sheds • 3 bdm Queenslander with built-ins • Polished floors, 5kw solar system

raywhiterural.com

Auction Friday 14 July 2017 11am In-rooms Andrew Thomson 0428 289 299 Garth Weatherall 0438 793 100 Ray White Rural Beaudesert *approx.


LIFESTYLE The location is first-class… Ideal penthouse alternative.

TENERIFFE 59 Kingsholme Street

INSPECT View by appointment

Every aspect of this contemporary home encompasses the finest in residential living, offering the chance to secure a private sanctuary in highly sought Teneriffe. Living spaces merge together to promote a sense of generosity accentuated by soaring voids, natural light and inspiring interiors that incorporate spotted gum timber flooring, striking Brazilian quartzite benches and sleek carbon fibre cabinetry. Outstanding extras include a spacious rumpus room and outdoor pavilion complete with plunge pool — all of this within minutes of the riverwalks, New Farm, Fortitude Valley and the CBD.

3 BED 2 BATH 2 CAR + POOL

eplace.com.au

AUCTION Thursday 22 June at 12:30pm, Place Auction Rooms, 33 Lytton Rd, East Brisbane Judy Goodger 0438 767 377 Matthew Foote 0400 107 707 PLC-OP3291 _BN_A


SUBLIME

Introducing one of Brisbane’s most comprehensive architectural residential homes. This stunning success of contemporary design truly sets the standard for modernist luxury living.

NEW FARM 9 Gibbon Street

INSPECT Saturday 1:30 – 2pm

On a prime 50 6m² allotment in sought-af ter New Farm, this residence designed by award-winning architect Shaun Lockyer more than meets the demands of the discerning buyer with the best in contemporary style, comfort and liveability. A sweeping 379m² floor plan spans over two levels with an open layout accentuated by oversized glass sliders, bringing the outdoors in while giving way to a large outdoor entertaining area. Exceptional extras include a heated pool and pavilion, wine cellar and an elevated position close to the spoils of Teneriffe, New Farm’s vibrant riverfront, James Street and the CBD. For more stunning visuals and floor plans visit judygoodger.com

4 BED 4 BATH 2 CAR + POOL

eplace.com.au

FOR SALE Judy Goodger 0438 767 377 Matthew Foote 0400 107 707 PLC-OP3291 _BN_B


BANC

Over 68% Sold! Construction starting soon, display to be demolished.

TOOWONG 601/527 Coronation Drive

(Access via 7 Land Street)

Offering superior quality for relaxed, executive living, this apartment is an opulent haven at BANC. Crafted for the utmost privacy, this boutique complex with limited neighbours offers rare three lift access, two private and one rear lift, ideal for teenagers or as a service lift. Upon entry you will be charmed by the living areas showcasing 12 metre frontage of uninterrupted Brisbane River and city views. Designed for the entertainer, the gourmet kitchen is set to inspire, fully equipped with Gaggenau and Liebherr appliances including wine fridge and butler’s pantry. With exclusive complex features such as an infinity pool and sub-tropical gardens, this prestigious property truly is a step above the rest.

3 BED 2 BATH 2 CAR

www.bancliving.com

INSPECT Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 12 – 2pm, Saturday and Sunday 2 – 4pm

FOR SALE Buyers in the $2m’s

Simon Caulfield 0437 935 912 PLC-OP3291 _BN_C


INSPECT Saturday 10 – 10:30am

NEW FARM 1-4/549 Brunswick Street Residing pride of place in the heart of cosmopolitan New Farm, this is your chance to acquire a ground floor Art Deco apartment. There are four on offer with the opportunity to buy one, a couple or all four! This is a great investment with each apartment returning between $300-$310/week. Classic architectural elements with some modern appointments, these apartments capture the charm of yesteryear - a rarity amongst the newer builds. Showcasing functional living spaces and graced with timeless elements. Mere minutes to a host of lifestyle options, this is an opportunity to take advantage of New Farm’s historically strong capital growth.

1 BED 1 BATH 1 CAR

eplace.com.au

FOR SALE Offers over $289,000

Aaron Woolard 0421 145 386 Anissa Lamond 0416 939 392

BULIMBA 4/24 Riddell Street

INSPECT Saturday 10 – 10:30am

A private elevator allows you seamless access to your 380m² home, opening conveniently into the living, dining and kitchen area. The gourmet kitchen has been designed to the highest specifications. A strong visible connection to the covered deck is made possible through bi-fold doors which merge the living and outdoor areas. The inspiring rooftop deck has uninterrupted city panoramas. Luxuriously appointed, the grand master suite has access to one of the outdoor terraces as well as an expansive wardrobe and ensuite. A further two bedrooms include built-in robes and are serviced by a main bathroom.

AUCTION Thursday 22 June at 12:30pm,

3 BED 2 BATH 2 CAR

and 1 – 1:30pm

eplace.com.au

Place Auction Rooms, 33 Lytton Rd, East Brisbane

Matthew Hackett 0407 761 061 PLC-OP3291 _BN_D


BULIMBA 23 Wambool Street

INSPECT Saturday 10:30 – 11am & 1 – 1:30pm

Prestigiously positioned 100m to the iconic Oxford Street, these luxury boutique apartments offer infinite opportunities for owner occupiers and downsizers. Defined by its outstanding blue chip location, this elevated complex showcases stunning city views from all apartments. The distinctive two and three bedroom layouts are constructed for ease of living with beautiful outdoor terraces, one apartment features a massive 64m² courtyard. The developer wants all remaining units sold and is negotiable. Don’t miss the opportunity to acquire this exclusive slice of Bulimba.

FOR SALE Brenton Faehrmann 0414 892 990

2 & 3 BED 2 BATH 1 & 2 CAR

Carla Haddan 0411 300 660

BULIMBA

and Sunday 11:45am – 12:15pm

eplace.com.au

INSPECT

Byron Street

This luxurious four bedroom residence boasts absolute north facing views of Hamilton Hill and the Brisbane River. Designed by award winning architect, Brian Donovan (BVN), The Boatyard Bulimba sets a new benchmark in waterfront living. With only one neighbour, you will be able to downsize into one of Brisbane’s most exclusive offerings. The handpicked timber, stainless steel and natural stone surfaces blend with a crisp white to create a mood of unaffected luxury. Only a lucky few will have the opportunity to call The Boatyard home.

4 BED 2 BATH 2 CAR + POOL

eplace.com.au

Display suite location: 145 Oxford Street, Bulimba. Open Tuesday to Saturday 10am – 4pm

FOR SALE $1,900,000

Deborah Barbi 0418 873 500 PLC-OP3291 _BN_E


It’s my kind of place.

Privacy and space

There’s nothing better than making your clients smile by achieving their property dreams. Using a tailored approach for each selling campaign, my clients receive the advice and experience they need to secure a great return for their biggest investment. If you’re looking for an agent that is dedicated to achieving a premium result for you and your family, call me today.

0438 114 056 shannon@eplace.com.au LIVING LOCAL | SUPPORTING LOCAL | SELLING LOCAL

PLC-OP3291 _BN_G

Shannon Harvey

Reminiscent of a European villa, this five-bedroom estate offers luxury and privacy across a vast 2.07ha block. Features such as terracotta tiles, exposed timber beams and whitewashed, rendered walls are highlights of the decor, while the design has an easy indoor-to-outdoor flow across its three separate structures. Oversized double timber doors provide access to an entry

CAMP MOUNTAIN 5 Vonne Crt Land: 2.07ha Inspect: By appointment Agent: Rachael Spinks, Spinks & Co Residential; ph: 3367 5444 or 0411 101 015 For sale: By negotiation

court, which has terracotta tiles, a handpainted mural and a water feature, while views across the estate encompass winding green vines, established gardens, terraces and a 12.5m pool.

Want your place sold? Call Paula Pearce to make it happen. 0417 433 098 Paula is a member of ‘The A List’ recognising the top 1% of sales agents in Queensland.


4 Day Street, Hamilton

Visit queenslandsothebysrealty.com


39 Ray Street, Wilston

Visit queenslandsothebysrealty.com


128 Crosby Road, Ascot

Visit queenslandsothebysrealty.com


62

Heritage charm Housed in the heritage-listed CSR Refinery building, this two-storey penthouse apartment captures a north-easterly aspect of the Brisbane River from its impressive living spaces. Stairs and a glass-door elevator provide entry into the first floor, adorned with cathedral ceilings, exposed brick walls, polished hardwood floors, traditional warehouse windows and timber beams dating back to the 1890s. At one end, an open-plan living and dining room adjoins a kitchen with a marble island benchtop, breakfast bar, custom cabinetry, fullsize wine fridge and Miele appliances. Sliding glass doors open to a balcony with views of the Brisbane River, while stairs lead down to a lounge room with a small balcony. A central hallway connects a shared bathroom, laundry and three

carpeted bedrooms with built-in wardrobes, including two with industrial sliding doors. The other bedroom overlooks the river and has an ensuite with a spa bath. The upper level features a spacious office with built-in storage alongside the main bedroom, which offers two built-in wardrobes and a tiled ensuite with a frosted-glass shower. A further highlight is three secure car parking spaces.

Taringa 229 Swann Road • • • • •

Architect designed multi-level home in blue ribbon precinct Two living areas and study accommodate Teen´s retreat Open plan, high ceilings & frameless glass embrace the trees Beautiful detailing in timber, stone and Italian tiling Absent seller keen to liquidate. Immediate vacant possession

NEW FARM 2531/32 Refinery Pde Unit: 310sq m Inspect: By appointment Agent: Max Hadgelias, Ray White Paddington; ph: 3369 6488 or 0411 276 372 For sale: By expressions of interest, closing Thur, Jun 22, 5pm

3 B 2 C 2 D


ABSOLUTE PERFECTION ON A GRAND SCALE...

New Farm 11 Sydney Street • • • • •

Hand crafted to absolute perfection Harry Poulos masterpiece Luxurious fixtures and finishes 607m2 block - approx. 15.1m x 40.2m Oversized proportions - a family home

6 B 1 H 3 C 3 D


NGU

R ARE ENTRY TO P RESTIGIOUS P OCKET 93 ELLIOTT STREET HAWTHORNE

NGU REAL ESTATE E L I T E

MAKE money while you are building your dream inner-city home. The house price growth in Hawthorne in the past year was 13.7 per cent, one of the highest in southeast Queensland. With Hawthorne’s median house price sitting at $1.21 million, this parcel of flat land in the heart of the sought-after suburb is a rare entry-level opportunity. The 407m2 block is the only vacant land available on Elliott St, and one of few currently on the market in the area. Development approval has been granted to build a three-storey house on the property, and plans will be included with the sale. Land 407m 2

Contact the NGU Elite Team to book your private inspection today.

T E A M

Auction Sunday 25th June, 3:30pm

Emil Juresic 0481 601 793

elite@ngurealestate.com.au nguelite.com.au


ljhooker.com.au

3

St Lucia 9/56 Bellevue Terrace Penthouse Living With The ’Uniqueness Of Quality’ ON OFFER IS A RARE COMMODITY... SIZE! Size is a commodity within our current market that is as rare as a ´Pink Diamond´. So, when you combine size and quality with a top floor position, city views, lift access and one of Brisbane´s strongest property suburbs, you end up with an opportunity that won´t last! Indulge in luxury & enjoy the perfect culmination of sophistication and functionality with a level of finish that is so rare, it is sure to impress.

A formal entry showcases the northerly ’City Views’ whilst the living blends seamlessly to the outdoor entertaining. A separate informal living area is perfect as a multipurpose media room & includes a home office, featuring LED lighting & custom cabinetry. Entertaining will be a joy in this stunning Kitchen with Butler´s pantry, ILVE appliances & the perfect combination of custom Polished Concrete with quality Stone. Located at ’The Peak’ of St Lucia, this home will ’Sell’. Don´t miss the opportunity to secure a rare Penthouse!

’The Peak’ Is Ready And Waiting For You To Move Straight In! Also available... is the most affordable 3 Bedroom apartment in this market at ONLY $699,000! Liverland Developments’ prides itself on an exceptional standard of finish and ’The Peak’ @ St Lucia is certainly no exception. It is one of their ’Signature Collections’ and privacy is guaranteed with only 2 apartments per level. St Lucia is one of Brisbane´s most prestigious suburbs and is renowned for strong investment given it´s proximity to the University of Queensland and all of the key amenities.

The key features include: •

Kitchens feature Stone & prestigious ILVE appliances;

Luxurious ensuite, with porcelain tile & double sinks;

Ideally positioned laundries with convenient storage;

Feature study area with desk & customised cabinetry;

Polished hardwood timber, plush carpet or tiled flooring;

Lift access, secure Intercom & Ducted Air-Conditioning.

2

1

For Sale $1,400,000 - 1,500,000 View Sat 24th June 12.30pm-1.00pm ljhooker.com/Q5VH1Z

Scott Gemmell 0414 606 114 New Farm 3146 5400

2

St Lucia 56 Bellevue Terrace

3

2

1

1

For Sale from $549,000 View Sat 24th June 1.00pm to 2.00pm ljhooker.com/QT3H1Z

Scott Gemmell 0414 606 114 New Farm 3146 5400

All information contained herein is gathered from sources we consider to be reliable. However, we cannot guarantee or give any warranty about the information provided. Interested parties must solely rely on their own enquiries.


ANSTEAD 246 Sugars Road

5

ELEVATED ACREAGE PERFECTION • • • •

2.5 Acres of north facing, elevated acreage with sweeping views 4 Generous bedrooms plus 5th bedroom or home office 2 Bathrooms including ensuite to the master Perfect separation with four defined living areas, soaring ceilings, large kitchen with walk in pantry • Large wrap around verandas overlooking the pool & tennis court

10

FOR SALE NOW OR BY AUCTION SUNDAY 25TH JUNE @ 1:30PM Inspect Saturday 12:00 - 12:45pm Benjamin Smith 0416 005 008 Kel Goesch 0408 647 568

CABARITA BEACH 8 PALM AVE

N AY O RD M TI TU 1A C A ,1 U , S LY A ITE JU -S H N 5T 1

This vacant & flat block of absolute beachfront land is the jewel in the crown of the Tweed Coast.

O

ABSOLUTE BEACHFRONT LAND AT ITS BEST

• Resort style grounds with beautiful established gardens • Private gated entry with concrete driveway and feature lighting • Tremendous storage with 6 car spaces, additional area for trailers, boats, caravans & workshop • Huge 9m x 6m shed • Town water and 90,000 in ground water tank • Convenient to buses, schools and local shopping

2

INDICATIVE PERIMETER

Boasting a 17-meter frontage & a three story building height with arguably the best ocean, beach & headland views in the area. • Ultra-wide 17 metre frontage, area 622 m2 • 3-Storey (9m) building height • Sweeping ocean, beach & headland views • Vistas never to be built out Offering a lifestyle and investment opportunity that many search for but rarely find. It is conveniently located: • 20 mins to Coolangatta International Airport • 1 hour 20 mins to Brisbane CBD • Next to Halcyon House with its soon to be developed luxury Day Spa & tennis centre • Next to Cabarita Beach Surf Club. • Minutes walk to restaurants, shops, bars, patrolled beaches and great surf breaks.

For details, visit www.cabaritabeachfront.com

Mason Garten 0451 307 305 masong@creg.com.au

Wayne Moore 0402 677 401 sales@seascaperealestate.com.au


11 exclusive townhomes in brisbane’s new green haven

Respiro Townhomes are connected to the five stage Masterplan Enviro Development Renovare’, located at Fehlberg Park, Yeronga.

Revitalise your lifestyle with abundant parkland, nearby vogue cafes, or ride your bike along the iconic Brisbane Corso. Retreat to you private sanctuary at Respiro and refresh yourself in the vast native landscaping, pool and recreational areas.

renovareyeronga.com.au

“Luxury is timeless... and time is of the essence” call John Wyka now 0413 831 738


68

Multi-level innovation This house occupies a quiet spot with leafy vistas and privacy across its three distinct levels. An innovative layout places a twocar garage on the second floor, with external stairs down to a workshop beneath. Entering through the second floor, a hallway leads to an open-plan kitchen, dining and living room. Polished timber floors and high ceilings complete the level, with clerestory windows along the back wall letting in views and natural light. From the kitchen and living space, a partially covered outdoor area overlooks an established yard. Back inside, the kitchen includes a marble island bench top, timber cabinetry, an Italian mosaic splashback and quality appliances. Custom-made floating timber stairs lead past a built-in study desk to the home’s first floor, which

includes a laundry, bathroom and two airconditioned bedrooms with built-in wardrobes. There is also a rumpus room with sliding glass doors out to a covered patio and established garden. The main bedroom is on the top floor. It has airconditioning, multiple built-in wardrobes, large windows with privacy shutters and an ensuite with a double vanity and mosaic shower tiles.

TARINGA 229 Swann Rd Land: 405sq m Inspect: By appointment Agent: Robin McIlwain, Belle Property Toowong; ph: 3120 2350 or 0411 530 870 Auction: On site, Sat, Jun 24, 11am

The Penthouse - Quay West

2501/132 Alice Street, Brisbane City Rare opportunity to secure a ‘shining jewel in Brisbane’s crown’. Spectacular views are captured from every angle of the luxury living spaces in this stunning property - from the Botanical Gardens, Kangaroo Point Cliffs, Brisbane River, South Bank and beyond. Representing the ultimate ‘city-change’ with stylish penthouse living and a luxury

lifestyle with resort hotel conveniences - all sumptuously bundled in one of Brisbane’s most sought-after CBD locations, this elite property is a must to inspect! • • • •

245m2 Penthouse & 41m2 Car Parking Over 32 metres of Balcony & Terraces 5 Star resort facilities with Pool & Gym Low B/Corp @ approx $8,500 per annum

Expressions of Interest close: 2:00pm, Tuesday 4th of July, 2017. Contact Sue Buchanan 0409 745 480 or sue@blocksidge.com.au

3

2.5

2

View

www.blocksidge.com.au

Open

Thursday 5:30pm - 6:00pm Saturday 10:00am - 10:30am

REAL ESTATE SINCE 1888


THE RE/MAX COLLECTION

4

NORMAN PARK, 20 WYNNUM ROAD

5

4

UNIQUE RIVER - INSPIRED LIVING . A commanding riverfront position of unsurpassed views delivering that sense of space & privacy you have always dreamt of. Awaken to a glorious morning sunrise or relax as the sun sets over the city & the night sky comes to life. * A lavish master bedroom suite complete with a grand dressing room, free standing bath plus private access to the North-facing terrace * An expansive gourmet kitchen featuring Miele & Liebherr appliances, Quartzite bench tops, butler´s scullery & Teppanyaki BBQ * Many hours will be spent at the fully equipped & much loved "Boat House" with adjoining pontoon & sparkling inground pool * Acoustic glass & soundproofing blocks any hint of noise, four car garage, two car parking & turntable ensure easy road access

Inspect: Wed 6 - 6.30pm For Sale: Expression Of Interest Closing 23rd June

Proudly Presented By Deborah Evans Properties 0411 552 525 RE/MAX Results

Shop 3, 622 Wynnum Road, Morningside | 3899 9999 Each office independently owned and operated

remaxresults.com.au


mcgrath.com.au


3

2.5

$1,750,000

2

12/55

HOLIDAY VIBES EVERY DAY – WHY NOT? Total Area: 167m2

OPEN: Sat 12:00-2:00PM & Tue 12:00-1:00PM & Thu 6:00-7:00PM

Wednesday afternoon, 5pm: You wave to friends from your river-view balcony as they stroll by on their afternoon boardwalk - they end up staying for Spaghetti Marinara. You all head up to the Zen Garden to watch the sun set over the CBD – this is the reason you moved from the big family home - fun, impromptu gatherings . . . Friday morning, 7am: Wake up to your river vista. Brew your coffee (fresh from your Gaggenau coffee machine) and head down to Zahra’s 17.5m heated pool for a few leisurely laps . . . Sunday afternoon, 3pm: Watching the big match in Zahra’s cinema room keeps your cheering out of the apartment so your partner can have a nana nap . . .

RYAN LEDDICOAT

0422 132 222 PETER HUTTON

0488 018 170

Monday morning, 10am: The best time to stroll James St (our version of Hastings St, Noosa), late breakfast at Harvey’s, then a movie at Palace Cinemas.

ZAHRANEWFARM.COM.AU

OXLADE DRIVE, NEW FARM


72

Modern fusion This elegant multi-level cottage on a corner block has been transformed into a luxurious residence where old world charm meets modern comfort. High ceilings, VJ walls, leadlight casement windows and polished hardwood floors highlight the home’s historic feel, with split-system airconditioning, a security alarm and video intercom helping to bring it into the present. Beyond a courtyard entrance with established gardens and a stained glass-feature front door, a foyer leads into lounge and dining rooms with pendulum lighting. A hallway then continues beyond to a kitchen and living and dining room with a soaring angular ceiling and clerestory windows. From here is a back deck with city views. Completing the middle level is a bedroom with an ensuite. Upstairs houses the main bedroom, featuring a

private bar area, Juliet balcony, walk-in wardrobe and an ensuite with a spa bath. Windows with privacy shutters surround three sides of the spa bath, which sits beneath skylights and has views of the surrounding area. A third bedroom is located on the home’s lower level, along with a laundry, bathroom, an understair storage cupboard and access to a double garage with storage space.

AUCHENFLOWER 94 Birdwood Tce Land: 405sq m Inspect: By appointment Agent: Max Hadgelias, Ray White Paddington; ph: 3369 6488 or 0411 276 372 Auction: Emporium Hotel, Ann St, Fortitude Valley; Sun, Jun 25, 10am


Modern Masterpiece 22 PROCYON STREET, COORPAROO

5 Commanding an elevated position in one of Brisbane’s most sought-after enclaves, this extraordinary three level, solid concrete home, is a triumphant collaboration of contemporary design and superior construction. Architect Elizabeth Anderson, of awarded HAL Architects, has masterfully designed this home to enhance family living and entertaining, while maximizing the stunning city and vast urban views.

FEATURES • Stunning City and Vast Urban Views

8

1

AUCTION

• 2 x Huge Entertaining Terraces + Outdoor Kitchen

Saturday 15th July, 2017 at 12pm if not sold prior. Viewing: Call for viewing times.

• Fully Tiled Suspended Swimming Pool – Solar Heated

Contact:

• Home Cinema + Home Office + 2 Powder Rooms

Rachael Spinks - Spinks & Co Residential 0411 10 10 15, rachael@spinksco.com.au Vern Gilbert - Plum Property 0400 221 967, vern@plum-property.com.au

• Solid Concrete Construction (approx. 780m2 under roof) • Built by Trovato Constructions as Master Builder’s Own Home

• 4 Person Lift Servicing 3 Levels • Ducted Air Conditioning & Vacumaid System • Video Security + Security Screens + Automated Gates

This is a rare opportunity to secure a spectacular, multi-level contemporary residence in one of Brisbane’s most highly regarded locations.

4

• 6ft Rendered Concrete Wall - Full Perimeter Boundary • Zoned Sound System & Intercom System • 8 Car Garage + Additional Off-Street Parking

Specialising in Tennis Court Homes & Prestige Property spinksco.com.au


Enjoy coastal living just 30 mins from Brisbane CBD Luxury 3 bedroom apartments Easy stroll to Cafe & Restaurants Opposite Blue Water Square Shopping Centre 5 minutes walk to Redcliffe Lagoon and Sutton Beach Located at 11 Anzac Avenue Redcliffe

From $529,000

• QUIETLY SOLDTM • 1ST TIME OFFERED IN 48 YEARS • • CALL FOR A CONFIDENTIAL DISCUSSION OF YOUR FINE HOME •

• SPRING HILL • ‘YORK HOUSE’ • 1930’S SPANISH MISSION INFLUENCES • GREGARIOUSLY PROPORTIONED • 6 BEDROOM • 3 BATHROOM • 38.4M FRONTAGE • $2M PLUS • • PADDINGTON PRECINCT • PEACEFULLY LOCATED ON THE HIGH SIDE OF THE STREET WITH DISTRICT VIEWS & GORGEOUS VERANDAHS • COMING SOON • $1.175M PLUS •

Proudly Marketed by

PHONE IAN MCLACHLAN ON 3284 6885 OR 0419 781 834

NO COM W P READ LETE Y MOV TO E IN

1300 1800 18 LARRY@MCQUIE.COM . AU WWW. MCQUIE.COM . AU

Raine Horne Rural Brisbane

145 Ryan Road, TAROME Live the good life – Sophisticated yet practical in this glorious se ing

View

75 minutes from Brisbane and 1,300 feet above sea level, this 13.5 acre property has breathtaking 360 degree views of the surrounding landscape. A-typical in every aspect, the curved lines and artful use of colour inspire creativity and command you to think outside the box. The home spans two air conditioned pavilions, linked by decking: • Main pavilion – soaring ceilings, full length glass sliding doors opening onto four metre wide timber decks, powder room, kitchen with butler’s pantry and access to the loft, master bedroom (with ensuite and walk in robe) • Second pavilion – Two bedrooms with built in cupboards and a two – way bathroom • Low maintenance gardens with orchard, organic vegetable garden and chicken run, watered from bore • 18m x 8m shed with concrete floor and skillion, two rain water tanks with water purification system, 1 dam

By Appointment

Auction Friday 30th June, 11am Lvl 1/153 Racecourse Rd, Ascot Agent

Danny Bukowski 0427 007 116

www.raineandhorne.com.au/16856485


75

Horoscope with Tanya Obreza SCORPIO

GEMINI

(October 24-November 22) Scorpios love the best of everything. Maybe the current financial climate doesn’t allow for extravagance, but you might get away with having a small spending spree. However, take some time for rest too. Some of the cosmos is currently lazing back, and so should you.

(May 21-June 21) Forward planning is the key to a firm financial future, so this week you should investigate ways to make money grow. While you’re at it, reconsider older plans. Some ambitions may no longer serve you. Ditto for relationships. It’s never too late to change, Gemini.

SAGITTARIUS

CANCER

VIRGO

(June 22-July 22) You often feel the need to meddle in family matters. Not always the best thing to do, especially if you’re dealing with matters that aren’t your concern. Either think things through carefully, or defer said business to the rightful individuals.

(August 24-September 22) Conflict seems to be the norm right now, regardless of your best intentions. To defuse such emotions, don’t get your wires crossed. Make sure you know the facts. Just go easy on friends and family. Know who your true opponents are.

LEO

LIBRA

(July 23-August 23) While you might not be successful in your own right this week, you may be asked to applaud another’s good fortune. This can either be the cause of envy, or you offer congratulations. Go with the latter. Your support matters in good times as well as bad.

(September 23-October 23) This week, other people’s money can bring a windfall or your downfall, so be discriminating in your choice of financial partnerships. Don’t be troubled if a loan or line of credit falls through: there’s hope of a better offer in about two weeks.

(November 23-December 21) Whether you’re walking a monetary maze, or surrounded by untrustworthy company, you need to get yourself sorted. Although caution is still advised, by the end of the week the cosmos introduces a special someone. It may not be love at first sight, so try friendship first.

CAPRICORN (December 22-January 20) There’s much to be said for integrity. Unfortunately, not everyone understands this concept, so the chances of you hearing the-wholetruth-and-nothing-but-the-truth this week are slim. Maybe you should lead by example. Be truthful about recent actions.

AQUARIUS (January 21-February 18) The week allows hard-working Aquarians to mellow out. As a result, you may have much more time for family and friends, and an unusually

ANNIVERSARY GALA 30 JULY 2017, Concert Hall, QPAC

Bookings: qpac.com.au or 136 246

high tolerance level. This means doing things more slowly than you usually would, but you are in no rush. Enjoy the give and take of life.

PISCES (February 19-March 20) Time out, Pisces. You really need to spend some quality time at home. Carefully think through various alternatives that will benefit you and your loved ones. Don’t be in so much of a hurry to make what could become life-altering plans. Do the groundwork first.

ARIES (March 21-April 20) Sometimes it pays to forge ahead without too much forethought. Call it “intuitive action” if you like, or perhaps it’s just being downright clever. You are more gifted than most and others can resent this. Go with your instincts and power ahead at top speed.

TAURUS (April 21-May 20) It’s a vibrant week, Taurus. These next few days should provide enough sparkle to light up even the darkest moments. So try to set aside plenty of time for play. Whether you are at work or at home, seek to indulge in activities that promise plenty of happy memories. tanyaobreza.com


Make this the last time you lose weight

Break the dieting cycle

Our clients have already lost over 100,000 kilograms. Let us help you break the dieting cycle and achieve a healthy weight for life. Tomorrow becomes never - call us today 1800 567 348 lifeshape.com.au/new-you

Changing waistlines, changing lives


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.