Welcome to the fnal edition of Allhomes magazine for 2025! Inside, we refect on Canberra’s property trends over the year (p12), providing insights on popular suburbs and buyer wish lists as we head into 2026. Despite the approaching holidays, the market remains active. Our recent auction volumes indicate there are still many notable listings available, and we proudly highlight these standout properties over the following pages. While this edition marks our last until we return on January 24, we’ll be kicking of the new year with a special summer issue spotlighting the beautiful South Coast. Keep a look out! For now, we at Allhomes wish you a wonderful and relaxing festive season.
A courtyard home of calm
There’s something distinctly Japanese about this contemporary home at 28 Port Arthur Street, Lyons.
Clean angles, natural stone, manicured gardens and wooden slats make for an elegant facade, behind which the U-shaped building wraps around a central north-facing courtyard, spilling out to a lawn and fire pit.
The result is a beautifully functional floor plan of light-filled spaces across more than 250 square metres.
Shiplap feature walls, glass louvres and a palette of warm whites create a relaxed ambience. The living area looks out over the sunny courtyard, flanked by a kitchen with a butler’s pantry.
The hotel-style main bedroom has an en suite and a walk-in wardrobe. On the opposite side of the house, a full wing is dedicated to three more bedrooms, the main bathroom and the laundry. Designed by Cox Architecture, this is a masterpiece of modern family living, says agent Dan McAlpine of Belle Property Canberra. The private sale has a price guide of $2.8 million-plus.
Lucy Jones
Editor Laura Valic
laura.valic@domain.com.au
Senior designer Colleen Chin Quan
Graphic designer Emma Drake
Head of print & B2B content Sarah Millar
Group content director Mark Roppolo
Chief marketing officer Aisling Finch
President Jason Pellegrino
Sales leader Nick Tinling
Marketing manager Bree Baguley
Source:
Laura Valic
WHAT TO SEE THIS WEEKEND
Words by Lucy Jones
Narrabundah
27 Wambool Street
$1.995 million+ 5 2 2 EER 6
Private sale
Agent: Purnell, Steph Hoss 0401 857 662
Enjoy cosy cottage living with expansive proportions and modern upgrades in a quiet corner of Narrabundah. The stunning kitchen features stone benchtops, premium appliances, a large butler’s pantry, a sparkling water station and a wine fridge. Bespoke cabinetry, recycled hardwood foors, plantation shutters and handcrafted doors create an elegant heritage aesthetic. The main-bedroom suite is a private retreat with access to an outside entertaining area, and an attic conversion ofers more space for living or sleeping.
Hawker
28 Tanumbirini Street
$1.349 million+ 4 2 2 EER 5.5
Private sale
Agent: Agent Team, Steve Lowe 0414 720 532
An enviable lifestyle close to everything Belconnen has to ofer awaits in this architect-designed home. It’ll be a pleasure to cook in the designer kitchen, with a six-burner induction cooktop, a 900-millimetre oven and a walk-in pantry. Or relax and enjoy the built-in barbecue and wine fridge in the outdoor entertaining area. In the main-bedroom suite, the bed faces a wall of windows, so you’ll wake to views of your leafy, sun-dappled garden.
Downsize without compromise to one of Canberra’s most sought-after over-55s communities. Spread across two levels, there’s space for formal entertaining, family visits, work and hobbies. The ground-foor main bedroom leads out into the leafy courtyard, and both upstairs bedrooms feature a private balcony. A gate takes you into the development’s communal garden, while green spaces and buzzing restaurant strips are just a few minutes away.
A modern twist on the mid-century modern style of Australian home builder Pettit & Sevitt, this stunning home features signature raked ceilings, exposed beams, and acres of glass looking onto a leafy internal courtyard. The brand-new kitchen, bathrooms and huge butler’s pantry-laundry bring modern conveniences with the clean lines and bold colour choices. The elevated timber verandah ofers sweeping views of the city and mountains.
Private sale
Agent: Better Real Estate, Eliana Rojas-Terry 0432 659 790
Escape the city with this secluded rural retreat on the edge of Gundaroo. The 3391-square-metre block has 20 metres of private river frontage at the rear, and the house itself covers an enormous 845 square metres. This is living large from every angle, with six bedrooms (including a self-contained suite with bathroom and kitchenette on the ground foor), four separate living areas, multiple verandahs and a private cinema room with a projector screen.
Words by Laura Valic • Photos by Ashley St George
Vote of confdence in Canberra market
Lower rates in 2025 drove buyers toward lifestyle features, adaptable homes, turnkey options and better value in established suburbs.
The national property market saw renewed optimism in 2025 after two years of fragile confdence and high borrowing costs, with the frst interest rate cuts in more than four years.
According to Domain’s 2025 End-of-Year Wrap report, property seekers who had spent months on the sidelines suddenly saw a more certain path forward.
Domain chief of research and economics Dr Nicola Powell says the initial relief lifted sentiment and strengthened enquiries, setting a more optimistic tone across the market.
“Lower rates didn’t just ease the cost of borrowing; they reset expectations,” she says. “Many Australians began the year believing 2025 would mark the start of a broader easing cycle – and for a while, that felt true. But the path proved cautious rather than rapid.”
Powell observes that while those rate cuts ofered relief, they did not provide a complete afordability reset, and households remain mindful of that gap.
“Population growth continued to outpace supply, a severe structural imbalance that kept both prices and rents under pressure,” she says. “Faced with these realities, buyers adapted rather than withdrew.
“Many looked for homes that could support multigenerational living, generate supplementary income or simply provide a more achievable entry point into the market.”
Rise of lifestyle search terms
Against this backdrop of cautious optimism and structural supply imbalance, the Domain report revealed that property seekers in Canberra focused their searches on lifestyle and afordability factors in 2025.
“Pool” became the most-searched term in the capital, overtaking “view” and indicating a strong desire for at-home resort-style features, while searches for “study” increased sharply.
This was a clear divergence from national trends.
The affordable suburb is one of the top five most in-demand in the Canberra region.
Kambah:
The ACT was one of the few capital cities where interest in a dedicated workspace increased, reinforcing the city’s commitment to fexible working arrangements.
Powell says that compared to 2024, searches for zoning terms, such as “Z2”, fell sharply to 20th place, while “dual” climbed from 13th to eighth.
“This suggests buyers are focusing more on how a home functions than on zoning details,” she says.
Additionally, “courtyard” also rose from sixth to third place, highlighting renewed demand for usable outdoor areas and low-maintenance living.
Afordability drives suburb popularity
Afordability emerged as a key theme in the demand data, leading buyers to established suburbs outside the traditionally expensive Inner South.
Ainslie topped the list of most-indemand suburbs, signalling interest in high-quality housing on the city fringe.
Though its median house price is still substantial at $1,479,637, it ofers a more accessible entry point than the $1.895 million median required to buy into the South Canberra region.
The rest of the top fve included the afordable Tuggeranong and Belconnen
suburbs of Wanniassa, Kambah, Evatt and Calwell.
Local agent Eliana Rojas-Terry of Better Real Estate says some buyers searching in the Tuggeranong region were willing to spend more than the asking price to secure a property.
“We marketed a home in Calwell in the second quarter, which saw over 100 viewings and sold for six fgures above asking, showcasing the value that established suburbs in the valley hold,” she says.
Both Wanniassa and Kambah were listed among the most afordable Canberra suburbs by price per square metre in 2025, complemented by their rapid sales times – Kambah homes spent an average of 48 days on market, and in Wanniassa, just 45 days. This is signifcantly faster than the 122 days on market that properties in Wright averaged, or the 125 days for homes in the city centre.
Turnkey over project homes
In 2025, the ideal property profles for Canberra buyers remained classic single household or family formats: houses with four bedrooms, two bathrooms and
“The market seems to have stabilised and is showing signs to be back on track for steady growth into 2026.” Eliana Rojas-Terry
a double garage; townhouses with three bedrooms, two bathrooms and a double garage; or one-bedroom, one-bathroom units with a single car space.
In the Tuggeranong region, Rojas-Terry witnessed a clear trend towards movein-ready homes.
“There’s been a decline in [interest in] project homes, with more families valuing, and willing to spend on, polished products,” she says. “Segregated living spaces, outdoor entertainment and family-friendly yards have also proven to be very popular.”
Some of Canberra’s newer suburbs in the Molonglo Valley and Gungahlin regions, ofering turnkey solutions, demanded the highest prices per square metre: Denman Prospect came in at the highest ($3391 per square metre), followed by Crace ($2736), Taylor ($2704) and Franklin ($2592).
However, a few of these suburbs also ofered the largest seller discounts, for example, Gungahlin (6.5 per cent), Franklin (6.2 per cent) and Coombs (5.9 per cent).
Auction hotspots
Auction clearance rates highlighted pockets of strong competition in 2025.
Of the back of a busy spring selling season, Domain data shows Canberra experienced a 60.8 per cent clearance rate in November, up 1.4 percentage points from the previous month, and 14.3 percentage points higher than in the same period last year.
In 2025, the suburbs that achieved the top clearance rates across the ACT included: Charnwood (90.9 per cent), Stirling (90 per cent), Richardson (88.2 per cent), Latham (85.7 per cent) and Holder (83.3 per cent).
These fgures underline the intense demand and competitive environment in specifc markets, particularly where afordability and established infrastructure meet.
Rojas-Terry says it’s clear that confdence is returning to the Canberra market, which has been cemented by interest rate holds.
“The market seems to have stabilised and is showing signs to be back on track for steady growth into 2026, giving sellers confdence to release their homes to incoming families,” she says.
2025: “Pool”, “study” and “dual” were popular searches.
Gungahlin: With many new suburbs, the region demands high prices per square metre.
Words by Ray Sparvell
Apartment living that puts communities frst
If there were any doubt about the Woden Valley lifestyle appeal, then it would be dispelled by the district’s current level of residential apartment development.
A snapshot of the skyline shows much current activity, while further game changers in the works include the Hellenic Club’s plans for two sites, and a potential Westfeld Woden redevelopment.
Add to that the new Canberra Institute of Technology campus, a new bus and light rail interchange and future town centre renewal, and it’s clear that Woden is absolutely buzzing.
That puts the spotlight frmly on the new YarraVale apartment development on Yamba Drive, Phillip. The frst stage,
now selling, is Sage at YarraVale. The second, Orima, is set to hit the market in February.
The YarraVale apartment development represents a major new residential precinct for Woden, with further stages planned after Sage and Orima. It will be about more than constructing dwellings, says Chris Uren of Independent Property Group Projects, adding, “The design intent is to create not just apartments, but connected communities.”
These frst two stages will deliver nearly 200 one, two and three‑bedroom apartments to a wide range of buyers, from frst‑home purchasers to downsizers and investors.
The team behind YarraVale includes development manager Lockbridge, Stewart Architecture and builder Construction Control.
Sage will be a 12‑storey building with 147 units, including 43 unique foor plan options across the frst two stages. Three basement parking levels will hold up to 300 vehicles. Orima, a boutique six storey ofering, will comprise 52 apartments.
Innovative: The apartment interiors are being created to boost energy efficiency and comfort, with attractive finishes.
At a glance
Sage at YarraVale
Display suite: 50 Launceston
Street, Phillip Development manager: Lockbridge
Architect: Stewart Architecture
Builder: Construction Control
Agent: Independent Property Group Projects, Chris Uren 0407 466 199 and Nicholas Jacob 0432 177 449
Prices: From $448,900
Feature we love: The incredible 14,000 square metres of communal landscaped areas for residents to enjoy.
From the agent: “The emphasis on outdoor and shared spaces adds a layer of liveability that is often missing in high‑density projects.”
“It’s the frst chapter in a ... precinct that promises a new benchmark for urban living in Canberra.” Chris Uren
Sage prices range from $448,900 to $1,335,800, and Uren says 35 per cent of the apartments have already been sold.
“That’s a remarkable result in a couple of months, but there was considerable market research informing the design,” he says.
“The aim was to bring something diferent to the market – something that was bigger than just a living space.
[More like] a liveable community.”
There will be plenty of green space, with 14,000 square metres of landscaped areas forming a green spine throughout the precinct.
“The developers are targeting a prestigious fve-star Green Star Communities certifcation that goes well beyond just a green building,” Uren says.
“It’s awarded to precinct-scale developments that demonstrate excellence in sustainability, liveability and resilience.”
For residents, that means healthier, safer and more connected communities – something Uren says is very important to their lifestyles.
“People need to be able to get out into the fresh air for play, for dog walking, perhaps a barbecue, and just connecting with neighbours,” he says.
“This emphasis on outdoor and shared spaces adds a layer of liveability that is often missing in high-density projects.”
That sentiment aligns with the development’s sustainability focus – another key point of diference. It will include rooftop solar and EV-ready infrastructure.
The apartment interiors are also being designed to maximise energy efciency and comfort. Features include full-height double-glazing, acoustic comfort, and abundant natural light.
“Interiors are fnished to a high standard, with timber-look fooring, mineral stone benchtops, Bosch appliances, induction cooktops and integrated dishwashers,” Uren says.
The owners of many three-bedroom apartments will also enjoy oversized double lock-up garages.
Uren says all the elements of the approach to Sage by YarraVale combine
to create a unique lifestyle ofer. “You can add easy access to the Woden Town Centre, transport links and employment hubs,” he says.
“Sage by YarraVale presents a compelling option.
“It’s more than just another apartment complex; it’s the frst chapter in a master-planned precinct that promises a new benchmark for urban living in Canberra.
“More than that, it’s poised to become a defning feature of [the area’s] next decade of growth.”
Sage and Orima will be completed in early 2028.
This feature is part of an Allhomes Deluxe package.
Scan the code to see the listing
FEATURE PROPERTY
Words by Laura Valic
Modern updates, the rest is history
Built in 1930, this stunning Grifth home has been reborn through a fawless modern transformation.
Nestled in a leafy street, it’s one of the few remaining residential properties in the Manuka Housing Precinct, giving the next custodian a rare opportunity to own a delightful piece of Canberra’s history.
From the kerb, you’re met with a two-storey, lightly toned rendered brick exterior, with picturesque windows setting the scene.
Step inside to a living space defned by an original Canberra red-brick freplace
with high, detailed ceilings and natural light infltrating the interiors.
The kitchen and large dining room feel fresh yet provide a snapshot of a bygone era. A stunning wood-fred oven in green draws the eye, complemented by a similar aesthetic in the kitchen cabinetry and splashback tiles.
Three bedrooms – two with built-in wardrobes – a bathroom with elegant, period-style brass fttings, and a separate toilet form the upper level.
New carpets, fresh paint, ducted and split-system air-conditioning, and a
Grifth
31 Murray Crescent $2.25 million 3 1 2 EER 2
Private sale
Agent: AM Property Agency, Luke Lindley 0488 380 033
Scan the code to see the listing
new hot-water system round out the latest improvements to 141 square metres of internal living space.
The separate-title 621-square-metre block is located just moments from Manuka Village’s fne restaurants, cafes, pubs and boutique shopping.
The home is currently leased at $1050 a week until mid-2026.
Agent Luke Lindley says it represents “a secure investment and a once-ina-generation chance to be part of Canberra’s living heritage in one of its most exclusive and timeless locations”.
Words by Jil Hogan
Reimagined red-brick original
From the outside, 26 Elimatta Street reads like a beautifully preserved Reid classic: red brick, symmetry and timeless charm. But pass through the locally handcrafted wrought-iron gates and you fnd a diferent story. Completely rebuilt in 2012, with only the facade retained, it was a reimagining that combined modern touches with bespoke fnishes. The result? Part Toorak refnement, part European manor, and completely luxurious.
Craftsmanship is on full display. Polished red ironbark foors, soft
heritage tones, designer lighting and double-glazed sash windows set an understated, elegant tone.
Formal living and dining rooms ofer classic proportions, each anchored by refned detailing and garden outlooks.
The family room, wrapped in designer sheers, fows to an entertaining terrace and gardens. Out there is a meticulously landscaped world of camellias, cherry blossoms and clipped hedges.
In the kitchen, marble benches, premium appliances and a generous scullery bring both European glamour
“This is a special, character-flled home completely transformed with luxurious, sophisticated interiors. It combines classic elegance with a modern edge, plus has a magnifcent pool and gardens.” and practicality, while chequered porcelain tiles and a 1930s Murano glass chandelier add old-world theatre.
Outdoors, a wind-sensing retractable awning shades the terrace, overlooking a resort-style pool framed by travertine. The accommodation is equally indulgent. The king-sized main suite feels like a boutique hotel, with a luxe en suite, exceptional storage and views over the gardens and pool. There are three additional bedrooms, one of which is styled as a study, while a mezzanine retreat provides a fourth living space.
One of Canberra’s oldest suburbs, Reid’s heritage shows in every leafy street, with mature trees and lush front gardens. No need for a car: Civic, Braddon, Glebe Park and the lake are just a walk away.
Mario Sanfrancesco Blackshaw Manuka
Words by Jono Fleming
Creative minds, clever means
It’s a time-worn adage, but there are many good reasons for taking a DIY approach when it comes to your home.
Sometimes the best design ideas don’t come from fancy showrooms; they come from the most unexpected places.
One of my favourite DIYs I’ve ever done was creating a backrest for a banquette seat entirely from pool noodles. Cut, wrapped in fabric and lined up side by side, they created a sculptural,
custom look that no one would ever guess were pool accessories!
It is proof that DIY done well can be stylish and even add value to your home. DIY hacks have become more than a weekend pastime.
Thanks to creators like Geneva Vanderzeil and Jaharn Quinn, they have become a design movement.
Brush it off: A fresh coat of paint is a straightforward way to create a dramatic change to any room.
They show that you don’t need a big budget to make a big impact, and when done thoughtfully, these hacks can completely change the way a space feels.
Pool noodles are just the beginning. They have been turned into curved bedheads, arched mirrors, even an armchair. The result looks bespoke and designer but costs a fraction of the price.
The trick is in the fnish. Cover them in a beautiful fabric or paint them a bold colour, and suddenly you have a piece that feels intentional, not improvised.
IKEA hacks are another favourite playground for DIY enthusiasts.
A plain Billy bookcase with cane webbing added to the doors suddenly looks like a custom cabinet. A side table can be wrapped in marble-look vinyl and instantly become a chic pedestal.
These kinds of projects are popular for good reason. You start with something accessible, give it a clever twist, and end up with a one-of piece.
Dreaming in colour
Paint is perhaps the easiest hack of all, and one of the most efective. A tired pine dresser can become a statement piece with a coat of deep green, while dated tiles can be stencilled over to add pattern and charm. Even a simple light ftting can be transformed with a quick spray paint.
Small touches like this can fip the personality of a room without the time, cost, or commitment of a full renovation.
Thread your way through
Fabric is another underrated DIY tool. Beyond reupholstering chairs or cushions, it can be stretched over large canvases to create instant art or used to wrap tables for a textural fnish.
Rufes and skirts are becoming extremely popular with high-end designers, and it’s a look easily replicated at home (if you have the sewing skills). The beauty of fabric hacks is how easy they are to experiment with, and if you get tired of the look, it is simple to swap them out.
“Sometimes the best design pieces don’t come delivered in a box – they come from a little imagination.” Jono Fleming
Create a scene
What makes these projects so appealing is not just how afordable they are, but the personality they bring to a home. A clever DIY detail becomes a talking point, something that makes a space feel more lived in and layered. It is that extra spark of individuality that separates a house flled with catalogue pieces from one that truly feels like home.
For those who are nervous about starting, the key is to keep it small.
A lamp, a stool, a piece of art. It doesn’t have to be a major overhaul to make an impact.
Often, the smallest tweaks are the ones that give a room its personality.
Once you start, it becomes addictive, because suddenly you begin to see potential everywhere: in the pool shed, in the cupboard, even in the council pick-up pile.
So whether it is pool noodles, IKEA hacks, paint tricks or fabric experiments, clever DIY is not about cutting corners; it is about creativity.
It is about seeing the everyday in a new way and turning it into something that feels personal, stylish and unique. Because sometimes the best design pieces don’t come delivered in a box – they come from a little imagination and a Saturday afternoon with a hot glue gun.
LOUISE ROCHE
Start small: It’s all about adding personality to your space.
A STANDOUT SEASON OF RESULTS.
This Spring, 31 properties joined our Spring Showcase. Close to 90% sold with outstanding results , while the remaining homes continue to attract strong, qualified buyer enquiry.
By releasing multiple premium listings together, we created strong collective momentum, increased competition, and delivered exceptional outcomes for sellers across the Canberra region.
Summer is shaping up to be even bigger.
Our next Collective Auctions event is now open for registrations.
Scan to see how your property can make the most of the Summer selling season.
John Gorton Drive, Coombs
Newman-Morris Circuit, Oxley
1
More exposure, maximum results, and your chance to win. *
This Summer, list your property in The Property Collective’s Collective Auctions
Summer Showcase and receive FREE marketing upgrades valued at over $2,000 Plus go in the draw to WIN up to $10,000 of your marketing costs paid for.
Exclusive perks include:
Allhomes Upgrade
Premium placement in search results for maximum visibility.
Audience Boost
Targeted Meta ads to active buyers in your area.
Our auctioneer: David Holmes
Allhomes Guide Half Page Ad
Feature your property in Canberra’s most-viewed property magazine.
Summer Showcase Prize Entry
A chance to WIN up to $10,000 of your marketing costs paid for.
Listing Refresh
Push your listing back to the top of search results mid campaign.
Custom Collateral
Summer Showcase branded signboard and marketing collateral.
David Holmes is one of Australia’s most respected auctioneers, known for his professionalism, energy, and skill in creating competitive auction environments. With over 20 years of experience and recent appearances as an auctioneer on The Block 2025, David brings both expertise and charisma to every event.
Find out more about David Holmes: holmesauctions.com.au/david-holmes-profile
List your property to be part of our Collective Auctions Summer Showcase, taking place on Thursday 19 February 2026 at Beltana Farm in Pialligo, and get more eyes on your property, more competition, and a better chance at a premium result.
List now and make this Summer your selling season.
Limited spots available.
Award-winning project marketing built on collaboration, insight, and results.
With over 100 years of combined experience and a track record of sold-out success, we bring real
Proudly recognised as REIACT’s Project Property Marketer of the Year 2023 & 2025.
To learn more about us or to talk about a current or future project, scan here or visit
Live Larger at Woden Green.
A completed community designed for a more comfortable way of living. Woden Green offers generous foorplans, multipurpose rooms that adapt to your lifestyle and beautifully landscaped spaces that bring a sense of calm to daily life. With meaningful amenity and a central Woden location, it’s apartment living made practical, spacious and welcoming.
The Woden Green Difference
∙ Oversized living and bedrooms
∙ Pool and quiet cardio gym
∙ Green spaces and refection pools
Private dining hall with full kitchen
Secure resident parking with lift access
Minutes to Westfeld, dining and transport
Move-in ready with established community
Final Release Now Selling
Spacious One Bedroom Apartments from $540,000 *
Generous Two Bedroom + Study/Media from $730,000 *
Exceptional Three Bed Signature Collection from $1,349,000 *
GOWRIE 6 Dartnell Street
VIEWING Sat 13/12/2025, 3-3.30pm Sun 14/12/2025, 11.30-12pm Tues 16/12/2025, 5.30-6pm CONTACT Michael Potter 0413 830 598 Rick Jordan 0417 664 334
Spacious family residence elevated in the heights of Gowrie and nestled amongst a leafy suburban outlook.
A family friendly design features multiple indoor and outdoor living areas where cooking, dining and relaxation unite. The main bedroom is segregated from the other three, both bathrooms have been tastefully renovated and the generous sized kitchen is both functional and modern.
The final draw card is a secluded, covered outdoor area that offers engaging cameos across a crystal clear, inground pool and a mature, established garden setting. EER 1.5
Keystone Terraces, Lyneham
Terraces thoughtfully designed for privately owned seniors living and aging in place, construction complete for February 2026 .
Keystone terraces have been designed to answer the call for privately owned fit for purpose residences to age in place, where homecare can be brought to you in the years to come. Our terraces feature some of the widest townhouses in the Inner North, designed to ensure family home-like proportions that offer both space and comfort. Each home includes a full double garage with no basement, providing ease of access and most importantly higher security for a "lock up and leave lifestyle." All terraces have been designed with internal lifts from inception. The homes feature zero-threshold transitions with no lips or steps, wide doors, and bathrooms ready for movement assistance, large low maintenance private court yards and balconies all orientated to capture as much north sunlight as possible.
76/41 Clare Burton Crescent
1310/39 London Circuit
26 Dryandra Street
13 Gillman Place
37 Banambila Street
47 Kythera Street
8/12 Mulloon Street
7 MacNeil Place
3/12 Gould Street
9A Aprasia Avenue
4 Hayes Street
26/4 Ross Road
1/18 Moore Street
905/3 Grazier Lane
45/260 City Walk
4 Castle Street
94 Carnegie Crescent
1 Boree Place
218 Dryandra Street
41 White Avenue
3/15 Gibbes Place
24/3 London Circuit
3/27 Berrigan Crescent
8 Toolagal Place
35 West Avenue
29a/21 Beissel Street
310/39 Braybrooke Street
40 McGowan Crescent
1 Sheafe Street
58/4 Henshall Way
1/27 Jinka Street
1 Richard Avenue
803/4 Masson Street
4 Cavan Rise
123/64 College Street
13/2 David Street
Suburb
Franklin City O'Connor
Queanbeyan Aranda Googong
Queanbeyan Kambah Turner Googong
Queanbeyan Queanbeyan Turner Belconnen City
Googong Grifth
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At Blackshaw Gungahlin, we’re proud to be your trusted specialists in the greater Gungahlin region and surrounding suburbs. As locals ourselves, we understand what makes our community unique; from growing families searching for space, to first-home buyers taking that exciting next step.
Whether you’re buying, selling, or looking for award-winning property management, our team is here to guide you with genuine care, personalised service, and a commitment to achieving exceptional results.
Artist Impression
SCAN TO BOOK
Words by Jil Hogan
Just a short stroll from Merimbula’s cafes and waterways, this three-bedroom home comes with a fully self-contained studio. The open-plan living area fows to a leafy, heated balcony that feels like a second lounge, while downstairs ofers a home ofce and a second outdoor space. The large block also boasts ample yard space, with low-maintenance gardens.
Woodcomby ofers 49 hectares of grazing land. The homestead features raked ceilings, a cosy wood fre, slowcombustion heating, and a verandah. The original shearing shed, a solar array and three dams support an easy country rhythm. An outdoor area boasts a pergola and pizza oven, while a timber cottage adds extra accommodation.
Words by Ray Sparvell
Large industrial park primed for logistics
There’s no doubt there’s a shortage of big sites in the ACT suitable for logistics companies.
What’s equally evident is that there is a big demand for them, given Canberra’s location as a convenient staging post to service the NSW South Coast and the Riverina – a radius that could meet the needs of up to 1.2 million people.
Our cross-border neighbours are cashing in on a frst-mover advantage and drawing that business to the new Gateway Industrial Park in Environa, just a stone’s throw(-ish) from Hume.
Michael Ceacis of Select Property Group says the Environa park is emerging as one of the region’s most signifcant industrial developments.
“The demand since it came to market has been crazy,” he says. “Of the 13 blocks on ofer, seven have either been sold, are under ofer or are going through due diligence.”
The remaining blocks range from about 5000 square metres to 12,500 square metres.
Ceacis says the civil infrastructure within the park is nearing completion, with settlement on purchased sites expected in early 2026.
“It won’t be long before buyers begin to ... take advantage of these excellent regional transport links,” he says.
The park is being designed for sustainability. Planning includes provisions for energy efciency, modern utilities and adaptable layouts.