The Weekly Review Melbourne Times

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MAY 16-22, 2018

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INSIDE

SWEET SUCCESS A S U G A R - C O AT E D E M P I R E

MELBOURNE’S BEST PROPERTIES INSIDE MELBOURNE TIMES

MICHAEL ROWL AND + D A N N Y K AT Z + LIZ ELLIS + ROBYN BUTLER +


FIRST PERSON

I am David Dare … and I use the old methods, like in Mary Poppins I started doing this because I was helping a friend. He took off to Bali and never came back. Ever since I had my own website, it just went ballistic really. I think there’s about a dozen chimney sweeps in Melbourne, of varying quality. I use the old methods, like in Mary Poppins, with a brush and vacuum. It’s one thing that can’t be computerised. The kids love it. Sometimes they start singing the song (Chim Chim Chim Cher-ee Cher-ee). When I tell people I’m a chimney sweep, they’re a bit surprised sometimes, but there’s a definite demand for it. People get you to sweep their chimneys while they’re renovating and then real estate agents get you to sweep the chimneys between tenancies. It’s certainly not a passing fad. If anything, people are using their fireplaces more. There’s more atmosphere than gas, and gas is getting quite expensive. People think, if I can scrounge the wood I’ll use the fireplace, I’d rather look at a fireplace than a heating duct. They have to be serviced – it’s like anything. The soot builds up and it can be like cholesterol in an artery, it’s clogged up with soot. It’s not really something people can do themselves. They wouldn’t have the right equipment and a lot of people wouldn’t put up with the heights and the dirt. I wear a mask and goggles; you’ve got to look the part. Dead birds, possums and ducks, all sorts of things go down chimneys. They can get to the stage where they won’t draw properly and also you can have beehives in chimneys. I normally do them from the top down. People think you go up the chimney, but no, you don’t. It’s very important that people have their chimneys checked out before they light them because sometimes they can be capped off at the top. Sometimes you can have a fireplace but there’s actually no chimney there, so you can’t use it. What would happen? Well, they’d burn the house down. Normally in the winter months I work six days a week. I may do three days in summer, it depends. I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone else, because I don’t want any more competition. ●

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The editor’s desk The view

THEWEEKLYREVIEW.COM.AU

BY SCOTT MCNAUGHTON \ Southbank

A glimpse of modern Melbourne at Hamer Hall. ●

Farewell, my waistline. It was nice knowing you, even if for just a little while. After hours spent poring over pictures of doughnut prince (and cover star) Morgan Hipworth’s lush creations, I know that I am going to give into temptation and my swimsuit body will be but a dream. But, oh, that butter cream! And in this edition, we welcome new book club columnist Michael Rowland, co-host of ABC News Breakfast. Michael will be sharing his reflections on a selected title each month, and we hope you will read along with him by joining the conversation on our Facebook page. More details inside. ●

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THE FORMER CHAMPION NETBALLER ON LOVE, GRIEF AND COURAGE DURING IVF TREATMENT

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iz Ellis felt a strong responsibility towards telling people’s stories about their “infertility journey”. “Almost to a person, they all said they wanted to tell their story to help somebody else,” Ellis says. “Writing this book totally restored my faith in human nature because you can see what the human heart is capable of.” Ellis, 45, the former Australian netball captain, is talking about her book, If At First You Don’t Conceive, a “friendly” guide to tackling infertility, based on her own experiences, those of many others who shared their stories and a range of experts. To collate the stories, Ellis put a call out on social media for people who had experienced infertility to contact her. The stories, many told over the phone, were extraordinary. “I spoke to people who had the most emotional stories. I’d often speak to people after I’d put the kids to bed and I’d be on the phone,

them, their five-year struggle including five rounds of IVF and miscarriages. As someone who had been “on the infertility highway without a GPS”, Ellis was in a good position to make a series of calls to people she didn’t know about a most intimate subject. And it helped to be well known. “Yes, because people trusted me,” she says. “I cold-called IVF specialists and obstetricians, and when they knew who I was they were happy to sit and chat.” Her social media reach of 22,000 followers was useful, too. Asking strangers about difficult topics such as infertility and miscarriage was daunting. “There are no words to talk about the grief like that. If someone’s father dies, you know the words. If you have an IVF transfer and there’s nothing there, what are the words to talk about the grief for something that never was?”

“I want people to talk about it because there is a stigma attached to it a little bit around what’s not working, whose fault is it. Forget the fault, forget not working; this is what you’re going through.” – LIZ ELLIS

tapping away, bawling my eyes out because their stories were amazing. “To see what people are prepared to do for love is amazing, either because they love their partner or they want a family to love.” Ellis lives with husband Matthew Stocks and their two children – Evelyn, six, and Austin, two, on a 64-hectare cattle farm near Byron Bay. “We have a very gentle life; the kids have all the freedom in the world. They spend a lot of time muddy, I spend a lot of time hosing them down … they are my world.” Her book is a story of love and resilience. “I spoke to a woman who went through 19 rounds of IVF to get her twin boys. She miscarried twins at 20 weeks after 12 rounds and her story of having to give birth and seeing her husband talk to these dead babies … I get emotional thinking about that conversation. She was so resilient, so determined that she was going to have her family.” Ellis notes that one in six couples in Australia is affected by infertility. She and Stocks were one of

She says there remains a stigma. “I want people to talk about it because there is a stigma attached to it a little bit around what’s not working, whose fault is it. Forget the fault, forget not working; this is what you’re going through.” But people were relieved to tell their story. “A number hadn’t told their story before, particularly men. Infertility is not [only] a women’s issue. It’s equal male-andfemale factors.” Ellis says women and men approach the journey in different ways. “A lot of women I spoke to still felt like it affected their femininity, that the biological reason for me to be here is to reproduce, regardless of career,” she says. “When you want that baby, you want that baby. It was a hard thing for women to get their head around. But women are more able to talk about it. They confide in their friends; they’re used to having that conversation with people.” She says getting men to talk about it was difficult. “They didn’t want to talk to me about it because

I N T E RVI E W ● PE T E R WI L M O T H

there’s a stigma to infertility, around feeling emasculated … that you’re not as masculine as the bloke who’s got a great sperm count. My husband got his sperm count back and they said ‘you’ve got A-grade sperm’ and he was like ‘I’ve got excellent sperm!’ It’s such a pride thing.” She says the sense of relief when men did address it was “almost palpable”. “I spoke to a man who said he found it really hard dealing with his infertility … they used donor sperm, but when the baby came out that baby was his. He was so emotional in the telling of it, you couldn’t help get caught up in that emotion.” Ellis says it’s a story about love – wanting to share love with a child and the rocky road towards that quest, including the pressure on relationships. “My conclusion is that infertility treatment will exacerbate what is already there. So if you have a relationship that is strong but you need to communicate better, fertility treatment magnifies that and shows you must communicate. If you have a relationship that is rocky to start with, then infertility will absolutely tear that apart.” Ellis was impressed with the courage of people who shared their stories. “One woman said ‘I want my story to be a beacon for other women’. She gave me lots of notes and someone else gave her diary; very personal. I felt the reason they were giving me their story was to light the way for others.” IF AT FIRST YOU DON’T CONCEIVE \ By Liz Ellis $34.99 ● panmacmillan.com.au

PI C T U R E ● J U LIA N KI N G M A

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DANNY K ATZ \ HOME TRUTHS

T

he bank guy was round at our house, sitting at the dining table, telling us about our finances. He gave us good news so we pushed a little plate of Scotch Finger biscuits towards him as a gesture of appreciation. Then he told us the bad news so we slid the plate of biscuits away. It was just your typical dining-table, biscuitsliding, bank-guy, morning chitchat – and then right in the middle of it, we heard a snorty, snouty, snrrrrrrrrkkkkk vibrating from the nearby bathroom. Followed by a growly, guttural, achhh-achhhh-achhhh. A medley of greatest hits from legendary indie band Teenage Son and The Phlegm-Summoners. Anyone who has a teenage son knows they collect a tremendous amount of goop in their sinal cavities – it’s either hormonal or they shove it up there as some kind of fashion thing. And unfortunately we have a bathroom that’s butted right up

against our dining area – which is not so great if you’ve got people over and everyone has to sit at the dining table politely, listening to something that sounds like raw meat being sucked through a bong (Kids try all kinds of stuff; you just don’t know). Whoever designed our house was a monumental twit! Bathrooms and dining rooms involve opposite ends of the eating spectrum and do not belong together. But there’s nothing we can do about it: we’ve tried soundproofing the bathroom with cork tiles, but it just made it look like a scungy inner-city recording studio with a soap dish. We’ve tried replacing the thin, hollow bathroom door with a super-heavy, super-thick one, but the sound still leaked

through – and now it takes two people to open it. We even considered soundproofing our son, double-glazing his nasal passages and siliconesealing his sinuses, but we couldn’t find a tradie who’d do the job, not even on Airtasker. So any time there’s people around, and someone needs to use the bathroom, my wife and I must initiate our Emergency Bathroom-Noise-Muffling Procedure. First we try talking loud and fast. If that doesn’t work, we turn the stereo up. If it’s still bad, I get the blender and crush ice at the table then ask if anyone’s in the mood for a daiquiri. Thankfully the bank guy was in the mood. I made him a small one. Without the maraschino liqueur. ● Danny Katz is a newspaper columnist, a Modern Guru and author of the Little Lunch books for kids, now a TV series on ABC3.

“Bathrooms and dining rooms involve opposite ends of the eating spectrum and do not belong together.”

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MICHAEL ROWL AND \ BOOK CLUB

Thrills from an unlikely hero

YO U R SAY

THE WEEKLY REVIEW BOOK CLUB

T H E R E VI E W

J

THE GREATER GOOD \ By Tim Ayliffe $29.99, out now ● simonandschuster.com.au

Welcome to our monthly book club, where we invite you to read along with Michael. Each month, Michael will share his impressions of his chosen book and we want your thoughts on each title. To join the conversation, make sure you like our Facebook page. Your mini review could be featured in the next instalment of our book club. At the end of the year, three readers will receive a bundle of great titles from Australia’s top publishers. Make sure you share your reflections of Michael’s most recently reviewed books on The Weekly Review’s Facebook page to be in the running. ●

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THE NEXT READ

ohn Bailey is a broken man. After one too many shaves with death as a war correspondent in Iraq, Bailey finds himself back in Sydney as a 53-year-old police reporter, drinking to forget. Dispatched to cover an inner-city murder, Bailey stumbles onto a plot that extends all the way to the corridors of power in Canberra and catapults our jaded hero into a world of trouble. Tim Ayliffe’s debut novel is a crime thriller with the lot: murder, deceit, corruption and a hint of romance. The ABC journalist (full disclosure: he’s a colleague and friend who’s told tall tales for years) has a reporter’s eye for detail. Drawing on his extensive experience, Ayliffe takes you deep inside the worlds of politics and the media, with a heavy dose of international intrigue thrown in. Chasing the story, Bailey has to confront shady police, scheming politicians, Chinese spies and haunting flashbacks to Fallujah. Helping him out is old CIA hand Ronnie Johnson, who has mysteriously popped up in Sydney. A man well versed in the black arts, Ronnie ‘had never killed anyone who hadn’t deserved it’. Sprinkled through the book are Ayliffe’s dry observations on the media (the radio shock jocks who are ‘inflammatory morons masquerading as journalists’) and, in a line that will have all of Melbourne cheering, a frustrated Bailey laments Sydney turning into a ‘bullshitter’s paradise’. ●

M I C H A E L’ S L A S T WO R D

“The Greater Good is the first in a trilogy. It is easy to see John Bailey proving just as popular a literary figure as Peter Temple’s Jack Irish or Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan.”

BUTTERFLY ON A PIN \ By Alannah Hill $32.95, out now ● hardiegrant.com

Michael Rowland is the co-host of ABC News Breakfast, weekdays 6-9am on ABC TV.

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ENTERTAINMENT

Gen warfare MULTI-TALENTED ROBYN BUTLER LIGHTENS UP IN PREPARATION FOR THE FIRING LINE

S H AU N M I CA L L E F & R O BY N B U T L E R

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CHANNEL NINE

W

hen Channel Ten pulled the pin on Talkin’ ’Bout Your Generation in 2012, the TV landscape became bleaker in the absence of Shaun Micallef and co. exploring intergenerational difference from the Baby Boomers through to Generation X. Happily, the show’s jumped ship with a revival on the Nine Network, with a few tweaks. For a start, the Boomers have been ditched, with the elder generation being represented by Gen Xer, writer, comedian and actress Robyn Butler, funny dude

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Andy Lee (the Andy half of Hamish & Andy) captaining Gen Y, and actor Laurence Boxhall heading up the first-time inclusion of Gen Z. While a lot’s been made of the generational shake-up, Butler isn’t convinced it changes the flavour of the show. “My team fills the same role as Amanda’s team [Amanda Keller previously captained the Boomers],” she says. “We still have the slightly world-weary, ‘you know nothing’ attitude towards the others. It’s the same DNA of human beings travelling through time, no

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matter what you call it. So I don’t think it actually affects anything, except my pride.” While we’ve become accustomed to Butler driving things from behind the camera with the stream of awardwinning tele emanating from Gristmill, the TV-production company she spearheads with husband Wayne Hope, Butler is set to remind us that her on-screen chops are just as sharp. That said, it’s required something of a gear change. “I was a little bit tentative, because I haven’t been Robyn as Robyn, apart from doing publicity things, in front of the cameras for a long time,” she admits. “I’ve acted, but that took a

back seat, because I wanted to explore other parts of myself. “Increasingly, writing, producing and directing was where I was getting a lot of satisfaction, but the very first day we started shooting, I was like, ‘oh, that’s right’. It just was like riding a bike.” The move is also in line with a decision Butler made when she hit her 40s to make more joyful material. “I spent a lot of my younger career making darker, more cynical things, which I think you tend to do when you’re younger, because you’re not really concerned about mortality,” she says. “As you get older you go, ‘oh, I’m going to be dead soon’.

ROADSHOW

WO R D S ● M E G C R AW F O R D

Robyn Butler and Portia de Rossi in the Butler-written comedy Now Add Honey.

Like, come on, lighten up everybody. “Upper Middle Bogan is a very happy show. Little Lunch, our kid’s show, is a very happy show. It’s not to say that either of them are without

satire, but they certainly come from a place of hope. At this point in time we live in a funny old world: antagonist, human, disparate, and people are at odds. “In contrast, Talkin’ ’Bout Your Generation feels like fun, and I’m going with fun options.” All of that said, it is unusual for Butler to be working on a project sans hubby Hope. Is she going to miss him? “No. I’m contractually obliged to work with him on a 24/7 basis anyway. There is no escape. I’ve tried. I’ve looked at all the loopholes and, apparently, I can’t get out of it.” ● ● Talkin’ ’Bout Your Generation launches May 21 at 7.30pm on Nine.

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CULTURE

Steeling against name theft ETIQUETTE APPLIES WHEN SELECTING YOUR BABY’S UNIQUE MONIKER

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ack in the ’90s, before Gwyneth had Apple and Beyoncé had Blue Ivy, Seinfeld’s George Costanza tried to think up a unique name for his future child. In the episode, George reveals his name of choice – Seven – but to his dismay, his fiancee’s pregnant cousin likes it so much, she decides to use it herself. What was intended as an absurd plot line apparently rings true. Google ‘stealing baby names’ and 800,000 results pop up, ranging from

grievances shared on parenting forums to articles debating the issue. There’s even a term for it. “We call it ‘name sniping’,” says Jennifer Moss, founder of BabyNames.com and co-host of The Baby Names Podcast. “We get several messages, probably one or two a month, about it happening.” The anxiety around name sniping can be enhanced by parents wanting to give their kids names that are one of a kind – an especially modern desire and phenomenon.

When Moss checked the US Social Security Administration’s records for 1950 and 1960, she found that one in every three children had a name that ranked in the top 10 most popular names of the period. “Now it’s less than one per cent,” she says. “That’s telling us that parents are thinking outside the box and want a name that’s different from everyone else’s.” Sherri Suzanne, the founder of My Name For Life, a consultancy that helps parents select a baby name,

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WO R D S ● E R I N M U N R O

“We call it ‘name sniping’ ... we get several messages, probably one or two a month, about it happening.” – JENNIFER MOSS

“belongs” to. “I have had siblings quarrel over who had greater claim to a deceased relative’s name: did the younger sister have a right to use the name, since she had a child first? Was the older sister more entitled to the name by birthright?” So, what’s the etiquette when it comes to baby names, and how can cases of name sniping be resolved peacefully? “There aren’t hard-and-fast rules about it,” Moss says. “If it’s a close friend or family member who’s considering a name, you

should really ask them first if you can use it.” If you discover someone’s leaning towards a name you already told them you’d picked out, Moss advises having a face-to-face conversation – but keep it light. “Names are very personal to people, so I’d say approach it in a friendly manner and be open to compromise.” And if you can’t come to a resolution, let it go, and find a new name. After all, in Suzanne’s words, “the world is full of amazing names”. ●

ISTOCK

credits the trend for unique names with an increasingly globalised world and changing social mores. “Some of it is simple mathematics: there are a lot more names from which to choose,” she explains. “We hear new names daily on TV, in movies, on the internet, and in the news.” The experts agree that name sniping is a bigger issue when it happens within close circles, rather than among acquaintances. Suzanne usually encounters it when there’s a question of who a name

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COVER STORY WO R D S ● K AT E J O N E S

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Great expectations THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND TALENTED TEEN ACHIEVERS what you like, but promising up-and-comers like Hipworth have the world at their feet. Talented and driven, these teens juggle the demands of their studies with the push of their ambition. It could be said that Matthew Sutton has been kicking goals all his life. But these days, he spends a lot of time stopping them. The 17-year-old goalkeeper is one of the newest and youngest recruits at A-League soccer club Melbourne Victory.

ANITA MILAS

organ Hipworth is living proof of the fierce entrepreneurial spirit of Generation Z. For Hipworth, the humble doughnut represents the life’s endless possibilities. The 17-year-old has created more than 2000 Instagramfriendly varieties of the sweet treat for his Windsor cafe, Bistro Morgan. Currently, his favourite is a doughnut called The Cookie Monster. “It’s filled with cake batter, then it’s got white chocolate, Oreo chunks, some colourful sprinkles and confetti, and cookies and cream chocolate,” he says. This week, the year 12 student fronted five of Australia’s savviest investors when he appeared on the new season premiere of Channel Ten’s Shark Tank (Tuesdays, 8.30pm). He asked them to make a $200,000 investment in return for a 20 per cent stake in his burgeoning business. “Wanting to go sort of full time into the business and not necessarily having a full-on plan of where I wanted to go, I thought it’d be cool to get that expertise,” he says. “It wasn’t, for me, necessarily about the money. It’s never been. It’s just about doing what you love. “I thought being able to get that experience and expertise with someone who’s done it all before would be really, really valuable.” Hipworth received four offers, three of them from Boost Juice founder Janine Allis, but declined them all. At the end of the negotiations, Allis agreed to mentor Hipworth without payment. “It was an awesome outcome and I’ve had a couple of meetings with Janine since,” he says. “I didn’t really want to give away more than 20 per cent of my business because I’ve worked so hard for it. “She’s a really great businesswoman, so it was awesome to make that connection. Who knows what could happen down the track?” Hipworth was just 13 he began wholesaling doughnuts to a local cafe and at 15, opened his very own cafe in Windsor. “I went into business at a young age because I was really passionate about food and cooking,” he says. “Bistro Morgan is going great, as expected from our forecast of where we should be. It definitely keeps me busy in between school and life.” And if at times the demands of running a business and completing VCE are stressful, Hipworth says he uses it as a source of motivation. “There’s so many things that motivate me, but I think one of the main things is the constant challenges that come along with running your own business. It motivates me every day to do better than the previous.” Inspiring. Overachievers. Future stars. Call them

Supreme ambition: Morgan Hipworth of Bistro Morgan, top; Melbourne Victory player Matthew Sutton, above.

His sporting prowess was spotted at 15 when he won a scholarship at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra, which meant moving from his family home in Sydney. “I really wanted to make something out of football since I was about 14 and that included many training sessions, games, lots of sacrifices,” he says. “It’s a big commitment and one of the biggest was having to move away from home and all my family and friends. But it’s something that’s not really a massive thing for me because I’m lucky enough to do something I really want to do.” Mykelti Kotzur, 16, has loved art ever since she was old enough to grasp a pencil, but she never dreamt her works would be on display at a national gallery. The Wodonga Senior Secondary College student admits there were tears of joy when her work Me, Myself, and Matryoshka was selected for the Top Arts 2018 Exhibition at the Ian Potter Centre: NGV Australia. She spent 250 hours constructing the five babushka dolls that make up her artwork. Kotzur has her sights set on a career in medicine, but says art, like her determination, will always be in her life. “I’m always looking towards a goal ... even if it’s just something really small,” she says. ●

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FEATURE HOUSE FITZROY NORTH \

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enovated by the prestigious and award-winning firm NMBW Architecture Studio, this rather grand Edwardian home in Rushall Crescent has been treated to masterful and imaginative contemporary design to its complement period grace. Space has been cleverly managed to retain the treed rear garden while maximising the living area; a first-floor addition not only adds bedrooms and a bathroom, but gives access to roof storage. The house is sophisticated and elegant with light pouring in through banks of glass, reflecting off polished pine floors and pale walls. At the front of the ground floor, two bedrooms, the formal lounge and a bathroom open off the hall which is decorated with art nouveau fretwork. The lounge has an elaborately decorated ceiling, a timber art nouveau fireplace, picture rails and built-in bookshelves. In the rear living section, the family area, and the dining area – defined by a japanned floor – open to the deck. The kitchen extends along one side and beyond, ending with a built-in desk and a laundry opening to another small deck. The materials used in this section add texture and interest. Exposed brick contrasts with pearly white walls and, in the kitchen, plywood and timber cabinetry combine with white surfaces and stone benchtops, stainless steel and a mirror splashback. Windows are framed in black and the kitchen and dining area ceiling features white beams. The main bedroom suite on the first floor has a walk-in wardrobe and a smart en suite shower. The garden is pretty with flower beds, lawn, a garden shed and a barbecue area. The house has hydronic heating and split-system cooling. The address is in a quiet and pretty neighbourhood, close to the best of North Fitzroy and Clifton Hill. Queens Parade, Mayors Park tennis courts, and the pools and gym of the Collingwood Leisure Centre are close by. Rushall Crescent residents are also close to the best of North Fitzroy’s cafes, bars and restaurants. There are abundant parks nearby and the property is close to primary and secondary schools, and transport. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON property@domain.com.au

FINAL WORD “A TRULY EXQUISITE FUSION OF PERIOD CHARM AND MODERN ARCHITECTURAL BRILLIANCE, IN A TIGHTLY-HELD ENCLAVE.” NIGEL HARRY – AGENT

AGENT \ Jellis Craig 8415 6100 PRICE \ $2.2 million – $2.4 million AUCTION \ May 19 at 1pm

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DOWNLOAD THE DOMAIN APP SEE MORE IMAGES, FLOORPLANS & PROPERTY DETAILS


BRUNSWICK EAST \ 1 LEINSTER GROVE 4

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Set in a superb cul-de-sac location – opposite Methven Park and a few steps from the cafe and restaurant precinct of northern Lygon Street – this immaculately-renovated Edwardian home has strong family appeal. Through the gorgeous front door with its unusual oval panel, the ground floor is well-designed, light and spacious. All the bedrooms are here, the main with a smart en suite, along with the family bathroom, kitchen and living areas. On the first floor, via a staircase with boat-wire balustrade, is a 5.4-metre square living room with access to roof storage. The kitchen is large with a waterfall island bench, stone benchtops, Smeg and Miele appliances and ample storage. Bifold doors open the living area to the deck and the paved rear garden. Zoned ducted heating and cooling make it comfortable all year round. The floors are solid timber and outside the property has ROW access and is close to transport, schools and shopping. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON

AGENT \ Nelson Alexander 9486 1800 PRICE \ $1.4 million – $1.5 million AUCTION \ May 19 at 2pm Scan the code with the Domain app to view listing

CARLTON NORTH \ 55 MCILWRAITH STREET

BRUNSWICK EAST \ 5/150 DONALD STREET

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This elegantly renovated home is part of the Princes Hill precinct – recognised by the Heritage Council of Victoria for its period houses from the mid-to-late 19th and early 20th centuries. This particular home features three bedrooms (two with original fireplaces), a spacious marble bathroom, separate powder room and study. The entrance hall opens to the living area at the rear of the home encompassing the kitchen, dining area and lounge opening to a tiled rear courtyard. Alternatively, this courtyard could be used as an off-street parking space, as it backs onto a lane and is accessed via a garage door. ● AMELIA BARNES

Enjoy convenient inner-city living in this architecturally-designed townhouse. On the ground floor is the garage, European laundry and contained living space (alternatively a sizeable third bedroom). The middle storey has timber flooring throughout the main living area, which opens to a balcony, and the kitchen with Caesarstone benchtops and Smeg appliances. Off this area are the home’s main bathroom and one bedroom. On the top floor are two more balconies – one directly off the main bedroom, which also has an en suite. The Merri Creek Trail, the 1, 6 and 19 trams, and Sydney Road are nearby. ● AMELIA BARNES

AGENT \ Nelson Alexander 9347 4322 PRICE \\ $2.7 million – $2.95 million AUCTION \ May 19 at noon

AGENT \ Woodards 9344 1000 PRICE \ $800,000 – $850,000 AUCTION \ May 19 at 2pm

Scan the code with the Domain app to view listing

Scan the code with the Domain app to view listing

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NORTHCOTE INNER CITY LIVING WITH CITY VIEWS! This spacious, modern 4 level townhouse has quality fittings throughout! Large open plan living with Bose surround sound, dining, kitchen with stain/steel European appliances, sunny terrace & powder room, zoned floor heating & reverse cycle air. Two bedrooms have BIR, main has ensuite & WIR. Ground floor comprises double garage, laundry with plenty of cupboards, private courtyard & study with cable internet connection. The real 'X' factor of this magnificent home is its stunning rooftop with some of the Melbourne`s best city views! In a splendid location with tram at your doorstep & Lygon St cafés, restaurants & shops all close by.

BRUNSWICK EAST 5/363B LYGON STREET

a4 b2 c2 AUCTION

This Saturday at 11:00am

PRICE

$1,100,000 - $1,200,000

VIEW

Thu 17th May 5.30pm - 6.00pm

CONTACT

Angelo Bafunno 0414 585 777

Sat 19th May 10.30am - 11.00am Timothy Prosser 0449 998 787 OFFICE

440 Sydney Road Brunswick 03 9386 1855

PRESTON WEST 23 SYMONS STREET FAMILY LUXURY IN PRIME LOCATION!

a4 b2 c3

Outstanding 4 bedrm BV family home, comp: main bedrm with ensuite and WIR, 3 bedrms with BIRs, lounge with OPF, dining, kitchen with stain/steel bench top, splash back, DW and walk-in pantry. Bathroom with spa bath and laundry, 2nd living area opens to all weather alfresco with wood fire, bench seats and ceiling fan. Features: polished timber floorboards, gas ducted heating, split system air conditioner, downlights and more! Carport and driveway for 2 more cars plus 2 garden sheds and landscaped gardens.

AUCTION VIEW CONTACT OFFICE

ID and contact details are required at all open for inspections

This Saturday at 12:00pm Wed 6.00pm - 6.30pm & Sat 11.30am - 12.00pm Angelo Bafunno 0414 585 777 400 High Street Northcote 03 9489 5777

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3 Roemer Crescent, Alphington ´Rosemount´: This grand Victorian residence on spectacular land (1978m2 approx) with sweeping views over Yarra bushland in an exclusive precinct close to schools and parkland offers elegant formal sitting & dining rooms; music room/study; 4 double BRs (main with WIR & ensuite) & 2 further

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bathrooms; expansive family living/dining open to well-equipped kitchen; laundry & vast cellar/ workshop. This unique heritage home includes a double garage & features outstanding period detail, Baltic floors, hydronic heating and split-system a/c.


5 Auction Inspect

Sat 2nd June at 2pm Thursday 1.30-2.15pm Saturday 3.00-3.45pm

Guide Contact

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$2,400,000 - $2,600,000 Jacqui Knapsey 0418 592 509 Tom Breen 0437 175 677

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2J 2K 3L 701/103 OXFORD STREET, COLLINGWOOD HISTORIC APARTMENT WITH PANORAMIC VIEWS This unique two level contemporary apartment features spectacular 270 degree views from the Melbourne CBD through to the Dandenong Ranges. Comprises two bedrooms, three spacious and private balconies, large living and dining areas framed by polished timber floors and high ceilings, plus an enormous secure 2 or 3 car garage within the secure basement car park. Auction: Saturday 2nd June at 11.00am Inspect: Thursday 5.15pm - 6.00pm Saturday 11.00am - 11.45am Contact: Syd Sherrin 0418 530 452 Dylan Efron 0431 394 757

www.wbsimpson.com.au

Phone: 9328 1213

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PROPOSAL TO UPGRADE A MOBILE PHONE BASE STATION AT MELBOURNE. Optus plans to upgrade a telecommunications facility at Building C William Angliss Institute 555 La Trobe Street MELBOURNE VIC 3000 (RFNSA No. 3000394). 1. The proposal consists of the: ‡ 5HPRYDO RI WKUHH 5DGLR 5HPRWH 8QLWV (RRU’s) to be replaced by three (3) new RRU’s installed to the existing headframe; and ‡ ,QVWDOODWLRQ RI DQFLOODU\ HTXLSPHQW LQFOXGLQJ the aforementioned RRU’s and works within the existing compound. 2. Optus regards the proposed installation as a Low-impact Facility under the Telecommunications (Low-impact Facilities) Determination 1997 (“The Determinationâ€?) based on the description above. 3. Further information can be obtained from Shaun Wheatland on behalf of Optus, (02) 9495 9064, shaun.wheatland@axicom.com.au and at http://www.rfnsa.com.au/3000394 4. Written submissions should be sent to: Shaun Wheatland at Axicom Pty Ltd /HYHO 3DFLĂ€F +LJKZD\ St Leonards NSW 2065 by 5pm Wednesday 30th May 2018.

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JAYCO Hawk, 2014, original Jayco bed flys and battery kit, Fiamma awning, sleeps 6, serviced by authorised Jayco service centres, registered, $20,500 neg. Excellent condition, spotless throughout. Ph: 0499 353 777.


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