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Angus House, Darlinghurst warehouse style apartment listed

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Douglas Farrell, managing partner of the private equity firm Quintet Partners, is selling his Darlinghurst warehouse apartment.

It is in Angus House, set on the north-west corner.

The three-bedroom, two-bathroom property has 4.4 metre ceilings in the open-plan living spaces.

There’s a stone-topped kitchen with breakfast bar seating, a covered balcony and a car space on title.

McGrath Edgecliff have it for a July 7 auction with $2.1 million hopes.

It last sold at $1,375,000 in 2014.

The former Moran Health care head office was converted into residential by the property developer Theo Onisforou.


Stirling Mortlock sells at Pymble

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Southern Highlands-bound retired Wallaby's skipper Stirling Mortlock and wife Caroline have sold their Pymble family home for $3.8 million before its scheduled auction.

They've called the red brick residence home for the last decade, having paid $2.4 million in 2008, just a few years after it was built.

The five bedroom home sits in 1,208 sqm of manicured gardens which feature a tennis court and saltwater swimming pool.

Tim Fraser at Di Jones North Shore secured the pre-auction sale.

Mortlock captained the Wallby's, Brumbies and Melbourne Rebels over his illustrious 14 year career.

He pulled on the Wallaby's jersey 80 times, winning the famous Bledisloe and Tri-Nation Series' victories of 2000.

Following his 2012 retirement, Mortlock became a wealth director at NAB. Last year he moved to Peak Advisors.

This article was first published in the Saturday Daily Telegraph.

 

Yarranabbe, Darling Point sold after 52 years ownership

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The Crane family have sold their Darling Point home Yarranabbe after 52 years’ ownership. Offers above $14 million were being sought for the home with a history dating back to convict times.

It was last sold in 1966 by ­Rupert Murdoch, the then Daily Mirror publisher, for $100,000 to the mining company director David Crane, whose widow Sonia listed the home last month.

The six-bedroom, five-bathroom property with a pool was owned by the then newspaper publisher for five years, during which he launched the The Australian in 1964.

It was the retailing family Sir John and Lady Walton who sold to Murdoch in early 1961 for £55,000.

The Waltons had subdivided the parcel, building a new home on what was the harbour-edge tennis court.

The three-level property was marketed as Victorian with a twist of Mediterranean.

This article first appeared in The Sunday Telegraph. 

Ron Bakir penthouse buyers list Paradise Waters home

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Businessman and philanthropist Kevin Chatfield and wife Vicki have listed their redundant Paradise Waters home having bought the record-breaking Gold Coast penthouse of entrepreneur Ron Bakir earlier this year.

There's five bedrooms, seven bathrooms, a fully equipped gym, steam room and a wine cellar with tasting room across its four levels which are all accessible by the internal lift.

The top floor entertainment precinct features a marble bar, billiards room and a 260 degree terrace.

The entry level has a theatre, home office, a 20 metre lap pool and a heated spa.

The couple paid $4.8 million for the home on the Admiralty Drive dress circle in 2011 when buying from the Ferrari collecting Kiwi businessman Grant Baker and wife Donna.

Lucy Cole Prestige Property agent Nick Cole has expressions of interest until July 18, with all furniture included in the sale.

The couple spent $9.5 million for the Chevron Renaissance penthouse earlier this year.

The sale topped the previous penthouse high of $9.2 million, set six years ago when Melbourne builder Peter Devitt bought in Main Beach’s Liberty Panorama tower.

This article was first published in The Weekend Australian.

 

Prahran townhouse resembling Bec Judd's sells next door

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A Prahran townhouse, located in the development next door to the former home of interior designer Bec Judd and her husband, former AFL premiership winner Chris Judd, has just sold.

While not as grand, the townhouse draws similarities with the Judd's, particularly from the facade.

The home at 32 Hinton Lane (top), in a boutique block of just four town houses, sold for $1,085,000.

The listing suggested that no expense was spared on the interiors and fittings. 

It has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a north facing courtyard.

The Judd's home (below) fetched nearly double when they bought it in 2016, but it has two more bedrooms and another bathroom (below) and another level of living space.

It spanned four levels and sold with a new marble kitchen and a private master suite that spanned the entire top level.

Judd paid $1.66 million in 2007 and secured $1.96 million in 2016.

 

Willowglen, Foxground's early 20th century weatherboard farm home sold

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Allianz Australia chairman John Curtis and wife Anna have spent $2,625,000 on a farm in the Illawarra district. 

They've settled on Willowglen, a 43 hectare parcel in Foxground complete with an early 20th century classic weatherboard farm home.

The property had been run as a productive beef farm with Curtis intends to continue.

It has machinery and old dairy infrastructure. 

LJ Hooker Nowra agent Patrick Tynan sold the property which locals suggested has the best farm land in Foxground.

The couple are based at the historic Darling Point sandstone mansion, Craigholme.

They paid $1,615,000 for the 1850s home designed by colonial architect Edmund Blacket in 1993.

Four years ago they sought buyers at around $20 million for the home on the Yarrannabee Road dress circle. 

Curtis was previously the chairman at St George Bank and deputy chair at Westpac.

This article was first published in the Saturday Daily Telegraph.

Model Olympia Valance sells Tudor-style Elsternwick home

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Australia rock legend Ross Wilson, wife Tania Gogos-Wilson and her daughter, actor and model Olympia Valance, have sold their Tudor-style Elsternwick home.

It was the residence of Vallance, who is best known for her role as Paige Smith in Melbourne's famous soap Neighbours.

They paid $1.2 million for the 1930s period home in 2014. It sits next to Wilson's own home, which he has had since 1998.

The three bedroom home on 480 sqm features decking running the length of the established garden.

Glenn Bricker and Joshua Lubofsky at Gary Peer & Associates Caulfield North sold the home after it passed in at auction last month without a single bid.

It had $1.65 million to $1.815 million hopes.

Valance had no need for the home, with aspirations of a move to Hollywood.

She'll be in Australia sparingly no doubt, having last month joined the cast of Network Ten's sports drama Playing For Keeps.

She plays Tahlia, a socialite who is engaged to the captain of an Aussie rules team.

This article was first published in The Weekend Australian 

Banned cricketer Cameron Bancroft buys a new base in Perth

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Aussie cricketer Cameron Bancroft, one of the suspended players, has upgraded Perth homes. 

The Test batsman, who was the player with the sandpaper in South Africa in March, has paid $917,500 for a home in Melville, a suburb south west of the Perth CBD.

He snapped up the home which was listed by Justin Miorada at Acton North City Beach with a $890,000 to $950,000 price guide.

The four bedroom, two bathroom 1960s home entertainers had been recently renovated. 

An open plan kitchen and family room opens to an alfresco overlooking a backyard with winter garden and solar heated swimming pool with water feature

Bancroft has leased his former home, a 1980s townhouse in nearby Leeming, for $395 a week. 

He bought the three bedder in 2015 for $540,000, shortly before he announced himself on the international stage in T20 cricket.

Bancroft was given his baggy green cap on his Test debut in November

This article first appeared in The Sunday Telegraph.


Former rugby union boss Rob Clarke sells Mosman beachfront

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The recently departed ARU deputy Rob Clarke and his lawyer wife Kylie Virtue-Clarke have sold their luxury Mosman waterfront to a Seaforth family.

The price guidance had been between $9.5 million and $10.5 million through Richardson & Wrench agent Andrew Blaxland who was marketed the home as the "closest thing to the Whitsundays on Sydney Harbour".

It last sold at $4 million in 2003.

Designed by architect Patrick Nicholas, the Parriwi Road home comes with boatshed and private beach at low to mid tide.

Mosman has had XX sales above $10 million this year, including Cardross, the long-time Stenmark family home where Susie and Damien raised their four children. 

They accepted a pre-auction offer through Raine & Horne agent Brendan Warner having paid $2.65 million in 1998 when the twins, Jordan and Zac were six.

 

 

This article first appeared in The Sunday Telegraph. 

Former billionaire mining tycoon Frank Timis spends $5.5 million on Perth home

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2018-06-26The former billionaire mining tycoon Frank Timis and wife Carmen have spent $5.5 million on a Perth home.

Timis snapped up the property at City Beach just one day into its marketing.

The SW3 London-based entrepreneur secured a 2015 built home which was designed by Giorgi Exclusive Homes.

It has five bedrooms, a home office, theatre room, sauna, gym, outdoor kitchen, pool and spa.

Space Real Estate agent Scott Swingler secured the quick sale.

He was once ranked the wealthiest Australian in Britain, according to the Sunday Times Rich List in 2011, even ahead of Sir Michael Hintze.

This article was first published in The Weekend Australian. 

 

South Sydney Rabbitoh star Angus Crichton buys Rose Bay semi

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It's been a busy few of weeks for the South Sydney Rabbitoh star Angus Crichton.

Just before putting in a star performance on debut in New South Wales' Origin win, the young back-rower bought his first home.

It was secured off-market.

Settlement paperwork now shows the 1930s red brick Rose Bay semi cost $2.18 million.

The three bedroom semi, that last traded for $1.4 million in 2011, popped up amid the recent sales successes of newly appointed Ray White Double Bay associate director, Warren Ginsberg.

Crichton is set to initially be a rentvestor as he's put it up for lease at $1,350 a week, reflecting a 3.2 percent rental yield.

The single storey home with high ceilings, polished timber floorboards and a sunroom, sits in landscaped gardens on 290 sqm.

Crichton's new purchase in Roosters territory comes as no surprise as he has deep associations with Sydney's east.

He was born in Young in NSW's south west slopes, but he went to school at Scots in Bellevue Hill.

His father Charlie runs the popular Double Bay butchery 1888 Certified.

Crichton, who rents at Bondi Beach, has been in scintillating form for the Bunnies who sit second on the ladder after winning the last seven straight.

His desire to play the game was well documented in the off-season, after he underwent an operation to remove one of his fingers after ongoing injury troubles.

Crichton has committed to a contract with the Roosters from the 2019 season worth $2.7 million, however the Daily Telegraph's Phil Rothfield said that he was having second thoughts.

"I can tell you that Crichton has got very caught up with the excitement at the Rabbitohs,’’ Rothfield told Fox Sports’ NRL 360 earlier this month.

"They’re a really tight team and he is having second thoughts about going to the Roosters."

Commenting on the rumours, Crichton said he'd "pour cold water on that."

Angus initially looked set for rugby union when he was younger.

This article was first published in the Saturday Daily Telegraph.

Jersey-based billionaire funds pioneer Graham Tuckwell buys record setting Hyams Beach offering

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The Jersey-based billionaire funds pioneer Graham Tuckwell and wife Louise have emerged as the buyers of the record setting Hyams Beach sale.

They paid $4.8 million for the beachfront Cyrus Street dress circle offering that came with two houses, dubbed Jacaranda and Driftwood.

It was bought sight unseen by the Canberra born philanthropist.

Jacaranda is the original home closest to the Jervis Bay foreshore. 

Driftwood is a four bedroom contemporary home with two courtyards that sits on 1,370 sqm, one of the largest blocks in the popular tourism hamlet.

JB Beach Houses Vincentia agent Geoff Keighran sold the home in just 39 days.

Tuckwell is the founder and chairman of ETF Securities which holds $30 billion in assets. 

This article was first published in the Saturday Daily Telegraph.

The Block's Demmrich couple seek tenants at Bateau Bay

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The Block stars Kyal and Kara Demmrich, who have just welcomed their second child, are seeking tenants for their Central Coast renovation project.

After paying $580,000 four years ago, the couple undertook small scale renovation on the old fibro cottage at Bateau Bay.

There were no structural changes, just a modern facelift.

After ripping out the old tired carpets, there's rustic timber flooring throughout the home that sits on a 640 sqm parcel a stones throw from the beach.

They are again seeking $460 a week through Ray White Bateau Bay agent Kristen Burkett after the last tenant departed

The Bateau Bay home was leased at $395 a week before their renovation.

The couple are based nearby in a four bedroom home at Toowoon Bay.

Late last year they offloaded their Long Jetty renovation that they had been documenting room by room on their joint Instagram account.

They pocketed $1.59 million, over double the $710,000 they paid just 11 months earlier.

The Central Coast property market is on fire, with house price growth over the past year pegged at over 12 percent.

They announced the birth of their child on the social media platform last month.

Their daughter, Vada Jane, was born on Kara's birthday.

"Wow! She is here, born at 2:58am this morning, 30th May on Kara’s Birthday," the couple shared on their joint Instagram account, along with the first photos of their newborn.

They had their first child, son Ziya, in 2016.

The couple appeared on The Block: Fans v Faves in 2014 before becoming full-time renovators.

They now have their own segment on Channel Ten's The Living Room.

This article was first published in the Saturday Daily Telegraph.

 

 

 

Architect couple list Chippendale apartment

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Architect couple Bruce Eeles and Kathryn Trelease, who founded Camperdown's Eeles Trelease architecture firm, have listed their long held Chippendale apartment.

The couple paid $247,000 in 1997 for the top floor apartment at 303/30 Buckland Street.

It sits in the warehouse conversion Chippendale Mews.

The two bedroom unit has one bathroom and a study alcove. It has elevated views of the city and streetscape.

Ray White Surry Hills agent Ercan Ersan and Astrid Joarder have a June 30 auction.
 
Ersan said Chippendale Mews was one of his favourite warehouse conversions.
 
"This over sized two bedroom home with parking is a rare find in Sydney's hottest foodie destination," Ersan said.
 
Trelease said the building had always had a great mix people, with families and people of all ages and occupations.
 
"Chippendale has always been a convenient location and the units are easy to live in," she said.
 
"With only 14 units, its easy to get to know your neighbours, which is a rare thing in the big city," Trelease said.
 
"The unit is sunlit all year round, which is one of the best features."
 

Second floor Pomeroy, Potts Point apartment fetches $10.05 million

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Potts Point has seen its third highest apartment sale, with an second floor apartment in Pomeroy selling off market for $10.05 million.

It was sold an exisiting owner in the Macleay Street building who wanted more bedrooms and the elusive four car spaces.

The 340 sqm apartment has four terraces, two master wings, four bedrooms and five bathrooms, reflecting around $30,000 a square metre. 

It comes with 48 sq m in its terraces overlooking Rushcutters Bay from its second floor,

It was consolidated off-the-plan during the 2003 construction of the Winten-built block. 

It last traded for $6 million when it was sold in 2010 by Di Jagelman who had consolidated two apartments off the plan.

It was sold by R&W agent Jason Boon who Instagrammed his success this afternoon.

The top sale apartment price in Potts Point remains $15 million for the ninth floor Pomeroy penthouse which was sold by property developer Bob Ell to John Piven-Large in 2013.

Ell consolidated the penthouse offering with his initial $9.75 million purchase in 2005 from the Rothwell developer and added the lower floor apartment at $3.5 million which was bought from the late interior designer Garth Barnett. 

The penthouse came with 370sqm of internal space plus 200sqm of balcony space, four car spaces and dual harbour views. Designed by architect Susan Rothwell, the 34-unit Macleay Street block won the 2004 UDIA high density award after Mirvac's Chateau Hotel was demolished following its closure after the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

Other than the Pomeroy penthouse, there's only been other sale above $10 million on the Macleay Street dress circle, which came in 2014 when philanthropic Americans John Alchin and Hal Marryatt paid $10.95 million for a three storey penthouse in the Georgian which was then gutted in a renovation.

There was a reported off the plan $11 million sale of a penthouse in the hourglass-shaped Omnia tower redevelopment of the Crest Hotel in November 2015 which will be coming up for settlement later this year.

It was sold by Greenland as having an early 2018 completion date.


Western Bulldogs coach Luke Beveridge lists Bentleigh East home of 24 years

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The Bulldogs coach Luke Beveridge and his wife Dana have listed their Bentleigh East home.

The 2016 AFL premiership winning coach has a price guide of $1.4 million to $1.5 million for the home that cost $140,000 in 1994.

The Fraser Street home, built in the 1960s, has four bedrooms, two bathrooms and a fireplace in the open plan living and dining area.

The 650 sqm parcel features a solar powered swimming pool and spa, overlooked by the poolside caba, rustic full-size bar and gas fuelled wood fire heater.

Nick Johnstone Real Estate agents Nick Johnstone and Alan McGillivray have a July 28 auction.

Nova star Sarah McGilvray looking to flip Balmain terrace

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Fitzy & Wippa sidekick Sarah McGilvray and her husband, Thales Group director James Couche, are set to flip a Balmain terrace. 

The couple paid paid $2,040,000 last year.

They've been busy renovating, even while they had their first child, William, late last year. 

The home has three bedrooms and one bathroom on its 135 square metre parcel.

Belle Property Balmain agents Lyndsey Kemp and Kristyn Brennan have a $2.1 million guide for a June 28 auction. 

The new mother, who was in London with the team for the Royal Wedding, joined the Nova FM team in 2016 and produces Fitzy & Wippa's breakfast show.

They're opting to be closer to the North Shore where much of their family live.

This article first appeared in the Sunday Telegraph. 

Hadley House, Castlereagh gets heritage listed

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The New South Wales Government has heritage listed for Hadley House at Castlereagh.

The homestead’s significance is one of Australia’s oldest farming estates.

But keeping it on the map for future generations has been a struggle.

The Castlereagh property has a special meaning for 2GB broadcaster Ray Hadley, belonging to his fourth great-grandfather Charles Hadley in the 18th century.

In February this year, the Penrith Lakes Development Corporation assured Ray that Hadley Park would be protected only to go back on its word.

State Planning Minister Anthony Roberts says Governor David Hurley has signed off on a heritage listing for the property.

The government is now moving to restore it.

“From there we’ll start to, of course, protect the site further, rebuild it, and turn it into a destination for people to go and see how people in the past used to live and work,” he tells Ray.

Ray has thanked the Minister and the government for preserving the historic location.

“I think it’s very important, from my point of view, that we leave some sort of legacy into the future, where our children… can go and look at places and have a look and feel what it was like back then.”

NSW Heritage says it is difficult to overestimate the significance of this complex, "still extant in its original 1803 grant, and still in a remarkably unaltered condition".

As a building it is one of the earliest extant buildings in the colony; in its condition and setting it is probably unique, the reference suggests.

The farming complex, together with Nepean Park adjacent, make an outstanding pair within the Castlereagh/Nepean River farming plateau.

The site comes with a single storey outbuilding, possibly the earliest timber cottage on the site circa 1806, maybe the oldest timber cottage known to survive in Australia.

The area is now owned by the Penrith Lakes Development Corporation (PLDC) and is off-limits to the public.

The main farmhouse is an extremely rare surviving example of a jerkin head roof structure embodying a most unique and unusual timber structure and clad externally with brickwork.

The technical excellence of the timber roof structure is paralleled by Elizabeth Farm, Parramatta, Old Government House, Parramatta and St. Mathgew's Anglican Church, Windsor and because of this technical excellence the building cannot be described as vernacular.

Peter Nicholas selling Darling Point home

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HiLife Health and Beauty founder Peter Nicholas is selling in Darling Point.

It was four years ago when Nicholas paid $8.25 million for the apartment from Sydney FC chairman Scott Barlow after just one day of it being marketed.

Nicholas has renovated the fourth level apartment.

Nicholas, and his TV presenter partner, Belinda Rudd, are now expecting $10 million.

Nicholas had previously created Skin Doctors, which was sold in over 48 countries, before he divested the company.

In 2009, Nicholas made model Jacinta Campbell the face of his number 1 selling make-up brand, Nude By Nature.

 

 

 

 

 

Veteran visionary property industry developer Sid Londish dies

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The Sydney property developer Sid Londish, the 94 year old giant of the property industry, has died.

He still had all his charm when we last caught up in Milsons Point, one of the many suburbs that he helped transformed through the decades. He'd walked across from his Grandview apartment.

The raconteur wanted to talk about his plan for a $130 million residential retirement devel­opment at Woodend, 70km from Melbourne.

Always sharply dressed in a navy reefer jacket, often with cashmere cardigan, along with personalised cuff links, and gold watch, the ever forthright Londish was a true pioneer of the industry.

"I like being out in front,'' said Londish of his 60 plus years in property. He was the grandfather of the industry, taking over the mantle from Sir Paul Strasser in 1989.

I first came across him in 1986 when he paid $11 million for the air space above the Kings Cross tunnel with his initial plans to construct a luxury 500-room international hotel on the one hectare site sold by the NSW Department of Main Roads site. He was, at the time, a 62-year-old self made millionaire, who shunned my comparison to any likeness to Blake Carrington, the coiffured oil mogul from the then hit television series, Dynasty.

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The workaholic, thick-skinned property developer was born in April 1924 at Tientsin, in northern China, arriving in Australia as an 11 month old. His British father, who had come to Australia in 1885 as a 17 year old, had been in China to set up a typewriter factory where he'd met his Russian wife.

His father introduced him to the phrase from Euripides: "Men honor property above all else; it has the greatest power in human life."

He pioneered a range of visionary commercial and residential property developments across Sydney. 

He'd built NSW's first shopping centre at St Ives in 1960, then went onto develop Australia's first village-style shopping centre in Kings Cross. There was the 1963 Southside Plaza, the £800,000 development which included the popular Rockdale Bowl.

In the early 1980s he developed the Tower Square Village at North Sydney which SMH writer Valerie Lawson noted was aimed at people with plenty of disposal income and were attracted by glitter and glamour. The Big Bear office and retail complex in Neutral Bay came in the late 1980s too.

He developed the Hunter Connection, the major pedestrian retail food court thoroughfare to Wynyard Station, where retailers are currently unhappy with how Brookfield is dealing with the pending redevelopment distruption.

Then it was creating Australia's first bulky goods Supa Centre at Moore Park in 1993. Then there was the redevelopment proposal for the opposite corner, The Reschs Brewery site.

In 1988 Londish's Comrealty Ltd and the Japanese firm, EIE Developments, headed by Dr Bungo Ishizaki, unveiled plans for an $850 million office block to be built on the site of Sydney's first Government House.

The Young Street project would be "as important in Sydney as the Bond Centre is in Hong Kong," he noted. They are now the prestigious Governor Phillip and Macquarie towers in the CBD.

There were the Ritz Carlton hotel projects. Australia's first Ritz-Carlton was established when Londish constructed it on Macquarie Street in the late 1980s for Japanese millionaire singer, Masao Sen.

His prestigious residential developments included Pulpit Point at Hunters Hill; No. 9 Elamang Avenue, Kirribilli; The Wintergarden Apartments, Rose Bay, Grandview Apartments, Milsons Point among many others.

These all had such extravagance which are now actually the norm. 

Londish pioneered the luxury trend on the Kirribilli waterfront in the early 1980s. It was long before the term empty nester was conceived. His low rise residential building - in the grand southern Mediterranean tradition and finished with Corinthian scrolls and balustrades - was designed by architect Michael Stanley. The six apartments, with north-east aspect over Careening Cove, originally fetched about $500,000 each. In 1990 prestige apartment specialist Andrew Macluran sold one for $3.5 million, setting a record price for a North Shore apartment and an Australian record for a resale apartment. 

Londish had a policy of living in his own buildings, proclaiming he was not frightened to be in daily contact with his fellow occupants.

"That's how confident I am of presenting a quality product." 

There were certainly failings, financially and in his relationships. 

In Woolloomooloo, his joint initiative with the Moscow Narodny Bank came unstuck in the 1970s recession. He was undone again in the 1990s recession.

But his enduring legacy includes pushing for the development of Sydney's third runway, as chairman of the Sydney Convention and Tourist Bureau.

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"The government has a responsibility to tell us why we can't have it and I'm not talking about saving someone's bloody arse in Parliament," he forthrightly said, referring to the Minister for Aviation Support, Gary Punch, whose constituency was near the airport.

Much earlier he was apparently creating and operating Australia's first offshore oil rig too. And sand mining at Lithgow.

In 1986 the extraordinary specimen of a Plesiosaur was found partially preserved in opal.

Londish purchased the damaged specimen and then employed Australian palaeontologist Paul Willis to reconstruct the sea beast. 

The opal mining machinery had crushed the skeleton into hundreds of fragments with Londish having the idea that he would donated it to the Australian Museum under the Tax Incentives for the Arts scheme.

Paul Willis, then a doctorate student, but later to become a Quantum presenter on the ABC, spent some 450 hours joining all the broken fragments together. 

Liking light opera, he was credited as assisting Paul Keating's pursuit of opera. He once told how he often gave Keating "fatherly advice" until they lost contact after falling out over fringe benefits tax.

Londish's linkedin profile indicated his education was "the school of hard knocks." 

Sid Londish often recalled "poverty everywhere" growing up in harbourside Woolloomooloo.

He got his first job aged nine filling nail polish bottles being paid sixpence fornine-hour shifts.

In 2015 he kindly participated in a school program at Plunkett Street Public School – Me, You and Woolloomooloo – which gleaned first-hand history of the suburb when Year 4, 5 and 6 students conducted interviews, at meyouwoolloomooloo.com.

Londish spent about $20 million buying Woolloomooloo terrace slums and proposed a $400 million redevelopment in the early 1970s, seeking a 12:1 floor space ratio. The locals dubbed him "Quick Quid Sid."

His overly ambitious Woolloomooloo proposal came after he met one of his mentors, Daniel KLudwig, a fabulously wealthy shipping magnate, and richest man in the USA, who created the upscale suburban communities of Westlake Village in California.

By 1974 after two years of green bans, Londish’s backers withdrew, forcing Londish’s company Regional Holdings to abandon the project.

Some two decades earlier the Londish family's Woolloomooloo engineering workshop had closed two years after Prime Minister Robert Menzies scrapped the engineering depreciation allowance in 1950.

In the early 1990s SMH writer Deirdre Macken wrote his face went purple whenever he spoke of planners, council officers, and bureaucrats.

The Weekend Australian journalist Kate Legge wrote of him three years ago in a feature on 90 plus year olds who were living life to the max.

Describing him as "tall, with a weathered countenance, gold-rimmed glasses, combed furrows of white hair and a cautious gait, his appearance belies an indefatigable zest for the next big wave."

That was endeavouring to create a better lifestyle for elderly Australians with his new concept in aged living resorts.

After a lifetime building city towers, golf courses and shopping centres, he was hell bent on a mission to revolutionise aged care because the places he'd visited horrified him.

"I thought, 'If this is going to be my old age, I'd shoot myself'." 

She described Londish as a poster boy for the idea of "active" ageing underpinning the Intergenerational Report.

Londish, the ex-RAAF pilot in PNG, had a vision for aged care.

He envisaged serviced offices at his retirement village proposal.

"On offer will also be lectures on financial planning, how to update your computer skills, and many more courses to ensure guests have something to do both physically and mentally every day."

"I know what old people need and they need two things.

"First of all they can't be lonely. They need to be mixing with people and doing things every day.

"The second thing is if you don't keep your mind and body active you'll become a vegetable, so this place is all about living. It's all about getting out of bed and having something to do. I do this myself. I swim for half an hour every morning, it keeps everything moving; it allows me to turn my head when I'm driving."

Reinventing aged care became his mission after visiting a former golfing buddy who'd retired, sold the family home and moved with his wife into assisted living units with a central lounge.

"We went into this room and it smelt of death, like a repository. They were all sitting around watching each other die. So I came to the conclusion that this is not the way for elderly people to live. I started to look around and the more I saw, the more I was horrified.

"If ever my kids put me into one of those, I've had the richard.'' 

But his grand plans for deluxe retirement villages never quite got there.

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Initially there was a 20ha site at Campbelltown in Sydney's west in 2003 where he drew up plans for 1000 apartments.

"It was the first time in my life that I've left council with a standing ovation," he chuckles. But his partners took a quick profit and sold up.

Next he chased a bigger parcel of land in Sydney's north at Oxford falls but the council blocked his proposal through the Land and Environment Court.

"They're all frightened of aged care but I'm telling you it's the biggest problem coming in this country. Not one of the politicians can see it coming. If they do not wake up soon we're going to be so far behind."

He was just as fortnight in 1991 at the Royal Commission into Building Industry Productivity addressing the disruption on his trouble-plagued Premier Apartments site at North Sydney.

The cost of the project blew out from $22 million to $58 million and took twice as long as scheduled.

"A couple of unionists got sand in their meat pies up on the 11th floor," Londish told the commission.

"Strike.

"They all walked off the job.

"I got so frustrated with that job I could not bear to look at it because every time I did I used to get ulcers." Mr Londish said.

Click here to enlarge.

He work from his his earliest days to the end this week.

"They'll cart me out of here with my shoes on," he told me as he turned 65 in 1989, with no plans for retirement.

It was in 1957 when Londish's father, who lived until 96, sent him to America in search of new products for their reduced engineering business.

Sitting next to him on the flight to San Francisco was the manager of a Melbourne grocery chain on a trip to investigate cash registers.

"I had no idea what he was talking about but was interested to know more," he recalled to Legge.

"We went to this place called a supermarket where we met the manager who showed me the pre-packaging machines that bagged sugar, cut up butter, cellophane-wrapped tomatoes ... I saw shoppers selecting products from shelves and carrying them to a checkout basket at 10pm at night and I was stunned."

Londish came back and constructed the supermarket at St Ives in 1960.

"Sweetie," he told Kate Legge, "it's all about keeping your brain working. I'm still physically, intellectually and sexually active and I want this for everybody else."

"What I want to leave is a legacy," he says. 

"I want to give old people something better. They will live longer, happier lives and they'll have fewer medical problems. Why? Because they won't get depression sitting on their bum at home which is mostly what happens when their partners die. They watch bloody television until they get to the stage where they have to go into a nursing home."

In 1990 he participated in the documentary done by the Beyond 2000 reporters Simon Reeve, Amanda Keller and Ian Finlay that took a look at the future of the Lucky Country.

Australia 2020, the TV documentary produced by Tim Worner and Peter Abbott, had Londish warning about Australia's apathy and tendency to be "great muddlers."

He feared it would lead to a situation in the year 2020 of where "we're eating bread and jam again . . . or dripping."

The reviews suggested Londish was one of the more outspoken characters on the program.

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