This sensational 5 bedroom, 3 bathroom home is located on a quiet side street.
This versatile home offers formal living and dining areas to the front of the property and a huge family and kitchen area in the centre, which open out onto a sunny deck.
The kitchen is complete with gas cooking, dishwasher and a fantastic butlers pantry.
The main bedroom is huge with a large walk-in robe, ensuite and a dressing room area which could easily convert to a nursery. All bathrooms offer floor to ceiling tiles and a spa bath.
Downstairs offers teenagers retreat and bedrooms, laundry and with outdoor access. Enclosed are low maintenance gardens.
This home is located in the heart of the Gunghalin shopping hub, schools, restaurants and the soon to be completed light rail terminal.

Features include:
Pets considered
Double lock up garage on remote
Ducted heating and cooling
3 main living areas

Please note: Back storage shed not for tenants use
No EER

Suburb Snapshot
The District of Gungahlin is one of the original eighteen districts of the Australian Capital Territory used in land administration. The district is subdivided into divisions (suburbs), sections and blocks. Gungahlin is an Aboriginal word meaning either “white man’s house” or “little rocky hill”.

As of 2013 Gungahlin comprised eleven suburbs, including three currently under construction and a further seven suburbs planned.[citation needed] The town of Gungahlin was part of the original 1957 plan for future development in the ACT and in 1991 was officially launched as Canberras fourth town by the ACT Chief Minister. At the time, the population of Gungahlin was just 389 residents.
Within the district is Canberra’s northernmost town centre that is situated 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) north of Canberra city centre. The town centre is one of five satellites of Canberra, seated in Woden, Tuggeranong, Weston Creek and Belconnen.
The traditional custodians of the district are the indigenous people of the Ngunnawal tribe.

Following the transfer of land from the Government of New South Wales to the Commonwealth Government in 1911, the district was established in 1966 by the Commonwealth via the gazette of the Districts Ordinance 1966 (Cth) which, after the enactment of the Australian Capital Territory (Self-Government) Act 1988,[9] became the Districts Act 1966. This Act was subsequently repealed by the ACT Government and the district is now administered subject to the Districts Act 2002.
During colonial times and up until the late 1960s, present-day Gungahlin was part of the former farmlands of Ginninderra. Ginninderra Village and later still the village of Hall serviced the needs of the local farming community. Free settlers included farming families such as the Rolfe, Shumack, Gillespie and Gribble families.[12] These settlers established wheat and sheep properties such as ‘Weetangara’, ‘Gold Creek’, ‘The Valley’, ‘Horse Park’ and ‘Tea Gardens’. Much of the local produce supplied the large workforce at goldfields located at Braidwood and Major’s Creek in New South Wales.

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