Located on one of the widest absolute beachfront positions at north, central Palm Beach, this 3 bedroom plus 2 bedroom duplex pair is ready for renovation or leave it as it is and reap the rewards of its high demand rental position. The trade-off is that although absolute beachfront living is hard on property, it is absolutely uplifting for the soul.
This absolute beachfront secret is ideal for the discreet beach lover who wants to pick and choose who they give this locations coordinates to amongst their family and friends. Between you and me this cracker of an opportunity can be discreetly discovered by walking 4 doors south of 21st Ave, Palm Beach along the beachfront. But don’t tell anyone!
- 412m2 block with a 10m absolute beach frontage
- 3 bedroom top floor, 2 bed ground floor both tenanted
- No strata to be considered one title flats
- Wide, sand filled beach position, no erosion
- Property memorandum available on request
For further information about Palm Beach: http://profile.id.com.au/gold-coast/about?WebID=390
Henry Jordan, a Queensland parliamentarian and sugar planter living in the Logan area, selected much of the coastal land between Tallebudgera and Currumbin Creeks in 1873.
Gradually, Jordan added to his block, his property encompassed today’s Palm Beach, Elanora, and Currumbin Waters.
In a period between 1880 to 1890, a retired railway worker and early land speculator, William Wood, acquired 400 acres of Jordan’s coastal block.
Wood had numerous properties in south east Queensland and only appears to have lived at Palm Beach towards the end of his life.
Before World War 1, a Mr John Crimp occupied a homestead and grazed cattle on Wood’s property.
Wiliam Wood’s property south of Tallebudgera Creek was purchased by the Palm Beach Company Ltd around 1921.
The first housing allotments were subdivided from Cypress Avenue to the foreshore and were available for sale after 1922.
One of the first families to build a home on the estate at 4th Avenue, was the surveyor and development manager, Perc Ballard and his wife, Annie.
By 1925 there were twenty or so seaside homes on the Palm Beach estate. Potential investors and holiday makers were encouraged to stay at a boarding house (Anada) or lunch at tea rooms built by the company.
When the road bridges were constructed over the Tallebudgera and Currumbin Creeks in 1926, the Palm Beach Hotel, erected in the same year, was a convenient stopping place for passing motor traffic.
Word spread and many families from Brisbane, Ipswich, the Darling Downs or Western Districts of Queensland built their timber or fibro beach house or camped along the long sweep of beach.
Today, the Palm Beach/ Elanora is one of the most densely populated areas of the Gold Coast and in recent years the area has expanded to include new subdivisions, including a small section of canal development.
(SOURCE: goldcoast.qld.gov.au)