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Fake prince's real Brisbane property on the market: Title Tattle
By
Jonathan Chancellor
Page 1 of 2
The Brisbane riverside apartment of the fake Tahitian prince Joel Morehu-Barlow has been listed for sale. The Supreme Court has given the Public Trustee permission to sell the apartment through Josephine Johnston-Rowell of Johnston Dixon Quality Property. The apartment in the Pietra complex cost $5.65 million in 2010. The two-storey Moray Street apartment comes with three bedrooms, five bathrooms and pontoon on the Brisbane River. Morehu-Barlow is accused of embezzling more than $16 million from Queensland Health. It's taken 15 months, but Title Tattle can finally report that the former Champions Textile warehouse in Newtown (pictured above) – once home to broadcaster Alan Jones – has been sold through Raine & Horne Newtown agent Michael Harris for $3.1 million. The three-level O'Connell Street property was owned by Jones between 1989 and 2003, when it was sold for $2.9 million to the current vendors, the Bowden family. Jones secured his place on O'Connell Street, Newtown , in 1989. It was Jones's then managing agent Harry M. Miller – himself a residential warehouse pioneer –who suggested the warehouse way to Jones. Title Tattle seems to recollect that the world boxing champion Danny Green used part of the 650 square metre premises to train for his fights. The space is spread over three levels with 270-degree views taking in St Stephen's tower, among the oldest churches in Sydney. It has a loft penthouse with cathedral ceilings and a sheltered rooftop entertaining terrace. Downstairs there are self-contained apartments, an office and commercial space, and secure parking for five cars. There's approval for its conversion into a six-unit apartment complex. It was listed in April last year with $3.5 million-plus hopes.
Its fitout by BKH came after it cost $1.75 million in 2004, following Uren's return from New York. The 215-square-metre abode first sold for $675,000 in 1995. Title Tattle recalls when the entire eighth-floor property was first offered. Strata speculators sold off the 17 apartments through Laing Real Estate agent Doug Laing. It was sold separately after its sale in one line by the Albert family, who’d bought it in 1925 for £35,000. Kingsclere was the first residential block built along Macleay Street, as before 1912 most high-rise residential development, such as Wyoming, and the now demolished Strathkyle and Craignish, had been built along Macquarie Street. Manar, the nearby Macleay Street development, followed Kingsclere in 1919, then Byron Hall in 1929.
The Marshall White agents Walter Dodich and James Tostevin of Marshall White have the listing. The Raven Street house utilises "Green Heat" hydronic heating. Title Tattle recalls it was formerly an ivy-covered Victorian house, the oldest on the block which once had Yarra River frontage. Not sure how long the building syndicate have had the property but it was flipped within a year of selling at $1.66 million for $1,875,000 in 2007 when on an 1055-square-metre allotment. The latest offering is set over a 390 sq m holding.
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New data confirms two things we’ve been tipping: the decline of Gladstone and the rise of Rockhampton.
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