Buyers were invited by the selling agency to “be romanced” by its garden and “elegant portico”, and impressed by the “absolute rarity” of the opportunity to secure property in a “parkland cul-de-sac position in a blue-ribbon locale”.The 19 Second Avenue property sold 45 days later for $2m, CoreLogic records show.By January 2020, it was back on the market again asking more than double that — $4.3-$4.5m — and looking entirely different.
RELATED: Melbourne’s…
Click here to view the original article.
Faux French mansions changing our suburbs
- Advertisment -