Still with the settlements, Vogue Australia editor-in-chief Edwina McCann and her investment manager husband David Basha finally closed the sale of their Rose Bay home.
It was an off-market sale, with the only rumoured agent involved, One Buyers Agency’s Jayden Hurvitz, keeping quiet about the result.
Edwina McCann and David Basha have sold their Rose Bay home for $11.5 million.Credit:Ken Butti
Records show an $11.5 million settlement, more than doubling the $5.6 million they paid for it in 2016.
The buyer is advertising big wig Michael Rebelo, Australia chief executive at French multinational ad and PR giant Publicis Groupe, and deputy chair of the Advertising Council of Australia.
Rebelo and his wife Danniel are coming from Paddington, where Maclay Longhurst has already sold their terrace for $4 million.
In Woollahra, Charlotte MacKenzie, wife of private equity boss Adrian MacKenzie, has settled on a $9 million house, presumably to live in given an upcoming renovation of their historic Bellevue Hill home.
McKenzie’s new digs is the former home of Sphere Infrastructure’s Charles Crane and Camilla Green, sold by The Agency’s Ben Collier.
It last traded two years ago for $4.57 million.
The McKenzies bought a Palm Beach weekender two years ago for $11.5 million from Shay Lewis-Thorp.
Mosman’s pricey parking
Parking meter magnate Phillip Verity sold his Mosman waterfront house late Friday, prompting fevered talk locally of a result close to $19 million.
The Beauty Point home of parking meter entrepreneur Phillip Verity has sold.
Ray White Lower North Shore’s Bernard Ryan and Geoff Smith refused to be drawn on the speculation, despite having only recently taken over the listing.
The Beauty Point residence last traded for $12.5 million in 2018 when sold by RAMS Home Loans co-founder John Kinghorn, who at the time was downsizing to his $10.22 million spread in the Watermarque building on Mosman Bay.
The looming end of year deadline also saw a sold sticker go up on the Killara home of Judo Bank chief and co-founder Joseph Healy.
McGrath’s Glenn Curran wouldn’t divulge the result, but it was expected to go for close to the $11 million guide, doubling the $5.5 million Healy and his wife Susan paid for it a decade ago.
Chin Chin to Point Piper
The One Point Piper apartment purchased by Chris Lucas for $11.7 million.Credit:Domain
Is it just coincidence that Melbourne’s star restaurateur Chris Lucas has marked last weekend’s election win by Victoria’s Labor Premier Dan Andrews by buying $11.7 million digs in Sydney’s eastern suburbs?
Restaurateur Chris Lucas sold in Potts Point for $5.1 million.Credit:Louis Trerise
Certainly, the entrepreneur behind Melbourne’s Kisumé and Chin Chin restaurants has been a fierce critic of the Andrews government’s COVID lockdown measures, although his Chin Chin Sydney restaurant in Surry Hills might explain the purchase.
The apartment in the K2 Property development of Eric Koundouris, One Point Piper, was sold to Lucas recently by Highland Property’s David Malouf, and comes on the back of the restaurateur’s $5.1 million sale of his Potts Point bolthole.
Woolwich fine dining
Former restaurateur Jason Tait and his wife Kelli Haynes, who for years owned Sailors Thai at Circular Quay, have bought the Woolwich waterfront home of professional punter Lincoln Holgate.
McGrath boss John McGrath did the auction honours for Tracey Dixon on the day, dropping the hammer on a more than $20 million result.
Holgate and his wife Anica built the contemporary five-bedroom residence four years ago, having purchased it from former Sydney lord mayor Nelson Meers and his wife Carole in 2009 for $8.5 million.
The Woolwich residence was bought by former restaurateur Jason Tait and his wife Kelli Haynes.
Tait, who founded the cloud property management software system PropertyMe, is trading up from the Millers Point terrace he bought with Haynes 20 years ago for $2.29 million.
The Morning Edition newsletter is our guide to the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up here.
Source: www.brisbanetimes.com.au