What to love
Perched on a huge 922m2 piece of land in the coastal town of Dampier, this 3-bedroom home features side access, built-in wardrobes, and a huge backyard with a stretching patio, sprawling lawns, established gardens, and a huge fully powered shed with roller doors at both ends, enabling drive through access.
Inside this home, natural light shines on to white tiling, spreading through the spacious lounge and into the large kitchen where you have ample cupboard and counter space with a dramatic splashback and dark benchtops contrasting with white fixtures and stainless-steel fittings.
Each bedroom is carpeted, generously sized, and equipped with built-in wardrobes, air-conditioning, and ceiling fans, with huge windows letting in that marvelous ocean breeze and coastal sunshine.
The backyard will be your favorite spot in this home with a spacious, shaded patio stretching around the home perfect for relaxing with your family on warm summer nights, watching your gardens sway, and enjoying the salt air.
In the corner, a huge, powered shed sits across from side access, perfect for storing your weekend toys and valuables, with rear access making it so easy.
Who to talk to
For more information about the property, contact Jordan James on 0458 193 869 or Casey Dwyer on 0459 951 337.
This property at 13 Pingandy Crescent, Dampier is a three bedroom, one bathroom house sold by James Group at Realmark - Karratha on 31 May 2025.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other three bedroom properties for sale in Dampier or see other recently sold properties in Dampier.
A town on the northwest coast, west of Roebourne, Dampier was first established as a port for Hamersley Iron in the 1960s. It was also gazetted a townsite in 1972. Dampier is named after the English explorer and onetime buccaneer, William Dampier, who visited the adjacent islands in 1699 in his ship the "Roebuck". The island group through which he sailed was named "Dampier Archipelago" by Captain Louis Freycinet in 1803.
William Dampier (1651-1715) was the first Englishman to set foot on Australian soil. As a young man he took part in various adventures on both coasts of central America, and in 1683 joined a group of buccaneers bound for the Pacific. In 1686 he joined the "Cygnet" under Captain Swan, and in 1688, briefly visited Western Australia near Broome. He returned to Western Australia in 1699 for a longer visit, exploring the coast from north of Houtman Abrolhos to north of Broome. He landed on, and named, Rosemary Island in the Dampier Archipelago on this expedition.