This beautifully presented family home on 529m2 block is in ever popular Vasse Newtown & offers a classy contemporary street appeal showcasing many features including rendered & tiled facade & well-established landscaping including a perimeter hedge for fencing. Greeted by warm Blackbutt timber flooring you are invited to the large open plan living that includes a well-appointed kitchen with Corian benchtops & a large 1500mm wide island bench with feature pendant lighting providing a focal centrepiece. Offering a spacious master suite with ensuite & big walk-in-robe, 2 large bedrooms serviced by a bathroom & activity room, plus a 3rd living area currently used as a large guest bedroom/4th bedroom. Family friendly park with playground is a short 75m walk away & only 1km to Vasse Shopping Precinct & Primary School, 1.7km to Cape Naturaliste College & only 3.7kms to beautiful Abbey Beach.
This property at 2 Plough Crescent, Vasse is a three bedroom, two bathroom house sold by Lee York at JHY Realty on 08 May 2022.
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he townsite of Vasse is located in the south west, 240 kilometres south southwest of Perth and 11 kilometres south west of Busselton. The townsite is named after the nearby Vasse River and Vasse Estuary, both of which are named after a French seaman, Thomas Timothee Vasse who was believed to have drowned here in June 1801. Vasse was a helmsman on the Naturaliste, a ship which was part of a French scientific expedition to Australia in 1801-03. He was washed overboard and lost, and the river was consequently named in his honour. In 1838, G.F. Moore interviewed the aboriginals about Vasse and noted in his diary that Vasse had not been drowned but died later from anxiety, exposure and poor diet.
Vasse townsite was formerly part of the Busselton Commonage reserve, an area set aside in 1879 for the common use of Busselton residents. In 1898 the land was inspected by the Department of Agriculture, and was proposed as suitable for subdivision into five and 10 acre blocks for dairying in support of the soon to open Busselton butter factory. The good land in the area was swamp land, and release of lots was delayed pending drainage. When subdivision was finalised in 1906, the surveyor suggested the area be named Vasse after the river, and the townsite of Vasse was then gazetted in 1907. The townsite is very elongated and covers three separate areas. Vasse Siding on the Busselton-Margaret River Railway was named in 1923.