This is a brilliant opportunity to secure a beachside property in Quindalup and enjoy the laidback lifestyle. The fantastic investment or permanent home features a well-founded residence built in 1995 and is set on a generous 668sqm block which looks over treed reserve plus Quindalup Lake. The light filled kitchen and dining areas are facing north and have beautiful views of the trees and water. The stunning turquoise waters of the bay are a quick walk down the road plus there's a massive park nearby for recreation and kids to enjoy.
* Brilliant location only a 350m walk to the beach and a 1750m cycle to town
* 4 bed, 2 bath brick house
* 668sqm green titled block with spacious backyard and 19.8m street frontage
* Sun drenched, north facing kitchen/dining/lounge areas
* Side access which is gated
* Large alfresco with high ceilings and timber bush poles
* Views over a nature reserve and Quindalup lake
* Fully fenced boundaries and enclosed yard
* Double carport and ample parking spaces
* Fireplace for winter and reverse cycle air conditioning
* Beautiful timber framed bi-fold doors opening onto the alfresco
* 50m walk to Captain Toby Park
* Garden shed for storage
Summary: a solid house on a generous sized block close to the beach with a treed outlook, this is a prime investment or permanent home for those wanting to be close to the beach at an affordable price.
For further information please do not hesitate to contact your South West Sales Representative, Joe Jordanoff on 0498 935 086 or [email protected] .
This property at 21 Elmore Road, Quindalup is a four bedroom, two bathroom house sold by Joe Jordanoff at JMW Real Estate on 19 Jan 2020.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other four bedroom properties for sale in Quindalup or see other recently sold properties in Quindalup.
The townsite of Quindalup is located on Geographe Bay, 250 kilometres west southwest of Perth and 21 kilometres west of Busselton. The Quindalup area is the site of one of the state's earliest timber industries, and a timber mill was built here and timber exported through a jetty on the coast in the early 1860s. McGibbon and Yelverton used the name Quindalup in referring to their mill in the 1860s, and in the 1870s the government reserved land here. In 1899 a number of local fishermen in the area requested the Minister for Lands to subdivide the beachfront land. The Minister approved the subdivision, surveys of "working mens blocks" were made, and the townsite of Quindalup gazetted in 1899.
Quindalup is an Aboriginal name meaning "the place of quenda's". The Quenda is a small bandicoot common in the area.