This is not your average holiday shack!
With a total floor area of around 320 square metres, this two-storey brick and tile home is designed for a big family. It also sits high on a hill with panoramic ocean views that can't be built out.
On the ground floor, you have a big games room with built-in bar, kitchen with an ocean view, family room, bathroom, laundry and powder room.
The four big bedrooms are all upstairs and two have ocean views. There is another massive living room with a convenient kitchenette. The full-length balcony can be accessed by glass sliding doors from the living room and two front bedrooms. A bathroom and separate powder room are also upstairs.
The 809 square metre block has lawn front and back, with auto reticulation from a bore making it easy to maintain. A built-in barbecue blends in with the limestone retaining walls at the back. There is room to park a boat down the side of the house and a secure garage under the main roof.
This is an incredible opportunity to secure a large home in a great location. Contact Craig Hyne to arrange a private viewing.
This property at 21 Turner Drive, Guilderton is a four bedroom, two bathroom house sold by Craig Hyne at Country Values Real Estate on 18 Oct 2021.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other four bedroom properties for sale in Guilderton or see other recently sold properties in Guilderton.
The townsite of Guilderton is located on the coast at the mouth of the Moore River, 94 kilometres north of Perth. It was gazetted a townsite in 1951, but has been used as a camping and holiday place since around 1905 when residents of Gingin petitioned the Lands Department for the creation of a road to the place and a camping reserve. A reserve for a picnic ground was declared in 1907, and the area soon became popular for camping and picnicking In the 1940s public demand for permanent camping sites led to the government deciding to declare a townsite, and seeking a name for the area, which up until then had been locally referred to as "Moore River".
A number of names were considered, the preferred name of "Guilderton" being suggested by Mrs Henrietta Drake-Brockman. The name links the town with the wreck of the Dutch ship "Gilt Dragon" near here in 1656, and the loss of thousands of Guilders it was carrying. Dutch coins and relics of the wreck have been found near the mouth of the Moore River.