Does an investment property come any better than this?
This home has a Government Tenant that has been in the property since December 2013 with a current lease until December 2023 with a further 12 month option at a staggering $950.00/week.
This 4 bedroom, 4 bathroom home was purposely designed to be able to house 4 workers with the privacy of a bathroom adjacent to each of the bedrooms and the other important consideration is that internally the home must be able to be easily maintained and have a robust fit out.
The timber look vinyl throughout each room not only looks attractive but is easily maintained and hard wearing. There is a large kitchen adjacent to the open plan living area and to provide additional space there is also a separate home cinema room.
Feature Summary:
- 4 bedrooms and 4 bathrooms.
- 2 living areas, one open plan one separate
- Quality chattels throughout designed for Pilbara conditions
- Split air conditioning and ceiling fans throughout
- Reputable local building company
- Covered and insulated patio area with ceiling fans
Call Realmark’s Residential Sales & Leasing Specialist Brett Philp on 0414 666 676 today!
This property at 32 Homestead Ramble, Newman is a four bedroom, four bathroom house sold by Brett Philp at Realmark Commercial Pilbara on 03 Jun 2023.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other four bedroom properties for sale in Newman or see other recently sold properties in Newman.
Newman is a mining company townsite in the Pilbara region, 1184 kilometres northeast of Perth. The townsite was gazetted in 1972 after the Mount Newman Mining company developed a large iron ore mine at Mount Whaleback. The townsite is named after the nearby Mount Newman, a 1055 meter high mountain in the Ophthalmia Range.
Mount Newman was named by the surveyor W F Rudall in 1896, "in honour of our late leader". Newman was Aubrey Woodward Newman, the original leader of the survey party carrying out surveys in the neighbourhood of the Ophthalmia Range in 1896. He contracted typhoid fever at Peak Hill and, too ill to continue, was later returned to Cue where he died on May 24th, 1896.