The home is currently rented to a local company for $475.00/week until November 2021 and will always be a valuable rental proposition as you can walk to the Newman CBD and the local school is located at the end of the street.
The home features low maintenance Broome style construction and has pleasing features throughout. Some of these features include gas cooking and the interior of the home is fully tiled throughout.
Features include:
- Convenient location close to the centre of town and the shopping precinct
- Low maintenance Broome style construction will ensure hassle free ownership
- Quality company tenant with a lease through until November 2021
- Good open plan living/dining area together with a quality kitchen
- All three bedrooms are built in and afford room for Queen sized beds
- This location and this home will ensure above average returns
- A quality home with a quality tenant this home is a must see for the investor
Disclaimer:
Crawford Realty makes every effort to ensure the information provided on this property is deemed to be correct at the time of publishing. Prospective buyers should view the property before making their decision.
This property at 4B Moondoorow Street, Newman is a three bedroom, one bathroom house sold by Brett Philp at Crawford Realty Newman on 18 Nov 2020.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other three 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.