This classic 80’s style brick & tile home is the perfect blank canvas for a contemporary makeover. She’s been fastidiously maintained over the years and would be a delight to renovate and reinvent. The 3 bedroom 2 bathroom home enjoys a 1095m2 block (just over the old ¼ acre) bordering Toby’s Inlet to the south and is only a 100m stroll north to the tranquil waters of Geographe Bay. A formal lounge room offers a large bay window with views over the inlet and provides a reverse cycle split a/c as well as burning log gas fire. The adjacent master suite offers a big walk-in-robe/dressing room and spacious ensuite with bath, separate shower & wc, a small adjoining room would suit as a nursery or study. Step down into the kitchen/dining/family room and step out onto the long 2.5m wide verandah that overlooks the lush lawns and adjoining inlet. Two other double sized bedrooms with robes are serviced by the second bathroom & separate wc. Being located in far end Quindalup ensures privacy, peace and quiet and yet it is still only a 6.5km drive or a leisurely 20 minute bike ride along the foreshore to arrive in the Dunsborough town centre where you can enjoy all the amenities this popular south west town has on offer.
This property at 5 Stroud Street, Quindalup is a three bedroom, two bathroom house sold by Lee York at JHY Realty on 14 Feb 2020.
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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.