Investment Opportunity with a secured tenant
The unit offers a light and bright open plan living area with plenty of room to set up a meals/dining area. The two bedrooms are fitted with good quality split air conditioners and are located at the rear of the property. As the Newman property market continues get busier and gain momentum, now might be the right time to by your home or investment, for well below replacement costs.
- Two bedroom
- one bathroom-stand-alone unit in a complex of 4
- Split system air conditioning in all rooms including lounge Modern
- Bathroom with combined laundry
- Separate toilet
- Open plan kitchen
- Dining and lounge room
- Easy care vinyl flooring in all areas of the property
- One bay carport with under cover parking
- 2 toned corrugated iron external finish
- Fully fenced property in a secure complex with respectful neighbours
- Complex built in 2008
- Current Rental Income $350 per week
Disclaimer:
This information is provided for general information purposes only and is based on information provided by the Seller and may be subject to change. No warranty or representation is made as to its accuracy and interested parties should place no reliance on it and should make their own independent inquiries.
This property at 5B Anka Place, Newman is a two bedroom, one bathroom house sold by Daryan Abdullah at Harcourts Initiative on 24 Apr 2024.
Looking to buy a similar property in the area? View other two 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.