Where you asked - It is a small town in Western Australia that is located from 558km from the heart of Perth is were a great new adventure awaits. Have you ever wondered what it would be like to own your very own lodge.
This grand lady is boasting amazing value with this 14 room asset that has amazing natural light that skips across the balcony with a light breeze and the surrounds of bushland to gaze at, on those lazy Sunday Afternoons. As the Goldfields turns on its fantastic sunsets or those magical thunder storms that stretch over the lands. All finished with those colonial touches that makes this place feel more and more like home.
The option to evolve the current laundry mat into a thriving business is available and ready to leave its mark.
With Managers quarters and amazing commercial kitchen and the history of the amazing town enveloped into this very building.
Call Kylie now and make an appointment to seek out all that there is to know
This property at 75-77 Bayley Street, Coolgardie is a fourteen bedroom, one bathroom house listed for sale by Kylie Owen at Harcourts Kalgoorlie.
For more information about Coolgardie, including sales data, facts, growth rates, nearby transport and nearby shops, please view our Coolgardie profile page.
If you would like to get in touch with Kylie Owen regarding 75-77 Bayley Street, Coolgardie, please call 0404 099 594 or contact the agent via email.
Track this property
Track propertyCoolgardie is one of the major towns in the goldfields of Western Australia, and is located 510 kilometres east of Perth. Gold was discovered here by Bailey and Ford in 1892, and the townsite of Coolgardie was gazetted in 1893. At its peak in 1900 it had 23 hotels, three breweries, six banks, two stock exchanges and three daily and four weekly newspapers. The population then was 15,000, with 25,000 more in the area.
Coolgardie is an Aboriginal name of uncertain meaning. Different sources give it as meaning "a rockhole surrounded by mulga trees" ( the mulga tree is named "koolgoor"), from "coolgabbi" meaning a tree near a waterhole, or after the large Bungarra lizard, pronounced "Coorgardie"by the Aborigines. It is claimed that Warden John Finnerty was the first to record the name, having asked local Aborigines the name of the place. The name was difficult to spell, and what some claim is "Golgardi", was spelt by Finnerty as Coolgardie.