Showing posts with label infinity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label infinity. Show all posts

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Brisbane City Apartment Sales

Recent sales in November and December 2016:

Parklands
Apt 3104 - 2 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - $590,000
Apt 3036 - 3 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $650,000

Charlotte Towers
Apt 1207 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $460,000
Apt 1502 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $490,000
Apt 1704 - 1 bed, 1 bath, 0 car - $322,500
Apt 602 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $510,000

Riparian
Apt 4301 - 3 bed, 3 bath, 2 car - $2,562,000

Admiralty Towers One
Apt 135 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $615,000
Apt 21 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $720,000

Admiralty Towers Two
Apt 29 - 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 car - $1,059,000

Meriton Infinity
Apt 2907 - 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - $420,000
Apt 5006 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $600,000
Apt 5406 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $580,000

Riverplace
Apt 109 - 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - $516,800

Festival Towers
Apt 2905 - 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - $390,000

Aurora
Apt 248 - 2 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - $400,000

Capital gains were best for direct riverfront buildings and worst for the large apartment towers built by Devine (Charlotte Towers and Festival Towers and Aurora).  The Devine developers now run Metro.


Monday, March 14, 2016

Recent Apartment Sales in Brisbane 4000

Here are some recent sales (all early 2016) with actual sales prices of apartments in Brisbane Postcode 4000.  These are all B and C quality buildings, and so expect to pay more for A quality:
  • Skyline, Apt 91, 30 Macrossan Street, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 1 car - $747,000
  • Skyline, Apt 261, 30 Macrossan Street, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 cars - $800,000
  • Skyline, Apt 41, 30 Macrossan Street, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 1 car - $731,500
  • Festival Towers, Apt 3605, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $529,000
  • Festival Towers, Apt 4006, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $570,000
  • Festival Towers, Apt 1805, 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - $342,500
  • Festival Towers, Apt 2503, 2 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - $499,000
  • Charlotte Towers, Apt 508, 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - $350,000
  • Charlotte Towers, Apt 2902, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $540,000
  • M on Mary, Apt 3204, 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - $356,000
  • M on Mary, Apt 607, 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - $360,000
  • M on Mary, Apt 2609, 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - $327,000
  • Felix, Apt 303, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $600,000
  • Meriton Herschel St (Infinity), 2 bed, 2 bath, no car - $580,000
  • Meriton Soleil - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $575,000
  • Vue, 92 Quay St, Apt 2301, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $460,000
  • Vue, 92 Quay St, Apt 2602, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - $437,500

Friday, October 17, 2014

Legal Claim Against Meriton

A Meriton construction company is being sued by a body corporate for building defects.

"BILLIONAIRE developer Harry Triguboff is at the centre of a legal battle with a body corporate over who should foot a $2 million repair bill for one of his Southport residential high rises."

Meriton is also the developer of the Infinity and Soleil towers in Brisbane.

See Gold Coast Business News

Sunday, August 3, 2014

Recent Brisbane Apartment Sales


iStay River City - 79 Albert St

Apt 1201, 1 bed, 1 bath - sold on 27 July for $335,000

Charlotte Towers - 128 Charlotte St

Apt 2404 - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 27 July for $340,000
Apt 1201 - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 18 July for $365,000
Apt 4403 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 29 May for $650,000
Apt 2803 - 2 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - sold on 2 May for $495,000

Skyline - 30 Macrossan St

Apt 53 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 27 July for $603,000
Apt 193 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 2 June for $618,500
Apt 31 - sold on 16 May for $750,000

M on Mary - 70 Mary St

Apt 1205 - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 2 July for $322,500
Apt 4302 - 5 bed, 3 bath, 3 car - sold on 31 May for $1.9M
Apt 1009  - 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - sold on 26 May for $365,000
Apt 506  - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 10 May for $395,000

Festival Towers - 108 Albert St

Apt 3807 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 30 June for $516,000
Apt 1503 - 2 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - sold on 25 June for $460,000
Apt 4007 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 10 June for $541,000
Apt 704 - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 5 June for $298,500
Apt 2610 - 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - sold on 3 June for $400,000
Apt 905 - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 2 June for $319,500
Apt 2510 - 1 bed, 1 bath, no car - sold on 22 May for $350,000
Apt 2301 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 9 May for $525,000
Apt 508 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 8 May for $475,000

Felix - 26 Felix St

Apt 217 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 29 June for $580,000

Riverplace - 82 Boundary St

Apt 92 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 27 June for $645,000
Apt 147 - 2 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - sold on 23 June for $551,000
Apt 52 - 2 bed, 1 bath, 2 car - sold on 7 May for $650,000

Admiralty Towers One - 35 Howard St

Apt 44 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 8 June for $810,000
Apt 146, 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 12 May for $585,000

Infinity - 43 Herschel St

Apt 3807 - sold on 27 May for $400,000
Apt 4303 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 26 May for $630,000
Apt 6304 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 20 May for $640,000

212 Margaret St

Apt 82 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 26 May for $555,000

Admiralty Quays - 32 Macrossan St

Apt 137 - 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 cars - sold on 12 May for $1,100,000
Apt 34 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 2 May for $850,000

Riparian - 71 Eagle St

Apt 4302 - 1 bed, 2 bath, 2 car - sold on 8 May for $1.5M

Admiralty Towers Two - 501 Queen St

Apt 166 - 3 bed, 2 bath, 2 car sold on 28 April for $979,900

Aurora - 420 Queen St

Apt 301 - 2 bed, 2 bath, 1 car - sold on 26 April for $627,500

Quay West - 132 Alice St

Apt 103 - 1 bed, 1 bath, 1 car - sold on 24 April for $510,000

Thursday, February 13, 2014

New or Resale?

I am often asked whether it is better to buy a new or resale apartment?  A new apartment can be unsold developer stock in a new building or an off-the-plan apartment for a building not yet built.  A resale is a sale from someone other than the original developer.

There is a price difference between a new and resale apartment in Brisbane.  Sometimes, this is because a new apartment is new, with no wear and tear (e.g., freshly painted, new carpet, new kitchen, new appliances, etc).  But often, the price difference is not explained by newness.  Sometimes, the price difference is due to developer profit and marketing costs.

For example, Sunland is currently marketing Abian.  A large number of people I know have received a fancy brochure mailed to them, unsolicited, by Sunland.  There is an expensive display office onsite in Alice Street, where the landscaping alone would have cost a small fortune.  There is a video of a lost rich girl wandering around Brisbane, that does a good job not showing the neighbouring Quay West building.  Buyers are paying for all these marketing costs, plus the developers profits.

Another example is Infinity, by Meriton.  2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 89 sqm in total, no balcony, 7 apartments per floor, short stay and hotel guests, for $647,000 and up!

Or you can buy an apartment in Metro 21, on level 25, with river views, a large balcony, 2 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 113 sqm total floor area, 4 apartments per floor, no short term rentals or hotel guests.  For a price less than a Meriton apartment.   Metro 21 is a boutique residential building, with good facility, and a low ratio of residents to facilities.  Seems like an obvious decision to me.

That is $7,269 per sqm compared with less than $5,700 per sqm.


Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Infinity Brisbane by Meriton


Meriton's Infinity tower in Brisbane is now at its full height -- 81 levels -- and is now the tallest tower in Brisbane.  The internal fit out in the upper levels is not complete.  Lower levels are being occupied.  Meriton is selling apartments up to level 64.


A two bedroom, two bathroom, 1 car apartment in the middle for the building will sell for around $665,000.  These apartments are being offered for rent at $690 a week.  No balcony.  Internal size is 86sqm to 90sqm, which is not large.  I suspect many of the buyers are not Australian residents.



Friday, August 30, 2013

Infinity Part Opened

The tall Infinity building has partly opened, even though it is still under construction with a crane on top.  Meriton has opened its serviced apartment section, on the lower floors.  There are 10 apartments per floor.  I looked at a one bedroom.  It has good storage space, and a reasonable finish.  No balcony.  But strange design, because the living room is triangular in shape.  With the kitchen space in the living room, you have a nice view of your kitchen sink when trying to watch TV.  I felt like I was in a prison cell for white collar criminals.


Friday, August 9, 2013

Buyers Retuning to the Market?

Real estate agents are reporting that buyers are coming back to the market in Brisbane, and that prices achieved are increasing.  For example, two bedroom apartments in higher quality city apartments that, at the height of the boom achieved above $800,000, and then dropped to the mid $600,000 range, are now selling in the $700,000 plus range, and sometimes more.  This includes a two bedroom apartment in Quay West, sold for about $700,000; a two bedroom in Admiralty Towers Two sold above $750,000 and a two bedroom in Saville at Southbank for more than $800,000.  In fact, another two bedroom at Saville is now listed for sale in the $900,000 range.

Investors appear to be returning to the market, due to lower interest rates.  Owner-occuppiers are looking for larger apartments, and there are not many high quality larger apartments available for sale (partly because developers have been focusing on building very small apartments that have been sold to foreign investors).  With interest rates low, many investors who currently own property are not selling, because these properties are now becoming positively geared -- why sell, unless the price offered is high?  There is a shortage of apartments for sale for owner-occuppiers; and a shortage of existing apartments (compared with off-the-plan apartments) for investors.

Towers like Infinity, aimed at Chinese investors, do not provide what local Brisbane buyers want in my view.

Photo of Infinity, under construction on the right.  Evolution Apartments is the smaller building in the middle of the photo.  The Supreme Court building is on the right in the foreground; the Magistrates Court building on the left in the foreground.  400 George St is the taller building on the left.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Chinese Buyers & Infinity

The AFR had a story on 24 July:  "Brisbane keen for more Chinese buyers".  Some extracts:
  • Harry Triguboff from Meriton apartments expects Brisbane to be next in line for an influx of Chines investors, but says it will depend on the growth in education in Brisbane.
  • Chinese buyers in Brisbane were few and far between, when compared with Sydney and Melbourne.
  • Infinity Tower, by Merition, has sold about 200 apartments according to Urbis. 
  • In the first quarter, only seven apartments were sold in Infinity, for an average price of $560,714.
  • Meriton has no additional plans for apartments for Brisbane.  "I want the Brisbane market to get stronger first."

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Infinity Tower

Nice story in the Sunday Mail regarding Infinity Tower, being built by Meriton.  I will not be buying in Infinity, but there are cool photos of the construction.

See Sunday Mail.


Saturday, February 2, 2013

Capital Loss in Meriton's Soleil

Take care when buying off the plan!  At present, Meriton is marking Infinity, a tall apartment tower in the Roma Street area of Brisbane City.  Let's look at an example of an investor in Meriton's prior apartment tower, Soleil.

Apartment 6003 was purchased by a Sydney investor in September 2010, off the plan, for $640,000.  It is a two bedroom apartment with study, on level 60.  None of the apartments in Soleil (or Infinity) have balconies.  The apartment is 93 sqm, a good size, but faces West.

This apartment has been on the market for a number of months.  Ray White now has it listed for sale, at $575,000.  With stamp duty and agent's fees, a capital loss of at least $80,000 or more than 10%.

This is what Ray White says in an email:

Unit 6003/501 Adelaide Street, Brisbane – 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, study, 1 car + storage
Please see below links to the property internet listing along with a link to the floor plan:
6003/501 Adelaide Street, Brisbane - Internet Link
6003/501 Adelaide Street, Brisbane - Interactive Floor Plan Link
This property is open for inspection today 2nd February 2013 from 1:30-2pm. 
We also have another property on the market in Soleil, Unit 4803/501 Adelaide Street, Brisbane which is a 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom apartment with a study and 1 car space. 
At the end of 2012 we sold Unit 5204/501 Adelaide Street, Brisbane for $570,000 [the vendor had paid $540,000] along with many other sales within the Admiralty Precinct throughout the year.
We currently have buyers that are interested in acquiring quality properties within the Soleil and the Admiralty Precinct.

Monday, January 14, 2013

Infinity Tower Grows

The Courier-Mail has learnt Meriton has since last March been seeking permission from the Federal Department of Infrastructure and Transport to operate a crane at a height of 311m for two weeks during the ongoing construction of the 81-storey, 262m Infinity tower in Herschel St.

In spite of the 10-month wait, Meriton said the project remained on track for a November completion and the developer remained "confident the application will be approved in the near future".

Courier Mail


Saturday, October 13, 2012

Infinity Retreats to Serviced Apartments

Meriton Apartments builds more than 1,000 units a year – recently it has shifted its attention to serviced apartments, holding back nearly half of the apartments in its 81-storey Infinity tower in the Brisbane CBD to be offered as serviced apartments.

Meriton boss Harry Triguboff says Chinese buyers are retreating from the market due to the high Australian dollar and uncertainty in China as its economy cools.  Triguboff says that in the last three months Chinese buying has subsided, replaced (in Sydney) by first-home buyers taking advantage of new state government handouts.

No one is sure why Brisbane did not immediately respond but it would seem that the severity of the state government cuts and the fears about what will happen to coal mining would have played a role. Again it is early days and addition a large part of the Brisbane building skills base is employed constructing the mines.

See Property Observer and Business Spectator

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Meriton Infinity - Under Construction

Some recent photos of Meriton's Infinity apartment building in Brisbane, currently under construction.  When complete, this will be Brisbane's tallest residential tower, at 81 floors.  So I guess it is about half way now.


Infinity on the left, with Evolution Apartments on the right.  This was taken about two weeks ago.


Infinity behind Evolution Apartments, with Federal Court building in the foreground.  Taken this weekend.


From Roma Street Parklands, with one of the Pradella Parkland apartment buildings on the right.


From Roma Street Parklands


Saturday, April 7, 2012

Midwood Report - Brisbane OK

"The outlook for the new Brisbane apartments market remains healthy with supply and demand evenly matched, but the Gold Coast market continues to struggle with sales of new apartments still at post-GFC lows, according to the latest Midwood Report.

Unconditional sales of new Brisbane units increased from 74 in the November quarter 2011 to 186 in the February 2012 quarter. Stock levels have declined to 1,446 from a peak of 1,683 in May last year, which equates to two-and-a-half years’ worth of supply at current sales rates.

Investors have been spurred on by rising rental returns, with one-bedroom inner-Brisbane flats registering rental growth over the past 12 months of 9% to a median of $300 per week, with a smaller 4% increase in two-bedroom flats ($380).

The strongest-selling project was David Devine’s Metro Property Madison Heights development in Bowen Hills, which clocked up 57 sales with prices ranging from $350,000 for a one-bedroom apartment to $434,000 to $556,000 for a two-bedroom apartment. Madison Heights features 296 apartments, with 200 sold since launch of the project in March 2011. There were also 15 sales at Metro Property’s The Chelsea development also in Bowen Hills, with 190 out of 195 apartments now sold in the project. Prices range from $355,000 for a one-bedroom apartment to $546,000 for a two-bedroom apartment, and there were 20 sales recorded for Brooklyn on Brookes in Fortitude Valley, Metro’s joint development with Indian-based developer Pearls. The other strong performer was Meriton’s 81-storey Infinity Tower, currently under construction, with 34 sales recorded and prices ranging from $470,000 for a one-bedroom apartment to $650,000 for a two-bedroom unit. To date 123 out of the 287 apartments in the tower have been sold."

Full article here at Property Observer.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Chinese Retreat

"Australia’s largest apartment developer, Harry Triguboff, has confirmed that Chinese buying of inner-Sydney apartments has halved in the last month. The China squeeze on its property market and fears about the level of our dollar are now having a direct effect on the Australian dwelling market. 

Triguboff believes that the sharp cutback in Chinese apartment demand will probably reduce apartment prices in Sydney by about 10%, but the prices will not collapse. He believes that a fall in apartment prices will flow on to the whole dwelling market in Sydney."
Full story here.
Harry Triguboff is the owner of Meriton, that is developing  two massive apartment towers in Brisbane, Soleil and Infinity, where most of the buyers are reported to be Chinese.  It is uncertain what impact China will have on the Brisbane apartment market.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Infinity

According to an advertorial in this Saturday's Courier Mail, Meriton's Infinity apartment building has about 200 residential apartments remaining for sale, out of a total of 548 apartments.  That sounds too good to be true to me.  One bedrooms are priced from $380,000; two bedrooms from $550,000; three bedrooms from $949,000.   According to the newspaper, many buyers are from Sydney and China.  Meriton staff are currently attending property seminars in China to promote this building.

Completion is expected in late 2013 or early 2014.  Construction is underway, with the seven level underground carpark complete, and work up to level 1 above ground.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Infinity Tower

A significant height increase for Meriton's Infinity tower (which is currently under construction) has been proposed. The tower's height which was planned to be 75 levels will now be increased to 81 - a 6 level increase.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Off-the-plan apartment risks

I have previously written about the risks of purchasing off the plan apartments. See this post for example. Others have also written about these risks. See this article for example.

The May edition of Australian Property Investor had a good story about the oversupply of inner city Melbourne high rise, which is also worth reading. See "High on High-rise". One point made is that many of the apartment buildings planned for Melbourne are aimed at being sold to investors, not owner occupiers. This is resulting in the wrong type of apartments being built and the article predicts that these apartments will not grown in value.

A similar issue is revealed in a story in The Australian today regarding Meriton apartments. Meriton is currently building two very tall high rise apartment buildings in Brisbane, Soleil and Infinity. Meriton reports that sales have mostly been to Chinese investors, who have stopped buying. Meriton says that it is Chinese investors who purchase most of the off-the-plan apartments in Australia. There is a clear risk in buying an apartment as an investment in such circumstances. As I have previously written, it is best to buy in a building where there are a large percentage of owner-occupiers in the building.

"Mr Triguboff said prices in the overheated Chinese property market were starting to fall, while the Australian dollar continued its stellar run, making Australian property increasingly expensive compared with China.

"Our (real estate) market is the Chinese market, just like coal and iron ore," Mr Triguboff said.

"We need lower interest rates so that our dollar drops and it stimulates growth."

Mr Triguboff, whose Meriton Apartments builds more than 1000 units a year, said Chinese owners and investors had accounted for about 75 per cent of Meriton sales for the last two to three years.

But in the past month, numbers had fallen steeply. ..."

Sunday, February 13, 2011

New Apartment Projects In Brisbane


This is my list of actual and pending apartment projects in inner city Brisbane.

1. Macrossan Apartments, located behind Skyline and the Admiralty buildings. Not river front. 37 levels. Full floor apartments on higher levels -- 3 bedrooms plus study, about 250 sqm internal, with small balcony. High level of finishes. Expensive. See typical floor plan. The main bedroom looks right into Skyline -- not much privacy here. The apartment on level 26 will be auctioned (by the developer it seems) on 3 March 2011. The building is complete, but it seems that less than half the apartments have sold.


2A. Soleil, by Meriton. Next door to Macrossan, and also behind Skyline, is Soleil. Currently under construction. Over 400 apartments; 74 floors. Currently at about level 55. The developer will keep the management rights; and will keep ownership of a large number of apartments on higher floors. This, in my opinion, creates many issues for owners, so take care. Will be settled in stages, with lower floors settling first. This is a B grade development in my view.

Photos of Soleil under construction: Photo of Soleil, Macrossan and Skyline; photo of the 3 Admiralty buildings, River Place, Skyline, with Macrossan to the side and Soliel growing from behind above Skyline.

2B. Infinity, by Meriton. Located in the Roma Street area, behind but to tower over Evolution. 77 floors of apartments, so this will be a massive height for Brisbane, but the actual floor plate is not that large. Currently in off the plan sales - see brochure. The hole for the carpark has been dug, but the building itself is not yet under construction. With 2 bedroom apartments starting at $590,000, this looks to be expensive. Again, the developer will keep the management rights and a number of apartments in the building, so take care.

3. Sunland's "Carrington" development on corner of Alice Street and Albert Street. This development recently received Council approval. 47 floors of high end apartments. Will cast shadow over Botanical Gardens, which is not good for the public. If you read all the controversy about Q1 on the Gold Coast, I hope that Sunland does a better job on its first Brisbane apartment building. The AFR reports that construction will start when 50% of the 257 apartments have been pre-sold.

4. Devine's proposed development, on the corner of Margaret Street and Albert Street, at 30 Albert Street. This is right behind the Sunland development mentioned above. A development application was lodged on Christmas Eve, 2010, so this will be some way off. 37 floors, 420 apartments, 1 and 2 bed apartments only. Looks like another Charlotte Towers.

5. The Midtown, on Charlotte Street, opposite Charlotte Towers. Currently in pre-sales; demolition has started onsite. One and two bedroom apartments. 29 floors of apartments.

6. The Chelsea and Madison on Mayne, by Metro Property Developments. These apartment buildings are both in Bowen Hills, and contain 286 and 242 apartments. Metro is associated with David Devine and Ken Woodley, both ex-Devine. Their most recent development was Charlotte Towers, where (as reported elsewhere in this blog) capital growth has been on average about 1% and many purchasers off the plan have lost money. So if they follow the same approach, the developers will profit, but not the initial purchasers. It is interesting to read this. These apartments do not have development approval. (Metro is also planning on Brooklyn on Brookes, in the Valley. (Also, Richmond at Bowen Hills by another developer.)

7. Mosaic in the Valley, still waiting for development approval. 20 floors, about 250 apartments. Currently being sold off-the-plan.

8. McLachlan & Ann in the Valley. 234 apartments, currently being sold off the plan.

9. Kevlin Grove Urban Village: A bunch of apartment buildings under construction, including 3 buildings by Pradella (branded as Urban Edge); and Edenview; and Binary Apartments.

10. SouthPoint at SouthBank. 20 floors.

11. Newstead River Park - about 15 apartment buildings planned, with Mirvac completing "Pier" shortly, and "Park" in presales. FKP plans to build The Gasworks.

12. Northshore Hamilton (many developers, with a large number of apartments planned), Hamilton Reach (in presales) and Hamilton Harbour (three apartment buildings by Devine, currently under construction) and Portside by Multiplex (one building under construction, at least one more planned); and Rivana (by Citimark).

13. Rive at Albion/Breakfast Creek (under construction, but flooded). Two towers of apartments.

14. Waters Edge at West End. Developed by Pradella. (stage one complete; stage two under construction). Basement and pool area flooded.

15. FKP's The Milton at Milton. Was in off the plan sales. Display flooded.

16. The Capitol Apartments, South Brisbane. Currently in off-the-plan sales.

17. Yungaba Apartments, Kangaroo Point. Currently in construction, but delayed due to floods.

18. Montague West End - site flooded, and website not active.

19. The Apple, in the CBD. Small building on 1 bedroom apartments.

20. Belise, St Paul's Terrace, in the Valley. In presales, off the plan.