Saturday, July 14, 2007
Mary Street Developments
There are also plans for an office tower at 110 Mary Street, which is opposite 99 Mary Street. This is a 24 level office tower, called the Mattise Tower. This is next door to the Quest River Park Central Serviced Apartments building, and will block the views on the western side of that building.
There is also the large Vision apartment building at 105 Mary Street, which will be more than 60 levels. This will also impact the Quest River Park Central Serviced Apartments building, and will block the park views of the Charlotte Towers building.
There is also talk that the Kings Carpark at 53 Albert Street will be redeveloped, impacting River City apartments.
Sunday, June 17, 2007
Charlotte Towers
Based on sales around town, it is my view that fair market value for a two bedroom apartment in Charlotte Towers would be in the range $400,000 to $420,000, depending on the floor, whether the apartment faces West, and whether it has one or two bathrooms.
Agents have reported to me that a number of apartments in Charlotte Towers have been rented to students, and that in some apartments there are over 6 students living in a 2 bedroom apartment, and that one apartment had about 10 students living there.
The management of the rental pool has been sold to Oaks Hotel group, and I wonder if the current manager cares about the quality of the tenants.
Also, the river views for this apartment building will mostly disappear when the Vision building is complete.
I can only see apartments in Charlotte Towers going down in value.
Sunday, June 3, 2007
New Hotels on Alice Street
It has been reported that the Royal on the Park on Alice Street in Brisbane will be demolished and turned into a large six star hotel. Also, Devine is said to be building an apartment hotel on the corner of Alice and Albert Streets. So you should take care if you are in a building that is on Margaret or Mary Street, as you may not have a view.
Admiralty One Website
This website is good if you are looking to rent an apartment in Brisbane.
Sunday, May 20, 2007
Where to Find Good Apartments for Rent in Brisbane
Many of the good apartments for rent are hard to find. Often, this is because they are snapped up quickly. Also, onsite managers often control the rental rolls, and don't often advertise on the usual property websites (as they don't need to do so). Some have their own website. Also, onsite managers may have a relationship with executive relocation services, that are feed the better apartments.
If you are looking for a place to rent a good inner city apartment, I believe that this is the best site to look at: http://www.seqrents.com.au
Also, try: http://www.raas.com.au
You have to find out how each manager advertises his/her vacancy. You want to avoid any buildings managed by Oaks, as they focus on short term hotel style rentals.
Some places to look:
I recommend Arbour on Grey at SouthBank: http://arbour.com.au/cms/welcome.html
Also, Saville at SouthBank is one of the nicest buildings if you get a river facing apartment: http://www.seqrents.com.au/saville/index.htm
I know people at LeftBank at West End who like living there, but it is a little bit far to walk to any shops -- it is in an industrial area: http://www.seqrents.com.au/leftbank/
In the city, Admiralty One, is good value - see prior posts: http://www.seqrents.com.au/admiralty/
Admiralty Quays and Admiralty Two are also good quality.
Nearby on the river in the city is River Place, that is not as good quality, but is likely to have availability as this is a large complex. Careful of Storey Bridge noise. Great views.
On Alice Street in the city, if you can get an apartment in Quay West, that is fantastic, as it has park and river views -- for long term rentals, the best agent to try is Blockside & Fergerson for this building. Half of this building is a hotel managed, so it is easy to get short term accommodation in Quay West. All apartments are privately owned. You want to get above level 7.
For an inner city downtown building, Metro 21 is one of the better quality buildings. It has only 4 apartments per floor -- and tries to be more upmarket so is better than most buildings that aim at students -- it seems to have better availability, and some of the two bedroom apartments have three bathrooms. The baloneys are large: http://www.realestate.com.au/realestate/agent/metro+21+brisbane/mlibri
and http://www.metro21apartments.com.au/
In the back of Toowong, Encore is a relatively nice complex, with good pricing (but currently construction next door, so take care of which apartment). http://www.seqrents.com.au/encore/
St Lucia is harder to find quality -- there are few onsite managers.
In Indooroopilly, Riva is the only quality building -- again, some are noisy due to nearby construction. Some have river views. http://www.seqrents.com.au/riva/
This is a list by a selling agent about various innercity buildings:
http://www.openhouserealty.com.au/html/residential/21/apartment-buildings
Auction Results
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Will You Have Hotel Guests Staying In Your Building?
A number of Brisbane apartment buildings are being slowly turned into hotels by the Oaks Group, who have purchased management rights for the buildings.
If you are thinking of buying an apartment to live in, or renting an apartment for six months or more, you should take care not to buy or rent in apartment buildings that are or will soon become short term stay accommodation. The reason - the other "residents" of the building may only be staying for one or two nights -- there have been complaints about noise, parties, security issues, overuse of facilities such as pools, rubbish left in halls, and parking in the wrong spaces.
The apartments in such buildings will not, in my view, have good capital gains, as they will be less desirable for owner-occupiers and will become run down over time.
You should take extreme care before buying or renting in the following buildings:
- Festival Towers
- Felix
- Charlotte Towers
- 212 Margaret Street
- River City
- Any building managed by the Oaks Group
- Any building built by Devine
- Any building where the management rights are controlled by a real estate agent named Marshall.
(I see that a 2 bedroom apartment in Festival Towers, on level 31, recently was sold at auction by Ray White for $410,000. Another one on level 39 was unsold with the highest bid less than $450,000. It is now listed for sale at $499,000. Other apartments in the same building that are not as good as listed for sale in the high $400K and above $500,000 -- TAKE CARE!)
Here is a recent press report:
Oaks Hotels & Resorts has ramped up its growing domination of the Brisbane CBD accommodation market after snaring the management letting rights (MLRs) to two premier high-rise apartment towers, the 41 level Festival Towers and the 39 level River City project, for $14.1 million.
Today’s announced deal for the two properties delivers an additional 532 apartments to the rapidly expanding Oaks stable.
Managing director Brett Pointon says the latest acquisitions will boost Oaks Brisbane CBD portfolio to seven high-rise apartment buildings including Oaks 212 Margaret Street, Oaks Lexicon Apartments, Oaks North Quay, Oaks on Felix and Charlotte Towers (Oaks to take over management in October 2007).
While the 532 apartments delivered under the latest acquisition will initially be included in Oaks permanent letting pool, the company expects to progressively convert a majority into its short-term serviced letting pool to compete in Brisbane’s burgeoning short-stay market.
There is also a further 89 apartments in the buildings that are owner occupied or managed by external agents.
Pointon says Oaks expects to swell its short-term room stable from the 3,489 to over 3,600 serviced apartments by the end of June 2007.
In addition to the MLRs to the two properties, Oaks also acquired the freehold to the manager’s apartments in both properties for $1.45 million.
He adds the two latest acquisitions and the commissioning of Charlotte Towers deliver Oaks an unrivalled position in the increasingly buoyant Brisbane CBD accommodation market, and deliver a pipeline of units to further swell its serviced letting pool over the next two to three years.
"We’re expecting the market to continue tightening given the lack of any mooted major new hotels or serviced apartment projects in the CBD for the foreseeable future, with the exception of Charlotte Towers, which we’ve already secured the MLR for," he says.
"With Brisbane now boasting the highest hotel occupancy rate in Australia at around 80 percent, this strengthened presence in the local market will prove a cornerstone of Oaks financial performance over the next several years."
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Admiralty One
My favourite building is Admiralty One (or Admiralty I), at 35 Howard Street, Brisbane.
It is 28 floors (87 metres) high, all residential apartments. The building was completed in 1992. It has less than 160 apartments.
It is in an excellent location, right on the Brisbane River, and a very short walk along the river boardwalk to the downtown area.
On the lower levels, there are seven apartments per floor. At the front (i.e., on the river side) are a large 2 bedroom (132 sqm), a smaller 2 bedroom (106 sqm), a one bedroom (79 sqm) and a large 2 bedroom (132 sqm). All four of these apartments have river views, and regardless of what floor you are on, the views are fantastic. The views include the Storey Bridge in one direction and the Kangaroo Point cliffs in the other direction. At the back of the building, with city views or partial river views, are two one bedroom apartments (72 sqm) and a two bedroom apartment (98 sqm).
On the higher levels, there are five apartments per floor (three at the front, two at the back). The front apartments include three bedroom apartments, and the sizes of the front aparmtents range from 149 sqm to 197 sqm). At the back, there are two apartments at 105 sqm.
There is also a subpenthouse level (three apartments) and a penthouse level.
As you can see, the apartments in Admiralty One are much larger than apartments in newer buildings. For example, a typical 2 bedroom apartment in a new building is lucky to have 85 sqm of internal floor area. In Admiralty One, there are 2 bedroom apartments with over 115 sqm of internal floor area.
The building is well managed, and the body corporate committee is very professional and caring.
I believe that there are more owner-occupiers than renters in Admiralty One.
The building has undercover secure resident parking, secure guest parking, a small indoor pool, a gym and an onsite restaurant (Bubbles and Beans).
Positive Aspects
- Large apartments
- Fantastic views from front apartments
- Absolute riverfront
- Excellent inner city location
- Four elevators for 28 floors (a very good ratio compared with newer buildings)
- Good security
- Pool
- Gym
- Caring and more mature residents
- Good on-site management
- Most apartments are airconditioned
- Most apartments have their own laundry room
- Good closet and cupboard space
- Quality kitchens and bathrooms
- Close to Marriott Hotel and restaurants
- Far enough away from Storey Bridge so cannot hear traffic noise.
- No view from the pool, as it faces the city side
- Smaller balconies
- Hard to get river front apartment in this building
The best place to start is the on-site manager. Recently, there has been a change in on-site managers, as the previous manager (Leon Azar) moved to Arbour on Grey at South Bank. The new on-site managers are Jenny and Kingsley Short, telephone 07 3831 6455
The onsite manager maintains an Internet website at: http://www.seqrents.com.au/admiralty/
Typically, a large furnished two bedroom apartment with river views will rent for more than $640 per week. An unfurnished two bedroom apartment with river views will rent for $430 per week.
Each owner will furnish the apartment to a different standard, so the furnishing in one apartment is not at all representative of the style, quality or age of the furnishings in any other apartment.
Sales Inquiries
I recommend Margaret Waters as a good agent who knows riverfront apartment buildings.
An agent from West End, Open House Realty, is trying to get more business from sales in Admiralty One, but my experience with them has not been good for a number of reasons. I also understand that Open House is somehow associated with the on-site managers, as well as the on-site managers for a nearby building (River Place). It appears that they are trying to sell apartments to investors, rather than owner-occupiers, as the investors will then rent the apartment through the on-site managers.
Recent sales in 2007 include:
- Apartment 56 (Floor 9, 106 sqm, 2 bedrooms, river side) for more than $650,000.
- Apartment 92 (Floor 14, 1 bedroom, river side) for more than $500,000