logo
The properties about to test Collingwood's cool credentials

The properties about to test Collingwood's cool credentials

The Age24-07-2025
The US fund bought the 22-storey building from Challenger at a serious premium in 2019. Challenger, which paid $81 million in 2011, held the tower on its books at $165 million.
At the time of AEW's off-market purchase, the 19,213 sq m building was raking in $10 million a year in rent giving the deal a tight 4.9 per cent yield.
While not giving much away, AEW says it has achieved a 52.8 per cent increase in rental income in the six years it has owned the tower. It's understood that's on a fully leased basis, and the tower's occupation rate is currently about 83 per cent with new tenants still taking up space.
CBRE's Kiran Pillai, Scott McGlone and Nikola Jackson with Cushman & Wakefield's Leigh Melbourne, Nick Rathgeber, Josh Cullen and Morgan Briscoe have charge of the listing.
'Thirty-one Queen Street has been a dominant performer in the leasing market over the past three to four years, underpinned by one of the best examples of a ground-up refurbishment,' Pillai said.
'Given the asset's exceptional fundamentals, central-CBD location and low-risk cashflow, we expect strong interest from high-net-worth privates, syndicators and funds,' Melbourne said.
The decline in CBD values appears to have bottomed out with a series of big-game bargain hunters, ranging from cashed-up locals to offshore behemoths lured back to the market.
Hong Kong private equity property company PAG is understood to be running the ruler over Dexus' Flinders Gate complex. Its current book value stands at $265.5 million with Dexus is reportedly hoping for around $260 million.
Last year PAG snagged 367 Collins Street for $340 million from Mirvac, a 20 per cent discount to its peak value.
The move also comes as Singapore-listed Frasers Logistics & Commercial Trust revealed it had sold 357 Collins Street to Harry Stamoulis for $195.3 million.
The final price – about current book value – will clock in at $192 million, after lease incentive liabilities are paid out. Frasers paid a staggering $222.5 million 10 years ago.
Heavy lifting on High
Developers are expected to swoop on a huge building on Armadale's swanky High Street. The building which houses Armadale's Goodlife Gym at 1216-1230 High Street, comes with a price guide of $25-$30 million.
The property is on a 1926 sq m parcel of land stretching back to Willis Street at the rear. Records show the Tauber family paid $1.62 million for the property in 1986. The gym includes a pool.
Packed to the eyeballs with frock shops, bridal boutiques, cafes and homewares, High Street has a vacancy rate of just 2.3 per cent, according to Fitzroys' retail vacancy report, Walk the Strip, with rents commanding as much as $2000 a square metre.
Last year, the auction of 1047-1051 High Street dragged on for two hours with 900 bids volleyed between two parties. The corner double-storey office and shop, on 500 sq m of land, eventually sold for $11.4 million.
The Goodlife building is for sale through Cushman & Wakefield's Daniel Wolman, Oliver Hay, Hamish Burgess and Leon Ma with Teska Carson's Matthew Feld.
There's a bit of choice on the strip at the moment. Lawyer and investor Peter Mitrakas is selling a 1585 sq m parcel of land at 23-27 Osment Street near Armadale Station for about $20 million.
And five strata owners at 1097-1111 High Street are hoping to sell their building – on a large 1733 sq m site on the corner of Huntingtower Road – for about $30 million.
East Melbourne
A local private investor has paid about $13.5 million for the old Melbourne IVF fertility clinic at 344 Victoria Parade, a much-storied building in East Melbourne's medical precinct which won awards when it was built in the early 1990s.
While the vendor, veteran investment group Henkell Brothers, was seeking closer to $15 million for the three storey-office, it nonetheless made a tidy profit.
Henkell Brothers bought the 2444 sq m building from the late Richard Pratt's Pratt Industries in 1995 for just $3.92 million – after it passed in at a mortgagee auction for $2.9 million.
It was a bargain even at the time. The Victorian Public Service Association had been ready to pay $7.12 million for the city-fringe office, but the deal fell through after the sale of its CBD office to theatre impresario David Marriner collapsed.
CBRE agents Nick Peden, Sandro Peluso, Jamus Campbell and Mark Granter negotiated the deal.
'The campaign attracted significant interest, with several unconditional offers received from both local and international investors – an unprecedented result for a vacant property,' Peden said.
The building had been the home of Melbourne IVF's fertility clinic for many years but the baby-maker is off to Hines' new 15-storey timber building, T3 at 36 Wellington Street, across the road.
AirHub
Growthpoint Properties is testing the market's appetite for industrial investments offering up a six-property portfolio at Melbourne Airport.
The AirHub portfolio, currently on Growthpoint's books with a $127 million value, covers a 25-hectare chunk of land around the airport with net lettable space of 139,707 sq m.
They're being offered individually or as a job lot. Tenants include Australia Post, Unipart Group, Direct Couriers and Laminex.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start
Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start

West Australian

time11 hours ago

  • West Australian

Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start

Vancouver and Toronto-listed Rio2 Limited has made significant progress at its Fenix Gold Project in the Maricunga belt in Chile's Atacama region, with construction 41 per cent complete as of June 30, keeping the company on track for first gold production in January 2026. The company recently received a US$50 million (A$78 million) third prepayment instalment from United States-based precious metals investment firm Wheaton Precious Metals International, under a precious metals purchase agreement for Fenix. The funding stream has been a continued strong endorsement of Rio2's construction and development of its massive oxide-hosted, heap leach gold project. The latest prepayment is a key marker along the project's path towards launching mine production by the end of the year. From October 2024 to June this year, Rio2 has invested $56.4 million in the venture against a $57.8 million budget, excluding corporate overheads and 2022 pre-construction costs. The 1514-strong workforce is 94 per cent Chilean, including 41 per cent who hail from the surrounding Atacama, highlighting the company's strong emphasis on local employment. Construction milestones include the installation of 12.7 hectares of geosynthetics and 4 hectares of over-liner material on a leach pad, which the company expects will carry production through the first six months. The main haul road is 90 per cent complete, while a second haul road is 40 per cent complete. Both routes are critical for connecting the Fenix South mine pit to the leach pad. At the adsorption, desorption and recovery plant, work has progressed on the adsorption areas, reagent handling and storage facilities, while the process plant's structural assembly is almost complete. Cladding is 90 per cent finished and the first of three electrical switch rooms is in transit from the nation's capital, Santiago. Additionally, Rio2 has nearly finished grade control drilling aimed at the first three years of mine production. An updated mineral resource estimate is expected by September 2025, which will help the company refine its mine planning. Key upcoming milestones include kicking off ore stacking, finalising the pregnant leach solution pond and completing the electrical switch rooms this month. The pond is a key component of Rio2's heap leaching operation and will collect solution enriched with dissolved metals after it percolates through the crushed ore on a leach pad. Other key milestones will include commissioning the ADR plant in November and completing a mine expansion study by the end of the year. The Fenix Gold Project hosts a non-JORC measured and indicated resource of 4.8 million ounces of gold. The project is designed as a run-of-mine heap leach operation, which minimises its environmental impact by eliminating crushing or tailings facilities. The project has an estimated US$235 million in initial and sustaining capital and will employ 1200 people during construction and 800 during its 17-year operational phase, which will significantly benefit the Atacama region. With construction on budget, a robust resource base and Wheaton's strong financial backing, Rio2 is poised to deliver a modern, sustainable gold mine. The Fenix Gold Project is set to become a cornerstone of economic growth in Chile, with first gold in January marking a transformative milestone for the company and the region. Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact:

Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start
Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start

The Age

time11 hours ago

  • The Age

Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start

Vancouver and Toronto-listed Rio2 Limited has made significant progress at its Fenix Gold Project in the Maricunga belt in Chile's Atacama region, with construction 41 per cent complete as of June 30, keeping the company on track for first gold production in January 2026. The company recently received a US$50 million (A$78 million) third prepayment instalment from United States-based precious metals investment firm Wheaton Precious Metals International, under a precious metals purchase agreement for Fenix. The funding stream has been a continued strong endorsement of Rio2's construction and development of its massive oxide-hosted, heap leach gold project. The latest prepayment is a key marker along the project's path towards launching mine production by the end of the year. From October 2024 to June this year, Rio2 has invested $56.4 million in the venture against a $57.8 million budget, excluding corporate overheads and 2022 pre-construction costs. The 1514-strong workforce is 94 per cent Chilean, including 41 per cent who hail from the surrounding Atacama, highlighting the company's strong emphasis on local employment. Construction milestones include the installation of 12.7 hectares of geosynthetics and 4 hectares of over-liner material on a leach pad, which the company expects will carry production through the first six months. The main haul road is 90 per cent complete, while a second haul road is 40 per cent complete. Both routes are critical for connecting the Fenix South mine pit to the leach pad. At the adsorption, desorption and recovery plant, work has progressed on the adsorption areas, reagent handling and storage facilities, while the process plant's structural assembly is almost complete. Cladding is 90 per cent finished and the first of three electrical switch rooms is in transit from the nation's capital, Santiago.

Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start
Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start

Sydney Morning Herald

time11 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Rio2 gold project in Chile on track for 2026 start

Vancouver and Toronto-listed Rio2 Limited has made significant progress at its Fenix Gold Project in the Maricunga belt in Chile's Atacama region, with construction 41 per cent complete as of June 30, keeping the company on track for first gold production in January 2026. The company recently received a US$50 million (A$78 million) third prepayment instalment from United States-based precious metals investment firm Wheaton Precious Metals International, under a precious metals purchase agreement for Fenix. The funding stream has been a continued strong endorsement of Rio2's construction and development of its massive oxide-hosted, heap leach gold project. The latest prepayment is a key marker along the project's path towards launching mine production by the end of the year. From October 2024 to June this year, Rio2 has invested $56.4 million in the venture against a $57.8 million budget, excluding corporate overheads and 2022 pre-construction costs. The 1514-strong workforce is 94 per cent Chilean, including 41 per cent who hail from the surrounding Atacama, highlighting the company's strong emphasis on local employment. Construction milestones include the installation of 12.7 hectares of geosynthetics and 4 hectares of over-liner material on a leach pad, which the company expects will carry production through the first six months. The main haul road is 90 per cent complete, while a second haul road is 40 per cent complete. Both routes are critical for connecting the Fenix South mine pit to the leach pad. At the adsorption, desorption and recovery plant, work has progressed on the adsorption areas, reagent handling and storage facilities, while the process plant's structural assembly is almost complete. Cladding is 90 per cent finished and the first of three electrical switch rooms is in transit from the nation's capital, Santiago.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store