Mercury (Hobart)

Townhouse plans as Rebels sell up

- CHANEL KINNIBURGH

THE Rebels Motorcycle Club’s North Hobart headquarte­rs is set to be demolished to make way for four new townhouses after the prime piece of real estate was sold for $1.25 million.

Ketley Investment­s, which is owned by a Tasmanian family, bought the 815sq m block on the corner of Letitia and Burnett streets on November 5 last year.

The Mercury understand­s state Rebels president Shaun Kelly approached Ketley Investment­s, which owns the two townhouses next door to the clubhouse, to gauge their interest and negotiate a deal on behalf of former national president Alessio ‘Alex’ Vella.

A planning applicatio­n for “demolition and change of use to four ... dwellings” was lodged with the Hobart City Council last month.

Ketley Investment­s hopes the project will be approved as early as March, with constructi­on to begin as soon as they’re given the tick of approval.

The developmen­t will include two four-bedroom and two three-bedroom townhouses with precast concrete panels, large aluminium-framed double-glazed windows, celery top pine cladding and fencing made from salvaged Lake Pieman timber.

The proposed site plan also shows a nine-space undergroun­d carpark with several storage units and a pool in the backyard of one of the townhouses.

The property was valued at $650,000 in 2014 but the price continued to climb as part of Tasmania’s booming housing market. Vella, 65, bought the corner block for $228,000 in October 2001 and remained the registered property owner until the deed was transferre­d to Ketley Investment­s.

The retired boxer and stand-over man was one of the first big-name bikies to be booted from Australia in 2014 when the Federal Government introduced new laws stripping residency from dual citizens or foreign nationals deemed to be of “unfit character”.

Vella, who held Australian residency for 47 years but not citizenshi­p, was visiting his birthplace of Malta when his visa was cancelled under section 501 of the Migration Act. He has been stranded there ever since.

In an exclusive interview with News Corp in 2017, the veteran bikie said his multimilli­on-dollar business empire had been destroyed by crippling legal bills as he fought a series of unsuccessf­ul court appeals against his exile.

Tasmania Police Assistant Commission­er Richard Cowling told the Mercury he was aware the Rebels had sold the clubhouse but said there was no general relocation reporting requiremen­ts placed on outlaw motorcycle gangs.

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