The Gold Coast Bulletin

Fresh bid to offload glamour penthouse

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AN item on a nightly television news report has contended, wrongly, that a big-ticket penthouse at Main Beach in which US socialite Paris Hilton once was entertaine­d is on the market for the first time in 20 years.

The statement’s reminiscen­t of the days when properties west of Nerang aimed at gullible out-of-town buyers were described in advertisem­ents as “handy to the beach”.

Fortunatel­y, thanks to technology and today’s property-search systems, most buyers now look deeper than some news reports and advertisem­ents.

Anyone seriously looking at the Main Beach penthouse will discover that it was marketed in 2006 and today is in the middle of its fourth marketing push since 2017.

In fact, a property data base records the penthouse as having spent more than 600 days on the market since June 2017.

The property sits atop the Harry Triguboff-built Oscar on Main tower – Oscar is Harry’s middle name – and was bought new for $2 million in 1998.

The buyer, and he’s still the owner, is a fellow called Wayne Sharpe, who was joint founder nearly 30 years back of trade-dollars business Bartercard.

The then bachelor later said he bought the penthouse because he wanted to live among glitz and glamour without actually feeling that he was doing that.

Wayne achieved that aim but went on to jet off to an even bigger glitz and glamour pond – London.

His 2006 effort to leave Oscar came with hopes of finding a party keen on the high life near the ocean and with more than

$10 million to spend.

The penthouse sat in the Sharpe portfolio, unmoved, until a new sales push was fired up in 2017 and interest above $10 million again was sought for a “true home in the sky – one in a league of its own”.

The “ask” later was trimmed to $7.95 million.

Two subsequent pushes didn’t produce an enthusiast­ic multi-millionair­e and today another hunt is under way.

It seems, according to that television news feature, Wayne’s expectatio­ns today have waned and are above $6 million.

The so-called selling points with the four-bedroom Sharpe sky mansion range from a three-tonne tank for tropical fish to a bar and a private steam room.

Any “richie” taking the penthouse plunge can dive into a rooftop pool that is nearly two metres deep and long enough for swimming laps.

Of course, there are penthouses aplenty at Main Beach and the suburb for years held the Gold Coast record for such apartments.

It was set in 2012 when Melbourne builder Peter Devitt paid $9.2 million for the apartment that crowns Main Beach’s Liberty Panorama tower.

That figure was bettered in 2018 when developer Ron Bakir sold his expansive Chevron Renaissanc­e pad in Surfers Paradise for

$9.5 million.

 ??  ?? Wayne Sharpe in his penthouse at Oscar on Main at Main Beach which is back on the market.
Pictures: MIKE BATTERHAM
Wayne Sharpe in his penthouse at Oscar on Main at Main Beach which is back on the market. Pictures: MIKE BATTERHAM
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