Townsville Bulletin

Dancer makes right moves

- TONY RAGGATT

A “QUIRKY” building in the CBD is being reborn as an event space for ballroom dancing, for a cafe and deli and as a base for a project management company.

Systems and process engineer and ballroom dancing teacher Chris Christense­n has bought the former Bank of Queensland building at 106 Stokes St which has been vacant for years.

Mr Christense­n said he would refurbish the property to take advantage of its high ceilings, old bank vaults and strange doorways which at one time opened to an adjoining building but have been bricked in.

“It’s probably a building that is quirky and unique enough to do what we want to do. We love the city and have always had businesses predominan­tly in the CBD. We want to be part of the reactivati­on of Stokes St and the mall,” Mr Christense­n said. The 60-year-old building includes a basement where Mr Christense­n’s project management company Cachet Advisory will be based, a large ground floor space for a cafe similar to Christo’s which previously operated at The Precinct and a first level which Mr Christense­n plans to operate as an events space for dancing and for use by yoga and pilates groups.

“We’ll be spending a fair bit of money on bringing it up to

the standard we’ll need for our offering,” Mr Christense­n said.

“We are going to do it as a staged approach. We will get the ground floor operationa­l first. We are hoping to be open by the end of November.” Apart from his role at

Cachet Advisory, Mr Christense­n is a ballroom dancing champion and teaches ballroom and Latin dancing.

He also operates the Betty Blue and The Lemon Tart in Denham St which will continue to operate in its current location.

His former manager at The Precinct’s Christo’s deli, Karyl Pattison, will manage the Stokes St cafe.

While property agents are seeing a long-awaited recovery in the CBD office and retail market, with a rush of recent sales and leases in an

area where vacancies have been astronomic­al, Mr Christense­n said he was keen to be part of the CBD’S reactivati­on.

“We are looking long term. It makes sense to capitalise on an investment that we own. You can be part of a solution to reactivate or wait until somebody magically fixes it for you. For us, we are at a point in time where we would like to be part of a solution,” Mr Christense­n said.

The 411sq m multi-level office and retail building sold through Ray White Commercial Townsville for $500,000.

 ?? ?? Chris Christense­n in the old CBD bank building he is refurbishi­ng for a cafe, events space and business premises.
Chris Christense­n in the old CBD bank building he is refurbishi­ng for a cafe, events space and business premises.

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