Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

EARLE’S LEGACY LIVES ON

It’s 20 years since the death of the Gold Coast developer who put the suburb of Robina, among many other things, on the map

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FEW Gold Coasters have had the kind of legacy that Arthur Earle secured in his long lifetime.

The developer made his mark on the city and was one of the two founders of Robina, now a suburb which is home to more than 23,000 people.

The towering figure of the city’s history died 20 years ago this week but two decades on from his death, Earle’s legacy continues to grow.

He was born in 1913 at Goombungee on the Darling Downs and went on to work as a grazier, among many other industries in his early years.

Initially investing in tobacco, the industry failed to deliver so Earle moved into the rural field, growing cotton and clearing trees

Shortly after World War II he employed the future premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen to clear brush for him.

These industries as well as his dealing in sheep and cattle proved to be successful and Earle, who was living in Charlevill­e in the state’s west at the time, became wealthy.

At one point Earle was the state’s biggest dairy farmer.

But in the 1960s Earle decided to retire and move to the Gold Coast where he found his retirement short lived and a secondary career began as a property developer.

In 1964 he bought more than 3000 acres (1200ha) of land east of Nerang and Mudgeeraba and built a road through the centre of it. This road eventually would form part of the Pacific Motorway.

At the time, the land which would become Robina was a swamp “and all it grew was teatree and a bit of marijuana,” according to Earle.

Through the 1960s and 70s the developer, who based himself at Earle House in central Nerang, was involved in the building of numerous housing estates including River Bend, Tallai Hills and Summerhill­s.

At the height of his success, Earle Enterprise­s had either developed or was in control of at least $5.5 billion worth of land which was home to 100,000 people.

This stretched from Tallai, Currumbin and Nerang to as far north as Bribie Island.

But it was in 1980 that Earle’s greatest gambit began.

In late 1980, Earle and Asian developer Robin Loh teamed up and bought 1658ha of land near the M1.

After paying just $11.2 million for the land through the liquidatio­n sale of Cambridge Credit Company, the pair announced the $1.2 billion new suburb of Robina.

It was given a completion date of 1995, a year before Robina Town Centre ultimately opened.

Outside of his developmen­t work, Earle maintained a love of collecting and using horsedrawn buggies.

He retired in 1987 at the age of 74 after a long career and enjoyed more than a decade of retirement though he continued to invest in rural properties and donated millions to charity.

His wife Lorna died in 1997 in her husband’s arms at their home while the pair enjoyed their weekend custom of dancing to old songs on their gramophone.

Earle died of cancer in late February 1998 at the age of 84.

His legacy continues to today in the growing Robina.

His former office, Earle House, remains a major business hub in central Nerang and Earle Haven Retirement Village is still open.

 ??  ?? Arthur Earle at one time had either developed or was in control of at least $5.5 billion worth of land; (below left) alongside Singapore leader Lee Kuan Yew signing the visitors book at the opening of the first Robina land sites in 1982 and (right)...
Arthur Earle at one time had either developed or was in control of at least $5.5 billion worth of land; (below left) alongside Singapore leader Lee Kuan Yew signing the visitors book at the opening of the first Robina land sites in 1982 and (right)...
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