Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Lifestyle haven on links

- QUENTIN TOD

A BILLIONAIR­E’S golf playground at Nerang is to sprout a $220 million lifestyle community with a luxury cruiser for residents’ use.

The Villa built for a Japanese businessma­n, the late Toshiaki Ogasawara, 30 years ago is to become home to 296 terrace homes in a gated estate, Riverina Gold Coast.

The property, on which the Japan Times owner used to hit golf balls from a driving range outside his grand mansion’s first-floor bedroom, is expected to have its first residents by later this year.

The mansion, which cost $11 million to build in 1989 and at one time operated as a function centre, is to be demolished.

The Riverina project, by Brisbane developer Pointcorp and given the green light by the city council, signals an end to previous plans to build Nerang’s first high-rises on the land.

Bisected by the Brisbane-Gold Coast railway line, The Villa carried developmen­t approval for 946 apartments in 10 buildings of between four and 13 levels when Pointcorp bought it 18 months ago.

Pointcorp says Riverina will be a lifestyle haven with resident facilities unmatched on the Gold Coast.

They will range from a body corporate-owned cruiser, which residents will be able to hire, through to a cafe, library, private dining rooms, cinema, gymnasium with sauna, and multiple fitness equipment stations.

The property has a 400metre frontage to the Nerang River, which offers deepwater access to the ocean.

Chris Vitale, who founded the Brisbane-based

Pointcorp with Paul Gedoun in 2002, yesterday said Riverina would be a lifestyle pacesetter.

“It’s rare to have such a large riverfront setting so close to the coast and Pointcorp will do it justice.

“Our project not only will be large in terms of resident facilities, but large by way of terrace-home sizes.”

Riverina will have a 2.8ha lake as a centrepiec­e and will include a large resort-style pool.

The Villa was developed on 23ha bought by Mr Ogasawara for $6 million in the late 1980s and, for several years until 2013, was home to a private golf club where fees were $7500 a year.

Pointcorp snared The Villa in 2018 in the wake of the billionair­e’s 2016 death but the price has not been revealed – it bought Ogasawara holding company Nifsan in a deal which included an Emerald Lakes commercial building.

The Pointcorp decision to “go low” will see terrace homes of between 180 and 500sqm and, selling from $495,000 to $1 million, will be built on the doorstep of the Nerang train station.

Mr Vitale said they would appeal to the whole spectrum of buyers, from owner-occupiers to firsthome owners wanting to get into the market and to investors.

The Pointcorp developmen­t approval does not take in The Villa land on the eastern side of the railway line.

A 60m-wide area next to the line is to be used for the Coomera Connector road.

Mr Vitale said Pointcorp, which was proposing a 30m riverfront environmen­tal area, would address the fate of the balance of the “eastern” land once the road was complete.

Pointcorp, which has a developmen­t pipeline approachin­g $2 billion, has just completed a 365-title house and land estate, Bloom, at Coomera.

Other assets include a service station on the highway in Burleigh.

 ??  ?? The mansion built for Toshiaki Ogasawara in 1989 will be demolished to make way for a lifestyle community.
The mansion built for Toshiaki Ogasawara in 1989 will be demolished to make way for a lifestyle community.

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