From a dilapidated dump that sold at auction for over $2 million to an $8 million patch of grass on the Goldy and even a million-dollar jetty, these are the state’s most outrageous sales of the year.
From a dilapidated dump that sold at auction for over $2 million to an $8 million patch of grass on the Goldy and even a million-dollar jetty, these are the state’s most outrageous sales of the year.
At just 25, Joseph Lordi is often branded a young gun in the real estate game. Lordi cut his teeth with Ray White, Raine & Horne, Sotheby s and McGrath. And while he might drive a $110,000 BMW M2 Competition coupe - which car reviewers have described as a boy toy of unsurpassed excellence - Lordi owns it outright through a seven-year slog to become his own boss. He recently launched his own agency and the bold move comes after a string of successes, including the sale of a mansion at Raby Bay last August for $8.5 million, and two record-breaking $4 million-plus sales at Chandler in 2019.
Homes are fetching eye-watering prices in key Queensland suburbs as the state s red-hot housing market shifts into a higher gear. Recent sales this year show just how much people are willing to pay to secure a property in the Sunshine State, with some transactions smashing suburb records and homes selling for hundreds of thousands of dollars more than their asking price or reserve. Buyers are clamouring to get into the market, with auction clearance rates up around 80 per cent, and supply is tight, resulting in prices climbing all the way from Cairns to Clayfield. Hot auction markets like Camp Hill, Wavell Heights and Wilston have recorded epic sales under the hammer, while coastal markets like Airlie Beach, Mermaid Beach and Broadbeach Waters are achieving jaw-dropping prices for properties.