Jack Nicklaus-designed St John course at Heritage Golf and Country Club, Chirnside Park sold

Jack Nicklaus-designed St John course at Heritage Golf and Country Club, Chirnside Park sold
Jonathan ChancellorDecember 7, 2020

The receivership sale of Heritage Golf and Country Club in the Yarra Valley’s Chirnside Park, north-east of Melbourne, has secured $17.8 million, just over half its over-inflated $30 million book value.

The two golf course, 230 hectare property has been bought by HGC Properties, a company directed by Melbourne accountant Sam Cimino, with its only shareholder being, Fly Group Limited, an entity without any directorial paperwork which is understood to have origins in China.

Scott Callow and Mark Wizel of CBRE Hotels negotiated the sale on behalf of the receivers PKF Lawler in conjunction with Michael Hede of Knight Frank. 

"We are certainly in a different cycle of commercial property when golf courses are quickly selling," Mark Wizel told Property Observer.

"Banks have an increased preparedness to lend on non-core assets.

"There is Chinese buying appetite for leisure property, not just the residential projects that have been the dominant desire to date," Mark Wizel said.

The Jack Nicklaus-designed St John golf course ranks among the best golf courses in Australia. The property is located on the Yarra River near Chirnside Park and has two 18 hole golf courses (the St John Course, south side designed by Jack Nicklaus in 1996) along with the Henley Course, on its north side designed by Tony Cashmore in 2002.

The property included townhouse development land and residential lots (STCA). 

Heritage Golf & Country Club has a strong established membership base with 1,394 members. It hosted the Victorian PGA Tournament in February this year. 

There were about 47,500 golf rounds by played annually.

Heritage Golf and Country Club was under the control of the Melbourne businessman and property developer Guo Zhao “Sunny” Sun.

Mr Sun acquired the golf estate around 2011 at just short of $15 million. But he subsequently became embroiled in a Victorian Supreme Court dispute with business partner Wang Hua, China’s 790th richest person, over control of the country club, as reported by Fairfax Media.

A court ordered followed that Heritage Golf and Country Club Pty Ltd be wound-up with the creditors owed $13.8 million, according to a News Ltd report which suggested one creditor, the Alter family, through its Austpac Funds Management, unsuccessfully proposed a deed of company arrangement.

Sun had purchased the property from receivers to the Letten Schemes, a series of property investment funds established by Mark Letten that fell apart during the global financial crisis.

Wang Hua and Mr Sun founded residential development company Kingsland Group, which has built small-scale townhouse and apartment developments in Melbourne since around 2003.

Wang Hua, from the Jeshing Group, was the mystery buyer who spent $18.58 million last year on the Toorak estate of the director of construction company L.U. Simon Peter Devitt through Kay & Burton agent Ross Savas (pictured below), in the name of his wife, Xiao "Kylie" Yan Bao, who received an Australian visa in 2001. She had bought a mansion on Irving Road, Toorak for $3,399,000 in 2003.

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Private homes overlooking the course have been sold over the years, with Fletchers currently having a three bedroom townhouse offering on Turnberry Lane (pictured below). It had $1.3 million hopes, after being passed in at $1.05 million at auction last month. Its vendor is not connected to the golf course ownership.

Jonathan Chancellor

Jonathan Chancellor is one of Australia's most respected property journalists, having been at the top of the game since the early 1980s. Jonathan co-founded the property industry website Property Observer and has written for national and international publications.

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