Eliza penthouse finally getting off the ground with $15 million hopes: Title Tattle

Eliza penthouse finally getting off the ground with $15 million hopes: Title Tattle
Jonathan ChancellorDecember 8, 2020

The Eliza penthouse, spanning three levels overlooking Hyde Park, is the latest Sydney skyhouse being marketed with $15 million hopes.

Developed by Edward Doueihi of Ceerose, with an architectural hint in its balconies of Antoni Gaudi's Casa Mila, the penthouse is due for completion in mid-2013. Its the building site with the crane that currently swings across Elizabeth Street just down from the intersection with Market Street.

The 460-square-metre, three-level penthouse will sit atop a 17-storey building designed by the architects Tony Owen Partners.

It features four bedrooms, five bathrooms, a home theatre, a private lift, 3.5-metre-high ceilings, a massive 13.5-metre frontage overlooking the park and full automation through C-Bus.

The top level comprises the entertainment terrace with a 10-metre lap pool.

It’s being marketed by Jean-Paul Markopoulos of CBRE. Just 7 of the 19 apartments remain for sale, including six full floor apartments with prices around $4.5 million each.

The site – whose neighbours are Hermes and the Sheraton on the Park – was originally to be used for a building named The Elizabeth. Its then developer Andrew Richardson however lost his record $20.1 million off-the-plan penthouse buyer in 2008. Richardson had accepted a $100 deposit for the proposed three-storey penthouse from now-bankrupted businessman Rodney Price.

The vacant Elizabeth Street site cost $13 million in 2003 when bought by Richardson and his initial partner, Tjeerd La Grouw, who exited the project several years later. Edward Doueihi, from the Dural construction company, Ceerose, paid $8.5 million in December 2009 to Richardson and his subsequent partner, Multiplex.

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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