Nautical Brisbane Moderne-style house on the market for only second time

Nautical Brisbane Moderne-style house on the market for only second time
Jonathan ChancellorDecember 8, 2020

{yoogallery src=[images/stories/october28brisbane]}

Brisbane’s 1938 landmark nautical Moderne-style residence – designed by the architect Mervyn Rylance – is on the market for only the second time.

Inspired by the Art Deco style of Miami Beach, Florida, the house sits on a 736-square-metre block in Hamilton Hill with views from Moreton Island to the city skyline.

Level one offers living areas, kitchen, media room and a utility room.

The second level has the master bedroom with a dressing room and ensuite, plus two other bedrooms each with ensuites. A study is also located on this level.

“It’s a rare opportunity to secure this much-admired Brisbane landmark,” says listing agent Alma Clark of Alma Clark Real Estate Ascot.

She says dedicated attention to detail has been employed to bring this home into the modern era.

It was briefly listed last spring but didn’t sell.

Hamilton prices have ranged between $700,000 and $3.2 million this year.

The property last traded in 1993 at $490,000.

It has an official unimproved $2.4 million land value.

The last known sale of a house designed by Mervyn Rylance was the heritage-listed Oogarding, the Bardon house, which is considered among the best examples of his work in the Mediterranean style of architecture. It sold for $1.86 million in 2006.

Very few pure Mediterranean-style houses were built in Brisbane, and Rylance was also responsible for the design of Blanchard House at New Farm, which was demolished amid controversy in 2009.

The bulldozers – accompanied by three police officers – moved in at 6.30am to demolish the unlisted 1934 Spanish Mission home on Maxwell Street.

Developer John Lynch and wife Monica Blinco, an interior designer, bought it in 2004 for $3.75 million and the adjoining block in July 2007 for $5.9 million with plans for a seven-storey apartment block.

There’s debate on Maxwell Street at the moment over the proposed demolition of a heritage- listed Mock-Tudor apartment block at 42 Maxwell Street.

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.

Editor's Picks