village news february 2015

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NEW FARM - FORTITUDE VALLEY FEBRUARY 2015 KANGAROO POINT PETRIE BIGHT NEWSTEAD TENERIFFE FORTITUDE VALLEY BOWEN HILLS NEW FARM SPRING HILL PAGE 16 Kate Collins love of China began in 1992 PAGE 18 Childhood chocolate dreams realised PAGE 8 Arthur St lock-up PHOTO BY ©TUBA MEDIA PRODUCTIONS

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Page 1: Village News February 2015

villagenews

February 2015 villagenews 1

NEW FARM - FORTITUDE VALLEY

FEBRUARY 2015

KANGAROO POINT

PETRIE BIGHT

NEWSTEAD TENERIFFE FORTITUDE VALLEY

BOWEN HILLS NEW FARM SPRING HILL

PAGE 16

Kate Collins love of China began

in 1992

PAGE 18

Childhood chocolate dreams realised

PAGE 8

Arthur Stlock-up

PHOTO BY ©TUBA MEDIA PRODUCTIONS

Page 2: Village News February 2015

February 2015 villagenews 3

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By Nick Moore

ALL voters in Teneriffe, Newstead and Bowen Hills would fall within Central ward under a proposed redraw of council boundaries.

The push to change the borders of Central and Hamilton has won the backing of Teneriffe Progress Association president Ben Pritchard.

At present, Teneriffe, Newstead and Bowen Hills are calved up between the two wards but the changes would put these suburbs wholly in Central, which would also pick up a small part of Windsor south of Albion Rd from Hamilton.

In return, Central would jettison voters on the western side of the Inner-City Bypass in the suburbs of Herston, Kelvin Grove, Wilston, Windsor and Newmarket.

Mr Pritchard said the plan to locate all of Teneriffe, Newstead and Bowen Hills in Central made sense.

“If possible they should keep whole suburbs intact,” he said.

Under the current map, Newstead and Teneriffe residents on the northern side of Commercial Rd and Chermside St belong to Hamilton, as do Bowen Hills residents north of Campbell and Cowlishaw streets.

Mr Pritchard said the changes made sense on commonality and interaction grounds too. Wilston and Windsor, for instance, shared little with other Central suburbs on the River side of the bypass. Similarly,

Teneriffe and Newstead had scant community of interest with Hamilton suburbs such as Pinkenba, Eagle Farm or Woolowin, he said.

The LNP submitted the redraw proposal in December to the Electoral Commission of Queensland, which must shed some electors from Central and Hamilton to stop them exceeding their target

quotas.“It is clear

the pattern of continued growth in the inner city wards of Central, Hamilton and The Gabba need to be taken into account when drawing boundaries to ensure a degree of longevity,” the LNP submission said.

“It is proposed that the new boundary of Central ward utilise the Inner City Bypass … (and) Breakfast Creek leading into

the north coast rail line, Albion Rd and Lutwyche/Bowen Bridge Rd to connect with the Inner City bypass,” the LNP proposed.

Mr Pritchard said: “The suggested alteration to the boundary to follow Breakfast Creek seems much more sensible, logical and defensible.”

The submission said Hamilton needed “to shed a quarter of its electors to become within quota for 2018, equating to around 7000 electors”. It’s proposed to share a new border with Central at “Breakfast Creek and Lutwyche/Bowen Bridge Rd”.

Mr Pritchard said the commissionContinued on Page 4>

Push to unite Newstead,Teneriffe voters in onecouncil ward wins backing

Ben Pritchard

THE BCC has over 700,000 electors in 26 wards with an expectation that each ward has approximately the same number of voters. Three wards are over quota including Hamilton(Cr David McLachlan) and Central (Cr Vicki Howard). Therefore a redistribution is required by the Electoral Commission of Queensland.

The Change Commission is an independent body that administers any proposed local government changes.

REVIEW PROCESS TIMETABLE

1. Call for suggestions - closed at 5.00 pm Monday 22 December

2014

2. Publish suggestions for public comment - closes at 5.00 pm Monday 16 February 2015.

To see the submissions and have your say go to www.ecq.qld.gov.au/Brisbane

Proposed boundary change moving Teneriffe, Newstead and Bowen Hills into Central Ward.

Page 3: Village News February 2015

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WHEN Teneriffe artist and graphic designer Liesbeth Thie was asked to create an image that represented her local suburb, she turned to the view from her wool store window for inspiration.

“The Teneriffe Progress Association asked me to design something that would portray just what Teneriffe was all about,” Liesbeth said. “I immediately looked toward my window because it tells the story entirely.”

Liesbeth has lived and worked in Teneriffe for eight years and during that time, has come to know the suburb and its people well.

“I joined the Teneriffe Progress Association so that I could meet my neighbours and know more about the community,” Liesbeth said. “I have definitely done that and since then, attendee numbers at meetings have

tripled.” Liesbeth said that being asked

to contribute to the awareness of the Association’s work gave her the opportunity to create a modern day view of Teneriffe.

“It’s really a feel good picture that I hope people can enjoy in their own homes as well,” she said.

The Teneriffe Progress Association has used the image on their flyers and promotional material to promote Teneriffe’s vibrant community as a fun place to live.

The artwork has since been selected by the New Farm and

District Historical Society as one of the pieces in their upcoming Exhibition of New Farm houses and streetscapes. Liesbeth is one of six well-known local artists who are exhibiting their works as part of the NFDHS’s launch of the

book, ‘Homes with History on the New Farm Peninsula’, by Gerard Benjamin on February 28 at the Uniting Church Centre on Merthyr Rd.

Liesbeth’s artwork is available to purchase in print from New Farm Editions or at the Museum of Brisbane shop at City Hall, or order it online from Liesbeth’s website - www.twotonedesign.com.au

Teneriffe landscape captured

I HAVE a possum that ‘visits’ once or twice a year during the wet season. I never see her in winter.Two nights ago I snapped the best shot ever of Esme and would like to share it with your readers.

I’m also curious as to how the locals feel about possums. Do they see them as a pest or do they believe that possums add colour to the local wildlife?

They are often heard making lots of noise in the New Farm area at night, as they carve out their claims for various branches of trees. Austin Hellier

A welcome brush with Esme, my summer visitor

Esme the possum.

Liesbeth Thie

Continued from Page 3>had electorally split Teneriffe

along a “completely arbitrary line”. He also said he felt there was some vagueness about the line’s precise path.

He said the council website showed “an apparently ECQ-sourced map that shows the boundary taking a completely arbitrary line, which extends Chermside St in a straight line towards the river - through the middle of an apartment building at Teneriffe Wharves.

“I am certain I had seen a third map that diverted that boundary line through the driveway to Teneriffe Wharves which sits opposite the steps from Macquarie St to Chermside St at the side of the old Paddy’s Market building.

“Whatever the reasoning in the past, Teneriffe needs this matter to be resolved. I look forward to having some clarity and certainty,” he said.

Labor and the Greens also submitted proposals. Submissions closed on December 22. The public can comment until February 16. Visit: goo.gl/EjjFCW

EMAIL US: [email protected].

HAVE YOUR SAY:

By Nick Moore

A NEW Farm mum was left gobsmacked after what she said was a heated chance run-in with Cr Vicki Howard over a petition to fix the bus run for Kelvin Grove State College students and parents.

Tracy Musgrave said the Central Ward councillor took exception to the Village News’s coverage of the bus campaign, which showed that Cr Howard’s office had been falsely claiming council were powerless to change routes and was instead trying to pass the buck to the State Government.

Ms Musgrave, who launched a council petition late last year to enhance bus route 393 for local families, said she saw Cr Howard at a state election candidates’ debate at the Powerhouse late last month and introduced herself as the petitioner.

She said after initial pleasantries, the encounter became heated.

Ms Musgrave told the Village News: “My discussion with Vicki was very heated at times as we both raised our voices.”

She said it took her Year 7 son an hour to get to Kelvin Grove college, including a change of bus in the City, and the same duration home. Kelvin Grove is the catchment high school for the Peninsula and a relatively short distance as the crow flies.

Her petition calls for route 393 to start from New Farm ferry terminal, about

2.5km from its current starting point at the Teneriffe terminal, and to push on about 2.3km from its current terminus at RBWH to the Kelvin Grove college.

Ms Musgrave said Cr Howard told her that TransLink, the State Government body that manages bus services in Brisbane, was not there to provide a taxi service to everyone’s door.

Contrary to advice from Cr Howard’s office to Ms Musgrave and the Village News, it is council that sets routes and timetables in Brisbane. TransLink then operates these.

Following the petition and media coverage of the problem, council was seeking feedback on what it described as “minor changes to route 393”.

“Under the proposed changes, the trip which leaves the Teneriffe ferry terminal at approximately 8.15am would now stop opposite the Royal Brisbane Hospital in O’Connell Terrace on school days and not stop at the Royal Brisbane Hospital platform until after dropping school students at Kelvin Grove State College,” council wrote.

Ms Musgrave told the councillor that the petition supporters would reject council’s alteration because the service still left from Teneriffe rather than New Farm, which excluded many families, and one bus at 8.15am was both too little and too late in the morning.

“Basically, she can’t believe that we are unhappy with the suggested one

bus in the morning and another in the afternoon and is dumb-founded that we think it unreasonable for the 393 not to come to New Farm ferry terminal,” Ms Musgrave wrote. The councillor said “wiser people than us” had made the decision, Ms Musgrave wrote.

Meanwhile, a transport expert who lives in the Peninsula, said it was reasonable to expect a more direct bus route to the school.

Rachel Smith, who has consulted for mayors and city leaders here and abroad, said Brisbane needed to move from a “commuter” public transport model, where travellers were forced to come into the City and then head out, to a “transit” system which crisscrossed more directly between suburbs.

She said improving alternative methods of getting to and from school could significantly slash cars on the road. She said it was not necessarily a safe bike ride for younger Kelvin Grove students.

Ms Smith has written Decongestion – 7 steps for Mayors and other City Leaders to cut traffic congestion, without the expense of new roads or annoyed residents” which was due out this month.

Cr Howard called the Village News on deadline to dispute Ms Musgrave’s description of the conversation as heated. “I at no time felt that it was an angry conversation,” she saidBus coverage earns praise Page 11>

Bus fight clash between Cr and mumTHE Rotary Club of New Farm is calling on businesses in the area to acknowledge the outstanding performance of their employees as part of the Pride of Workmanship Awards Program.

The club is inviting local businesses to nominate an employee who they consider a worthy recipient, to be presented at a special awards dinner at Eves on the River on March 25.

President Denise Buckby said that prospective employers wanting to acknowledge that special employee should take the time to nominate them for a 2015 Pride of Workmanship Award.

Ms Buckby said the presentation dinner provides an opportunity for sponsorship and also for colleagues, associates and friends to gather and enjoy the awards ceremony. The cost of the awards dinner is $50pp.

The award recipient will be invited to the dinner as a guest of the Rotary Club of New Farm and their work story will also be featured in the Village News.

Nominations close on February 25 and forms are on the website RotaryNewFarm.com. For information contact Denise on 0401 377 144 or at [email protected].

Award honours pride

Page 4: Village News February 2015

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villagenews February 20156 February 2015 villagenews 7

Ferry Terminal News Brisbane City Council is pleased to let residents know that the $7.7 million upgrade to the Bulimba Ferry terminal has been completed. This is the first of 11 projects across the network to make Council’s ferry infrastructure more accessible, connected and flood resilient – and most importantly ferry services between Bulimba and Teneriffe have now recommenced.

The upgrade to the original terminal – which had been in operation for over 100 years – will improve local network efficiency through the provision of a dual-berth pontoon.

Our next major project for the area is the Sydney Street ferry terminal upgrade that started in January 2015.

This new terminal is expected to open in mid-2015 with increased berthing capacity, improved efficiency and flood resilience, increased shelter and better access for people with mobility impairments. Council apologises for any disruption and encourages residents to contact the free-call information line on 1800 669 416 for further details. The terminal will be closed during construction.

393 Update Council has been undertaking consultation on a proposal to provide a school day service to and from Kelvin Grove State College by extending an existing service from the Royal Brisbane Hospital.

This proposal requires changes to the route and timetable of the existing Route 393 service which will have impacts on existing passengers travelling to the Royal Brisbane Hospital.

Once consultation is completed and feedback assessed, the petition will be considered by Council’s Public and Active Transport Committee before a recommendation being made to Translink, who are required to approve any changes.

If Translink supports the change it is expected that it would be implemented at the end of February.

If you would like further information on the proposed changes please visit Council’s website and search ‘393 proposed changes’.

COUNCIL CONNECTIONS

Cr Vicki Howard – CENTRAL Ward P: 3403 0254 E: [email protected] David McLachlan – HAMILTON Ward P: 3403 1095 E: [email protected]

COUNCIL would work with the city’s 300 schools to develop Traffic Management Plans and implement better parking enforcement to improve safety and relieve congestion, it was announced.

Council’s new parking strategy for schools was a direct outcome of the Parking Taskforce’s recommendations about managing and enforcing school traffic zones, a council spokesman said.

“Feedback from schools, parents, residents and P&C Queensland to the Parking Taskforce has been calling for better safety, as well as solutions to traffic congestion and enforcement of non-compliance in school drop-off zones,” he said.

“In response, council will work with schools to develop traffic-management strategies tailored to the needs to each individual school, creating safer parking areas, implementing educational programs and conducting more parking enforcement.

“We’re also looking at how we can create standardised, clearer signage for school drop-off zones,” the spokesman said.

School parking crackdown flagged

NEW Farm couple Matt and Caitlyn Lancashire became the proud parents of bouncing baby Monty N. Lancashire on the afternoon of January 7. After a relatively short labour at the Mater Mothers, South Brisbane, Monty was delivered weighing a very healthy 7lb 4oz (3.29kg) and 51cm long. Beaming father Matt said: “Not that I am biased, he is pretty cute and fortunately he received his mother’s genes and not his father’s!” The family has enjoyed several weeks at home getting to know each other before Matt’s return to work this month as principal of Ray White New Farm. Congratulations!

Lancashire family welcomes new addition

Phot

o by

©Tu

ba M

edia

Pro

duct

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WHEN Melissa Robinson arrived at the Irish Inn in New Farm in August last year, she had no idea that she would make lifelong friends at the boarding house whilst facing the toughest experience of her life.

It was here that Melissa met fellow boarder Kampong Keily, a reclusive Thai lady in her sixties, who appeared to have no family or friends even though she had been in Australia since 1987.

Melissa could see that Kampong needed company and soon they became firm friends, along with neighbours, Terry and Rachel.

Melissa could see that Kampong was struggling with her health and asked her if she could help.

Within a few weeks, Kampong was diagnosed with cancer and after spending several days in Royal Brisbane Hospital after the diagnosis, opted to finish her days out in the place she had called home for more than two years – the Irish Inn.

She opened up to Melissa about her situation and said: “Please don’t leave me alone with this.”

Melissa began taking care of Kampong after work, then before work and more and more at

weekends. Soon, Kampong’s health deteriorated to such a state that Melissa had to leave her job as manager in hospitality to care for Kampong full-time.

Melissa promised not to leave her and to care for Kampong until the end, which is what she has been doing night and day for several months.

Melissa, with the help of Terry and Rachel, launched a full-blown care campaign to reduce Kampong’s discomfort. Feeding her, bathing her, organising her medication and paying for everything out of her own pocket. Melissa is doubtful Centrelink or Kampong’s family will ever compensate her.

“It’s not about the money - I am just happy that I can do something like this for someone who needed my help,” Melissa said. “We have done everything we could to help her enjoy her last weeks and gave her a nice Christmas and some moments of joy to hang on to.”

Melissa has become firm friends with the Karuna nurses, who have provided nursing care to Kampong throughout her illness and is also grateful for the support from Footprints Inc.

“Without the Karuna nurses, we would have been lost,” Melissa said. “They have been a gift from God, sent to give Kampong treatment and help her feel comfortable in her last days.”

Melissa says she is exhausted and has faced the worst weeks of her life watching her friend pass away.

The whole experience has given Melissa the motivation to become a nurse herself.

“Kampong has inspired me to do

nursing, something I never thought I could do. I know now that I was sent to find this woman for a reason.”

“If people just realise that they can give someone a gift – not as huge as this, but even just five minutes of their time can be the greatest gift of kindness to someone in their community.”

To support Karuna Care and Footprints Inc, visit Karuna.org.au or FootprintsInc.org.au

“I won’t let you die alone,” sick, reclusive housemate promised

Melissa caring for Kampong in her final moments at the Irish Inn, Merthyr Rd.

Page 5: Village News February 2015

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villagenews February 20158 February 2015 villagenews 9

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IN the 12 years that I’ve lived in this locality, I have absorbed a lot about New Farm’s history, but to the question, “Did you know about the old police lock-up in Arthur St?”, I had to answer in the negative.

The inquirer explained that the lock-up was one of three adjoining houses, which also included a police residence and a post office.

Naturally intrigued, I soon paid a visit. After entering the little wooden cottage with its steeply raked roof, the brickwork of the fireplace naturally caught the eye. Most fascinating was the two-level stone and brick structure behind the house. The windows high up on the wall of the upper level were certainly consistent with a lock-up. The brickwork was attractive, and the stonework impressive.

The owners, who had bought the house in 1992, produced a folder of documentation and were keen to know if I could add anything further.

The Brisbane City Council’s Heritage Unit had obviously noted the possible institutional usage, but clearly were not prepared to draw any conclusions about the home’s historical origins, except to say that the style was typical of the 1880s development in this street where workers’ cottages were crowded tightly upon each other.

Also in the folder was a Daily Sun newspaper clipping from 1986. It was about the sale of the house next door which it called the “constable’s cottage”. The writer suggested that it was built around 1840. The article went on to mention this house with the lock-up: “The house next door includes a section in large sandstone blocks with high windows that was obviously the original New Farm lock-up. Similar stone blocks have been used in the foundations of the cottage for sale.”

An enquiry to the Police Museum brought the reminder that their records only began with the formation of the Queensland Police in 1864. The curator suggested visiting the State Archives so as to trawl through records from the early days of free settlement, in the hope of finding a reference to this house.

A cursory look through early

newspapers yielded nothing. Maybe the existence of this old police lock-up was once well-known in the street, but now, many generations later, all of the salient details may have been lost to collective memory.

I am leading up to explaining why this sweet and fascinating little house was not included in the forthcoming book, Homes with History on the New Farm Peninsula, being published this month by the New Farm & Districts Historical Society.

The scarceness of records simply meant that it was not possible to tell a story that is well anchored in history.

It is not difficult to imagine why a police station and lock-up might have been situated here. The spot was only 180m from a large property named “Stratton” on a rise overlooking Commercial Rd. The

owners were in-laws of Captain John Wickham, the police magistrate, who lived not much further away at Newstead House.

Perhaps there’s an elderly resident still living in Arthur St who remembers his grandparents talking about this police lock-up. Perhaps some photos will come out of the woodwork as a result of this article.

As I’ve discovered while working on the 20 key houses featured in the forthcoming book, a lot depends on luck. How else, against all the odds, could I have come across a colour sketch, dating from the 1840s, of the girl who later became the lady of the house at Stratton?

Gerard will sign copies of Homes with History on the New Farm Peninsula on February 28 at the Uniting Church Centre, 52 Merthyr Rd, 10am-4pm.

historicalsocietyby Gerard Benjamin

With its high windows and solid construction could this be anything but a police lock-up?

IF you love art and appreciate history, then you’ll relish the Art Exhibition which is to complement the launch of the new book by local historian Gerard Benjamin entitled “Homes with History on the New Farm Peninsula”.

Both events will take place on Saturday, 28 February, at the Uniting Church Centre, 52 Merthyr Road, New Farm, courtesy of the New Farm & Districts Historical Society.

The Art Exhibition will open at 10am and will feature works by David Hinchliffe, Jan Jorgensen, Trevor Downes, Philippa Webb, Stewart Free and Liesbeth Thie. Admission is free.

The book launch is to take place during the 2pm NFDHS public meeting, and will be followed by afternoon tea.

“This is a wonderful chance to meet the artists and to view their renditions of local homes and streetscapes,” said Society President Ross Garnett.

“In case you can’t be present at the launch, Gerard will be on hand earlier in the day to sign copies of this marvellous new book.”

Entry to the NFDHS meeting is $5 including afternoon tea ($4 members). For more information, please contact Ross Garnett on 0409 498 402.

A portion of David Hinchliffe’s depiction of “Kingsholme” in Kingsholme Street.

Homes withhistory featurein book launchand art show

BRISBANE will host Australia’s leading female entrepreneurs for the League of Extraordinary Women’s annual Run the World conference on May 16, a one-day event at which 10 trailblazing business women will share their strategies, secrets, insights, learnings and more.

Bringing together some of Australia’s best and brightest entrepreneurs, Run the World will feature talks from Renegade Collective founder and editor-in-chief Lisa Messenger, Showpo founder Jane Lu, The Content Folk founder Nicole Kersh, Nads founder Sue Ismiel, and Charlton Brown general manager Petrina Fraccaro. Five more speakers are still to be announced.

For a small taste of what will be on offer, the editor-in-chief of The Collective Magazine, Ms Messenger, will divulge how a woman with no background in print magazines can independently launch a 176 page glossy lifestyle publication into an industry heralded as ‘dying’.

Jane Lu will lend lessons on failure, having launched fashion website Showpo off the back of a failed business venture, $50,000 in debt, and still living at home with her parents.

Whilst the League of Extraordinary Women hosts a bi-monthly breakfast series across all major cities, the Run the World conference is the mindfood that budding entrepreneurs and business owners of Brisbane have been

craving. Brisbane is often seen to be lacking in culture and inspiration for its local entrepreneurs and creatives, yet league general manager Chiquita Searle wants to challenge this outdated mindset.

“Brisbane is the second largest of our 20,000-strong community,” Miss Searle said.

“And it’s a great community, and really thriving on the entrepreneurship front, but unfortunately tends to miss out on events like this while some of the other capital cities are spoilt for choice.

For more information on the League of Extraordinary Women visit LeagueOfExtraordinaryWomen.com.au.

Top women share wins, losses

Lisa Messenger, founder of The Collective Magazine.

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Intriguing Arthur St house, anold police lock-up perhaps?

Page 6: Village News February 2015

February 2015 villagenews 11

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villagevoice LETTERS TO THE EDITORHave you say about your community to

[email protected]

Fight to fix school bus trip ordeal earns readers’ praiseTHANKS to the Village News for the story on our issue of the 393 bus route change (Page 3, January edition).

As you’ve heard, our community feels strongly about the need for this change for our children and their parents, so it has been wonderful to have the support of our local magazine in highlighting our issue and in helping us to figure out what exactly is the process in council.

You’re persistence has been great to watch.

Michael (Hawke, editor) and Nick (Moore, reporter), our campaign wouldn’t have gotten to this point without your support. You’ve been amazing.

I hope that the community at large recognises your persistence and professionalism, both with feedback and increased advertising requests.Tracy Musgrave,New Farm

WELL done Village News. It was great to see this story on Page 3 as that’s where it deserves to be.

It’s such a simple extension to a bus run that would make a considerable difference to a lot of children and their parents.

As Tracy said in the article, now that year 7 is in high school, some of these children will be only 11 years old when

they attend high school. We need to do everything we can to make it as safe as possible for them to get to school.

Also, good on you Tracy for bringing this to the attention of the council. I only hope that Cr Howard can act to have this change implemented before school commences. (EDITOR NOTE: The problem was not fixed before school began.)Adam Gray,New Farm

TRACY has been the voice for us parents and we all have these concerns for our children, all set for high school now.

With no direct connectivity the impact on children and parents is likewise.

Safety, time and effort all are at stake.Jyoti Batra

MY daughter, Zahlia, (pictured in the January article) will still be only 11 years old when school starts.

She is expected set out each morning on the 199 to the city, then change buses at King George Square en route to Kelvin Grove. Not many parents would send their 11 year old into the City unattended.

In fact, it’s probably illegal (see Queensland Criminal Code Act 1899 (QLD) – Section 364A – leaving a child

under 12 unattended).There must be a better option.

Craig Reiach,New Farm

WELL done Tracy on ‘fighting the good fight’ despite the bureaucratic circus you have had to endure to get to the truth!

The Village News should be congratulated on the terrific job they have done covering this story and setting out the facts for its readers.Carmen Mitchell,Newstead

BCC, fix this fine messI TOO!! FINED!! (“Back street tricks motorists”, VN, January 2015.)

Was conducting business next door - I parked where the policeman/woman parked (Hastings St) and copped a fine!!

I debated this with BCC (usually my friends) in many exchanged letters - but to no avail!!

Really was not worth the time it was taking me to go into dispute, etc!! I presume BCC work at that!!

However, as you maybe note or your photo does not declare - the left-hand side of the “street” is totally taken up by the bicycle program - so no parking there!

The “street” finishes very quickly at the unit’s entrance - one has to reverse to get out!! It’s not a formal cul-de-sac!!

I simply asked them, “How can this be a street”? Same answer - “Hastings St is a street”.

I rest my case and paid my fine!!! BCC - please reverse the decision/s, send me back my money and fix this MESSY situation!!Doug Merritt

Gold star for coverageI JUST want to say thanks for the latest issue of VN - not just because of my story, though I was happy with the quality of it.

There were many stories of local interest.

I liked your explanation about not being able to cover the election because of the short time frame and the lack of response from candidates.

It was important to us to know that you tried to get info.

Mind you, I suspect everyone was caught a little off-guard and were in a bit of a spin doing what they had to do to organise themselves.Ross GarnettNew Farm & Districts Historical Society president

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Page 7: Village News February 2015

villagenewsvillagenews

villagenews February 201512 February 2015 villagenews 13

NEW Farm’s Melissa Scott is one of an emerging breed of successful young netball coaches after a skiing accident three years ago sidelined her from playing competitive sport for a period.Despite having no coaching experience and limited playing experience, the former junior swimmer took up netball coaching in 2012 and has never looked back, taking her under 12 years team to a premiership win the following year.The 26-year-old PE teacher is looking for others to join her and take on a coaching role in 2015 with one of Brisbane’s largest netball clubs, Raiders Allstars at the Downey Park Netball Association in Windsor. “When I was at school I used to train a lot for swimming and my coach wouldn’t let me play another sport, so I only started to play club netball after I left school,” Scott said.“Sport has always been part of my life, and after my knee reconstruction in 2012 due to a skiing accident, I felt bored not being able to play sport while I recovered. So I decided to take up netball coaching and that’s when I joined Raiders at Downey Park,

Windsor.“I’d never coached before and I was obviously quite new to the sport, so I was really nervous when I first started and worried I wouldn’t be good enough.“But I co-coached in my first year and watched what the other club coaches did, plus I went along to different coaching courses which really prepared me for the following season.”“In 2013, I coached the under 12s Division 2 team on my own. This was such a rewarding experience, not only because we won the grand final, but because I got to put into practice all of my coaching experience from the previous year.”Scott says that coaching has also taught her some great skills off the court.“Even though much of my early sporting experience was gained in the pool, I’ve learned that coaching is as much about managing people as it is about the actual game,” she said“I think it’s made me a better teacher because it has improved my attention to detail, which is important when giving feedback.“I really encourage people to get

involved in coaching for whatever sport they enjoy and don’t be scared to put your hand up for things you may not have done before. You may just surprise yourself.“Coaching can be hard work sometimes but if you are positive and make training and games a fun place to be, your team will always love turning up and I think that’s what netball is all about.” Raiders Allstars is recruiting coaches of all abilities, including

newbies, for its 2015 season for senior, junior and nipper teams. Full training and support is provided. Training kicks off on Wednesday February 25 and the first match of the season is Saturday, March 21, at Downey Park Netball Association, Windsor.

Visit RaidersAllstars.qld.netball.com.au to find out more or contact Raiders Allstars new coaching co-ordinator Melissa Scott on [email protected].

New Farm’s Melissa Scott.

Injury prompts New Farm swimmer to coaching success

A NEW Farm craft enthusiast is providing the local community a place to escape the everyday and share their love of all things handmade.

Crave for Crafts is the brainchild of Ana Garcia del Barrio, who wanted to create a place where talented makers and creators could share their skills with eager participants in a relaxed and supportive environment.

Launched late last year, Crave for Crafts has already held workshops in Teneriffe on crochet, wreath making and handmade decorations, with classes in smartphone photography, stencil paper craft and knitting scheduled for February and March.

Originally from Spain, Ms Garcia del Barrio found it difficult in Brisbane to find workshops or social groups with participants of similar age and found herself searching for a creative and social outlet.

“I was inspired to run simple classes that were outside business times, in accessible locations that didn’t involve a big commitment of time or money,” Ms Garcia del Barrio said.

“All of the workshops are one-off classes, uncomplicated and informal to make the most of the social opportunities. All materials and inspiration are provided, so people just have to turn up and enjoy their time, a

glass of wine and hopefully make new friends.”

The Crave for Crafts community is building through social media and those who attend the workshops are discovering they can connect with likeminded participants.

With workshops up and running in Teneriffe and also Hamilton, the aim is to expand to other inner city areas as well as being able to provide free resources and tutorials for DIY on the Crave for Crafts website.

The next workshop is scheduled for Saturday, February 7, with stencil silhouette card making for St Valentine’s Day, followed by a series of fun crochet workshops, and taking and editing great photos with your smartphone.

Visit the Crave for Crafts website for workshop information www.CraveForCrafts.com.

Ana Garcia del Barrio is inspiring locals to soothe the soul by learning both traditional

and new handicrafts.

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o by

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Indulge craving for craft

BEAT the drums and snap open the chopsticks as the popular BrisAsia Festival returns with a dynamic program across the city from Friday, February 6, to Sunday, March 1.

A council spokeswoman said the festival was a celebration of Brisbane’s connections with Asian culture and featured free events and activities to suit all tastes.

“There’s something for everyone at BrisAsia Festival with live music and performances, art installations, a games night, short film screenings, food stalls, artist talks as well as Japanese youth culture event, Neon Pop,” the spokesperson said.

“The festival kicks off with a free opening night party in Reddacliff Place (the City) where critically acclaimed Australian band The Bombay Royale will entertain with their vintage Bollywood inspired surf, spy disco and funk sounds while visitors sample Brisbane’s best Asian food trucks.

“Festival-goers can visit a cutesy, crocheted wonderland as the Japanese art form amigurumi takes over Burnett Lane, and listen to the South Bank Allstars sing World Pop.”

BrisAsia Festival also incorporates council’s Chinese Lunar New Year festivities which will bring Chinatown

Mall to life with lion dances, cultural performances, markets and firecracker displays.

The spokeswoman said most events were free to provide an accessible celebration of Brisbane as a vibrant, creative and multicultural city.

“This is shown through the return of signature events such as Taste of Asia where celebrity chef Adam Liaw will make his favourite Asian comfort food and Japanese youth culture event Neon Pop which celebrates everything wonderful and eccentric about cosplay and anime.”

Visit council’s website at Brisbane.qld.gov.au for the full BrisAsia Festival program.

Residents are also invited to go to www.vickihoward.com/cny2015 to enter our competition to win Dinner for four in Chinatown this February.

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Page 8: Village News February 2015

villagenews

villagenews February 201514 February 2015 villagenews 15

AS I write, the state election is in full swing but when you read this it will all be done and dusted and we will have elected our local representatives and the Government for the next term.

National Seniors is apolitical and New Farm Branch has always maintained good relations with our elected representatives at all levels.

As a community organisation each has helped us, listened to our views, attended our meetings and we have given them, and their opponents, the opportunity to talk to us both collectively and individually – it has always been a productive collaboration, which we wish to maintain.

In the lead-up to the election, National Seniors asked each of the major parties a series of questions, the first being: Will you create a dedicated Minister for Seniors? With 48 per cent of the Queensland electorate aged over 50 years we seniors need a powerful voice in Government. At least one of the major parties agreed. Watch this space!

After the summer break, New Farm

Branch is starting the year with a full program:• We were set to welcome local artist

Philippa Webb at our first general meeting of the year on February 5. Philippa illustrated her talk with images of her work, with New Farm and Brisbane scenes her favourite subjects.

• Our first Friday evening dinner when we particularly welcome those interested in National Seniors but unable to attend daytime activities will be at the ever-popular Merthyr Bowls Club in Oxlade Drive on February 20 from 6pm.

• Saturday 21st is the opening night of the latest Nash Theatre production of The Business of Murder.

• Branch members will meet at the Shingle Inn in City Hall at 10 on Wednesday 25th before visiting Costumes from the Golden Age of Hollywood in the Museum.

• We will celebrate our 25th birthday at the general meeting on Wednesday, March 4, at 9.15am for 10am at the Merthyr Uniting Church. A regular stich and bitch morning is planned once we have found a suitable location.

For further information on activities or to learn more about National Seniors, call Tony Townsend on 3315 2523 or go to our website nsanewfarmbranch.com.

Candidates grilled on support

seniorsvoiceby Tony Townsend

TENERIFFE student Phuong Huynh has been a familiar face at Vue Lounge and also recently at Eves on the River since she came to Brisbane to study a Bachelor of Health Sciences degree majoring in Public Health in 2011.Phuong graduated from the University of Queensland in St Lucia in December with a High Distinction, and during her time there, received several Dean’s Commendation for High Achievement and Academic Excellence Awards and two UQ International Student Prizes for the highest grade point average in her first and second years of study.Phuong received a scholarship from the Da Nang city government in Vietnam to begin her UQ Foundation year studies at IES in Spring Hill.She arrived in Brisbane from Vietnam just after the 2011 floods and during her time in Brisbane, Phuong has volunteered at St Andrew’s and Wesley hospitals, Daffodil Day and also helped her ‘mum’ Sue at The Fred Hollows

Foundation New Farm office.In addition, she completed an internship with the

Fred Hollows Foundation in Melbourne.Fred Hollows Foundation state fundraising manager Sue

Larsen said it was wonderful to have such a hard-working student in our midst. “These awards reflect the hard work and commitment of Phuong during her time in Brisbane,” Ms Larsen said.“We congratulate Phuong on her outstanding efforts.”Phuong returns to Vietnam in early February, however she will be back to begin a scholarship with UQ to study for a Master of Economics in 2016 and 2017.

There’s more to this familiar face

villagenews

Phuong Huynh at her graduation in December 2014 or at Vue taking an order from

customer Nicole Ireland.

FAMED German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche said, “I do not know what the spirit of a philosopher could more wish to be than a good dancer. For the dance is his ideal”. But these days the communication between body and soul that dance provides has an image problem.

Our ancient ancestors used rhythm and movement as a form of meditation and healing. Centuries of civilisation has meant that the complex, controlling social norms that form the unwritten rules of how a group behaves have deemed dance as embarrassing in our culture. We’re fraught by inhibitions and constraints.

This ‘unnatural’ state of self-control and self-consciousness is learned. It’s more common and acceptable for mothers of my generation to use alcohol as a way of numbing out the buzz of white noise and stress associated with modern, daily living, just like the mothers of the ’60s did

with Valium.Have we lost touch with our need

to move our bodies and our capacity to engage our innate wisdom and self-healing power? Even the Bible references dance as a practice people engaged in to celebrate the gift of life. It’s been around a while.

I’ve used dance, and especially tribal dance, as a meditation form and way to connect to my body for most of my life. Everything is stilled when I dance. Time is turned instead into responses my body makes to the patterns of rhythm. I can shake out frustration, defrag my brain, set my intentions, work through processes and ignite or calm my spirit, all by calling on a deep primal receptor within myself.

It’s a liberating exercise, releasing oneself into this meditative discipline. To medicate the body and reconnect in this way requires one to courageously reject inhibitions and disappear into the rhythm of the drum. It’s just you and the beat. For me, dance is an electric ribbon that runs through my veins. It’s a way off taking off the masks we wear in society and peeling back the layers to a primitive truth.

If you’re game, you can try 5Rhythms dance at Holy Spirit school hall. It’s could be a mirror to your most pure form.

When body and soul wed

villageviewby Beth J Leach

THE exhibition launch for Brisbane artist and designer Tiffany Atkin’s GYARU (“Girl”) was set to be held on February 5 from 7pm in Fortitude Valley. Atkin’s work is an exploration of femininity in contemporary Japanese pop culture and she says her body of work culminates from ideas, adventures, life-lessons, discovery, loves, losses and heart-felt respect for Japan, which has been significant to her journey as an artist and human. GYARU is her debut solo exhibition and was due to run from February 5 to March 31 at Lust for Life Tattoo Gallery Espresso Bar, at 176 Wickham St.

Visit www.tiffanyatkin.com for details.

Japan fan artist explores femininity

Pictured is Watashitachi no himitsu (“Our secret”).

RESIDENTS were being urged to keep their gardens tidy by ordering a council green waste bin.

Ordering a green bin during the summer months could help with staying on top of garden waste from pruning and mowing, a council spokesman said.

“Brisbane has experienced a wet summer so far, which has fuelled our gardens and lawns,” the spokesman said.

“It is an affordable way of disposing of green waste, with a one-off establishment fee of $30 and an ongoing cost of just $18.63 a quarter or $74.52 per year.”

Once collected, the contents are taken to a green waste recycling facility where it is composted and mulched ready for reuse.

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Page 9: Village News February 2015

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villagenews February 201516 February 2015 villagenews 17

“PAVAROTTI sat me beside him,” Kate Collins recalls, “patted my knee and signed a photo for my mum. I swore I’d never wash that knee again. ”

Kate’s interview with the great man for the Brisbane Times in 1994 followed earlier interviews with actor Jackie Chan in the Valley and the nephew of China’s last emperor in Beijing. So China was already on her radar.

Back home in Brisbane after a decade working there, the Brisbane writer has even more material for her latest book, a ‘Young Adult’ time- travel fantasy set in her old suburb of (Song Dynasty) Hangzhou, one of the seven capitals of Ancient China:

“Foreigners write about China’s economic miracle. My story is about the other half, the millions of poor migrant workers building the miracle. The Chinese government sees it as a massive problem, people living on construction sites with Prada and Starbucks opening next door,” she says.

It won’t be her first book. Ellis Rowan (1848-1922), the biography of Australian botanical artist commissioned for the 1988 Bicentenary is in the State and National libraries and was adapted for an ABC TV documentary. Several other book contributions followed.

“The China novel is set where I lived near the ancient Drum Tower,” Kate told me. “When Marco Polo visited in the 1270s the man-made Grand Canal had been there from 5th century AD, 1794km long from Hangzhou to Beijing. Hangzhou was already bigger than Paris or Constantinople.

“I worked as a journalist while lecturing at China’s National Academy of Art. China invented printing, gunpowder, the compass, centuries before the West. That was Marco Polo’s real discovery. Columbus used his book to search for the Spice Islands but found America instead.”

One of Kate’s weekly China columns records it: ‘The Canal was the internal trade artery that made China rich carrying rice, salt, tea and silk. Emperors toured it regularly and left memorials of canal journeys from Beijing to Hangzhou.

‘Sail past the massive modern West Lake Centre. Along the canal banks, tranquil willow-filled parks face historic buildings, wealthy apartment districts, locals airing bedding on iron fences, old men fishing, tiny homes that look ready to tumble into the water …’ Kate’s China stories also ran in newspapers like The Australian, South China Morning Post and Herald Sun.

Kate Collins’ love of China began on a visit to Beijing in 1992 for the Sunday Mail with a government business delegation.

“Beijing had still not opened up to the West, was unchanged for a century, nobody owned cars – the only cars were big Politburo limousines; there were millions of bicycles in the streets, the hutongs or tiny back alleys still existed. It was fabulous.

“I saw it all before it disappeared for the 2008 Olympics, before it became the economic super power of today. Now it is increasingly American, traffic chaotic, forests of high-rise, more billionaires in Shanghai than in California. The middle class is huge but so are the poor, migrant workers building the wealth but battling to survive.”

Hangzhou is Kate’s favourite city: “It is beautiful, historic because of its imperial past. I lived in a slum so saw both sides of life. Deng Xiao Ping succeeded Mao and kick-

started a modern market economy to compete with the super powers. Now it’s Communist in name only after decades of rampant development and social upheaval.

“The human cost is vast. There is no free education, no free medicine, migrant worker children cannot attend school or sit national exams. When I returned in 2004 it was vastly different to 1992.

Hangzhou – ‘In Heaven is paradise, under heaven, Hangzhou’ they say - was the last refuge of the Song dynasty conquered by Kublai Khan’s Mongol hordes. Marco Polo whose statue stands by West Lake visited in the late 13th century as Kublai Khan’s emissary. Kate hopes the new Netflix Marco Polo series builds an audience for her book.

“My story merges old and modern and introduces real characters not just Marco Polo and Kublai but figures unknown in the West like Shen Kuo, China’s version of Leonardo da Vinci.”

Kate studied Art teaching at Kelvin Grove and introduced the first Western Art history course at Hangzhou’s Academy of Art, her own first encounter with Chinese calligraphy, history and culture. She was invited to write columns about it from a Western perspective for Chinese newspaper Dushikuaibao’s eight million readers.

Her interests in journalism, education and politics began when working in London for The Humanist magazine after getting a BA (Hons) Sociology and Linguistics at Essex University. Postgraduate study at Queensland University followed.

villagepeopleby Gary Balkin

For author, Chinese miracle for all is a fantasy (novel)

Kate Collins.

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Pro

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In Hangzhou she covered the 2006 World Leisure Expo and in Shanghai the 2010 Expo.

“Food was another reason to stay,” she says. “I’m an Asian foodaholic.” For our interview Kate chose a Vietnamese restaurant Phob in Duncan St. We shared a bowl of soup (Pho) and noodles.

“Food is one of China’s great arts. I can’t go a day without rice or noodles, it’s so healthy. Chinese food is like medicine, special dishes heal different conditions. We wonder why there’s a diabetes epidemic in Australia but who eats soup every day here? In China every meal balances the body.

“Regional variety is vast: north of the Yangtze where they don’t grow rice it’s dumplings, noodles, pancakes; in the south it’s rice, fish, vegetables. I found plain rice bland at first but eat with chopsticks, ride bikes, walk everywhere and fat just falls off. Nothing is wasted. Old timers remember millions dying in Mao’s famines. They eat the same food daily, go for walks at night and drink endless tea.

“Australia owes our Asian immigrants our food. Without 19th century Chinese market gardens the Gold Rush diggers would have starved. Queensland got its first sugar cane, tea, rice, bananas, coconut, ginger, nutmeg, cinnamon, pepper from Chinese gardeners. In remote NT I’ve seen trees grown by the first Macassan traders who sailed down on the Trade Winds for trepang, centuries before Captain Cook arrived.

“Today we’d have no Vietnamese, Cambodian, Burmese, Laos food without immigrants. I can’t cook without coconut, lemon grass, chili, garlic, kaffir lime, sweet potato; my garden’s full of them. We’re spoiled with variety here. In China you get only the regional Chinese food. In Fortitude Valley we get foods of a dozen countries.

“Even in Paris last year I ate Pho for breakfast and Cambodian on the Cote d’Azur. I blame my friend the late great Eddie Liu who fed me weekly at the Valley Chinese Club.”

With immigrant Italian, Irish, Scots ancestry Kathleen Maccheroni was

always going to travel. She can order beer and hold conversations in English, Italian, French, German, Spanish or Mandarin, has dual Italian and Australian nationality and took her kids to Asia early. “I taught them to bargain in Asia and we nearly got thrown out of Woolworths when they tried it back home.”

Food has been a long-term Maccheroni affair: “Dad took us to Mamma Luigi’s when he ran the Leichhardt Hotel in Spring Hill after he had a pub in Roma. I ate in the Valley as a journalist covering Chinese New Year and my kitchen is basically Chinese.”

After pubs her dad Jack was a bookmaker and started Boys Town Art Union: “He was an entrepreneur like his grandfather who sold land to the Caltex Refinery on the river but asked them to leave the olive trees he planted there. Marco Polo brought pasta from China. My great-granddad grew olives and coffee on Mt Coot-tha and owned a pasta factory, wiped out in the 1893 Flood. He hand-churned gelato for the Italian immigrants for whom the Maccheroni home on Nudgee Rd was an unofficial consulate early last century.

After years at the Sunday Mail and Courier-Mail she ‘jumped the fence and went to the dark side’ to work in state and federal politics as a media advisor: “I saw amazing places like Torres Strait and Cape York through that era. You can’t call yourself a Queenslander till you’ve been there; growing up in Roma made me a bushie at heart.”

I asked if Kate’s novel was a Harry Potter-style story. “Harry Potter never eats,’ she joked. “In my book food is part of the adventure.”

“Writing comes easy to me. Writing an 80,000 word book was the fun bit. Getting published in Australia is the hard part. I got a contract in China but here there just aren’t the agents and Queensland publishing is a thing of the past. Like Dorothy Parker said, writing’s easy, just open a vein and let it flow. It’s the rest that kills you.”

Somehow I feel sure we will see such a book by KM Collins in the bookshops.

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THE Cerebral Palsy League has dared Australians to join their second annual FebruDAREy at their national launch at New Farm Park.

FebruDAREy’s celebrity ambassadors, Queensland Test cricketer Joe Burns, The Block contestants Carlene and Michael Duffy, and 97.3 radio host Paul ‘Campo’ Campion, accepted the challenge and were joined by CPL clients and families to carry out dares for the national launch.

FebruDAREy is CPL’s major fundraising campaign and calls on people to do a dare for donations to raise funds for children and adults with disabilities.

The Ultimate FebruDAREy Challenge in New Farm Park on January 22 consisted of mini-dares.

The challengers had to complete the dares in six stages. They started by running with an inflatable bouncy balls between their legs, then did a 20m arm crawl, followed by throwing balls into a bucket after quickly spinning around five times in a circle.

They then completed a FebruDAREy-style puzzle, ate five

dry biscuits as quickly as possible (without water), saying FebruDAREy five times in a row before running to the finish with an inflatable bouncy ball between their legs.

The three losers were covered in slime by the winning ambassador, Carlene, who was very happy that she was named the victor.

Gold Coast design and construction duo, Carlene and Michael, took on a dare to build an accessible cubby house for CPL’s Southport service just two days before Christmas.

Michael said the couple had chosen to come on board as ambassadors because they believed that Australian children and adults with disabilities had the same right to live fulfilling lives as people without disabilities.

“When you do a show like The Block, you really appreciate what it means to be able to choose to live the life you want,” Michael said.

If you dare to, register at www.februdarey.com.au, pick a dare and then seek donations from your family, friends and work mates.

Carlene Duffy from the Block with ‘Lyn’ - CPL client.

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Page 10: Village News February 2015

villagenewsvillagenews

villagenews February 201518 February 2015 villagenews 19

IF you are heading to Canberra, take the opportunity to visit Federal minister for Brisbane Teresa Gambaro’s parliamentary office. Ms Gambaro is hosting the second Officework in Canberra art exhibition.

The theme of the exhibition evolved from Robert Moore’s work, Four days in the Valley (2014). The well-crafted oil and enamel painting, explores the difference between coastal and country terrains.

The artist permeates geometric shapes in variegated blues and greens with Cezanne-like dark trees, to create a complex mosaic. Moore is well known for his distinctive work for Australian surf brand Mambo.

The exhibition features artworks by four other Queensland-associated artists, Noel McKenna, Julie Fragar, Ian Smith, and Bill Yaxley.

Noel McKenna is an acclaimed Australian artist who celebrates the ordinary, the mundane. McKenna’s

95 Arthur St, Fortitude Valley (2014) oil on plywood documents the house where he began his adult life.

The painting is strong and simple yet reveals the world through the suburban familiar.

By revisiting and painting significant places in his life, McKenna believes he has a better understanding of the person he has become.

Ian Smith, like Noel McKenna, began studying architecture at the University of Queensland before embarking to Melbourne to pursue his interest in art.

Smith’s Red, green and blue with new carport (2012), pictured above, captures the rooftops so familiar on the inner-city Brisbane skyline, in a bold and gestural pattern.

The vibrant asymmetrical roofs complement the geometric lines that carefully construct the new carport.

Both these artworks focus on the particular character of iconic homes found in Ms Gambaro’s Brisbane electorate.

Lastly, in writing this article during the Queensland government election campaign, I felt Ms Gambaro or the exhibition curator had a sense of humour for installing Robert Moore’s Galah (2014) in her office.

The galah, a native Australian bird, makes a distinctive and quite raucous call. Colloquially, galah may be used in Australian society as a derogatory term to mean “a foolish noisy” person. However, Moore’s Galah captures the iconic wildlife in the time-honoured artistic tradition of the gaze.

The cockatoo may be musing over the artist painting him or just trying to find a quiet space in the city fields.

Moore’s use of vibrant and cool colours reflects the terrain that the cockatoo lives in as well as the bird’s distinct grey-backed, and pink-breasted plumage.

The artwork is visually compelling because of Moore’s contemporary approach to abstraction. Moore’s Galah, pictured above, is an ironic statement for any politician’s

parliamentary office. Ms Gambaro is supporting

visual art and artists connected to Queensland in a positive and practical way. As the member for parliament regularly hosts national and international visitors in her Canberra office, she will be promoting Queensland art to the world.

The Officework in Canberra exhibition is a collaborated effort of Ms Gambaro, the Institute of Modern Art and Heiser Gallery, Brisbane.

*Images courtesy of Teresa Gambaro MP, IMA, Heiser Gallery and the artists.

The exhibition will be open until March 5, 2015. Please check the Parliament House website for further information.

VillageArtsby Kerry Gillett

Ian Smith’s Red, green and blue with new carport (left) and Robert Moore’s Galah.

by our local pubs and restaurants.”Murielle and husband Michael, who is the businessman behind Murielle’s dream come true, are very proud of what they have achieved. “Our feature piece in the shop is the polished concrete counter which does a great job in featuring the chocolates,” Michael said. “It also serves to keep the chocolates cool while on display. We also have a window into the chocolate kitchen so our customers can see us making the chocolates.” All chocolates are made onsite in the kitchen and the couverture is imported directly from Switzerland, including white, milk and dark chocolate ranging from 52% to 72% cocoa content.

In Murielle’s chocolate collection, there are 16 fresh flavours offered as truffles, pralines, gianduja and caramel flavours, the most popular of which are the traditional Swiss milk praline and the salted caramel. Also included in the range are some of the old favourites such as rocky road and liquorice dipped in chocolate, and some new innovations such as dried mango dipped in white and dark chocolate and a range of moulded chocolate objects such as the popular chocolate stiletto.

Murielle Vuilleumier Swiss Chocolatier is open Tuesday to Saturday 10am-6pm. For more information visit www.facebook.com/pralineluxury

It is never too early or too late to learn a new language!

Phone 0401 927 96726 Gray Street, New Farm

[email protected]

ITALIAN LANGUAGE COURSES

February 23, 2015Semester 1 starts

AS FAR back as she can remember, Teneriffe’s Murielle Vuilleumier has always loved chocolate, and not the ordinary kind – the artisan-made variety. Her passion for chocolate began when she was growing up in Switzerland.

“Each night after dinner my parents would give me a few pieces of fine Swiss chocolate, a family tradition that set in place my dream of one day becoming a chocolatier,” Murielle said. Murielle grew up in the French part of Switzerland in a small village close to the border called Tramelan. The region has a rich heritage in chocolate, including famous chocolate pioneers such as Lindt, Toblerone and Suchard.Her career as a flight attendant for

Qantas International gave Murielle the opportunity to enrich her dream by visiting chocolate kitchens all over the world.“My travels helped me to shape the kind of chocolatier I wanted to be,” she said.In 2008, Murielle began her training as a chocolatier, attending classes in Switzerland, Italy, Singapore and Melbourne. She then built a special chocolate kitchen in her home to practise and hone her skills in tempering and developing her own recipes. Five years later, Murielle was finally able to leave her Qantas job and start building her own business, Murielle Vuilleumier Swiss Chocolatier, opening a store in Commercial Rd Teneriffe, which includes retail space and a chocolate kitchen. “I wanted a name that reminded me of my Swiss heritage and ensured that I kept my mission to make chocolates the way the Swiss do using only the finest Swiss couverture,” Murielle said.“We now live close to the shop and love the area and being close to the river,” she said. “We love the idea of closing up and walking home passing

by Alisa Cork

community cravings

Swiss Chocolatier Murielle Vuilleumier and her delicacies hand made in her recently opened store on Commercial Rd, Teneriffe.

Childhood chocolate dreams realised in Teneriffe

Pollie hosts cracker of exhibitionwith links to our Sunny State

Phot

o by

Alis

a Co

rk

NATIONAL Australia Bank’s Carmel Carver is looking forward to a very busy 2015 helping customers get the best from their home loans. The time is right as well as conditions look very

promising in the Brisbane market.NAB Chief economist Alan Oster

said Brisbane was the best city in Australia for capital growth this year (5.7per cent) followed by Sydney (4.1 per cent) and Melbourne (2.7 per cent). The latest National Australia Bank Residential Property Index

also suggested that Queensland house prices in general to rise 2.1 per cent compared with the national average of around 1.5 per cent. Mr Oster also predicted that there would be two further RBA rate cuts in 2015, in March and August, which would bring the cash rate to 2 per cent, a new record low.

Carmel’s extensive experience in conveyancing, developing properties and investments makes her ideal to talk to about home loans. Whether it is unlocking equity in a currently held property, or switching a home loan from another lender, Carmel enjoys helping customers achieve their financial goals.

To organise an obligation free home loan health check, or to discuss your finances, contact Carmel on 3358 0300 or 0455 064 075. NAB New Farm is located at 92 Merthyr Road, New Farm.

Carmel Carver

NAB New Farm92 Merthyr RoadNew Farm QLD 40050455 064 [email protected]

Now is the Time

MOVIE TICKET OFFER: Come in and have an appointment

with Carmel about a new home loan or refinancing your home loan to NAB and receive a free double

Movie Pass from the newly renovated New Farm Cinemas, valued at $19. Films to screen in February include

the highly acclaimed Selma and the controversial The Interview.

Page 11: Village News February 2015

villagenews

villagenews February 201520 February 2015 villagenews 21

FOOD • WINE • DINING • FOOD • WINE • DINING • FOOD • WINE

Consider the bar raised

THE New Inchcolm Hotel in Spring Hill has been completely transformed, incorporating a new restaurant, Thomson’s Reserve, which has a beautifully intimate atmosphere of old-world charm blended with modern dining penache. For those looking for high-end dining with outstanding food in an atmosphere to rival Sydney and Melbourne establishments, Thomson’s Reserve is the place. I believe this restaurant raises the bar for Brisbane and offers a whole dining experience rather than just another meal.

The menu is specialised and limited for good reason, as executive chef Andrew McCrae has certainly mastered each dish to a standard no less than excellent. The ceviche of north Queensland kingfish, watermelon, grapefruit and chilli with kalamansi

was an incredibly tender combination of exotic flavours. The wine, an Adelaide Hills Lucy Margaux Lucci gris noir chosen by food and beverage manager Dallas Bickle, was a brilliant match and just an example of the quality of wines in the Inchcolm cellar.

The mains featured pressed organic duck leg with flowers and tea, sweet potatoes, beetroot sand Davidson plums. This dish I languished over and was especially superb with a glass of 2010 Kaesler Avignon grenache mataro shiraz. To finish, a sublime dessert of golden cherry meringue, citrus curd, white chocolate and honeycomb. The entire deal was sealed with a glass of Campbell’s Merchant Prince Rare Muscat. This was an experience I hope to repeat very soon.

Food, glorious food!

JAN Powers Farmers Markets have started again for the year, kicking off at the Brisbane Powerhouse last month. This market is a visual and virtual feast offering the most popular forms of food and beverages available today. Several varieties of coffee, kombucha, fresh juices and smoothies, cronuts and croissants, seafood, goat pies, authentic Italian pizza and pasta, paleo muesli and dumplings - just a hint of the treats I tasted whilst working my way through the culinary corridors of this giant food market. Take home all the fresh fruit and veg you can carry and fill up on sauces and condiments for the week ahead. The market is back again

every Saturday from 6am-noon. There are not many foods that you won’t find here with even locally made canine variety cupcakes available.

Gettin’ in

AT the top of James St sits a small cafe with big impact. Their menu consists of creatively healthy breakfast and lunches that are packed with flavour and impart plenty of nutritious goodness. The Gettin’ Place is becoming famous for their Green Top Toast which is adorned with asparagus, a mixed green Asian salad, boiled egg and spicy tomato relish. Also on offer is a freshly made-to-order salad of the day. Mine was a delightfully light and tasty concoction

by Alisa Cork

Villagefood

of quinoa, rocket, cherry tomato, goat’s cheese and beetroot relish. Sit in conditioning or out back in a quaint courtyard. Either way, it’s a great meeting place with a feel good vibe.

A regal experience

THE art deco surrounds, regal red velvet lounges, antique dining tables and its own royal crest give Cafe Belson a stately feel. It’s different to most cafes on the contemporary set, but then again most cafes in Brisbane aren’t situated in an original building, circa 1900. As grand as it is, its relaxed vibe can be attributed to the uber-friendly service and the modern food options. The new owner has turned things up a notch, offering a weekly unlimited coffee deal and a flip for your coffee offer between 2pm and 3pm weekdays. Resident artist Jade’s work lines the walls and she also makes a fine barista. Make sure you add a brownie to your order. Chock full of seeds and nuts it’s hugely generous and worth every calorie.

Hot off the rotisserieLa Rotisserie has put a French spin on southern fried chicken labelling it “not so sinful” and I hope they are right, because it is sensational! They have redesigned the process, taking their rotisserie chicken and dusting it with their own secret herbs and spices, then plunging it into a hot fryer for one minute only. The result is super

crisp and super tasty. The raw salads are deliciously fresh and inventive, offering five different combinations to add to your choice of pulled meats or tender juicy chicken. C’est magnifique!

New cafe on the block

IF you have wondered what all the fuss is about down the New Farm Park end of Brunswick St, it’s because there is a new cafe in town and its reputation has preceded it. You may know 63 from Wilston or Hamilton and now that this franchise has come to New Farm, it brings with it loads of mealtime variety - and flowers! The menu choices are huge starting with bircher muesli with berries, a selection of omelettes and traditional big breakfasts available all day, through to midday specials such as pulled pork burgers and Cajun chicken. Talk about spoilt for choice! The atmosphere has a slightly European feel, chairs and tables right up to the street for the best position possible to watch the world go by.

Australia Day was a great time for a pool party Murray and Shiralee Sutherland’s place.

Photos by www.facebook.com/tubamediaproductions

Richard Bodley, Tony Ferguson & Neal OrpinPeter Hobbs & Tanya Williams

David Liddy, Simon Fuhrmann & Trent Daley

Australia Day

Leah Ong & Elena Yusim

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Page 12: Village News February 2015

villagenews

villagenews February 201522 February 2015 villagenews 23

villagesocials

Leah & Simeon Ong with CrystalLisa Moricz & Tameika Mannell

Robin and Vicki Birthdayat Alfred and ConstancePhotos by www.facebook.com/tubamediaproductions

Helen & Damien Owens

Robin Maini & Tuba HuangMichael Wilkins

Scot Harris, Amanda Cooper, Ebony Lee, Shiralee Sutherland & Vicki Howard

Richard Bodley & Lisa Rigby

Photos by www.facebook.com/tubamediaproductions

Emma Roberts & Pippa

Amanda Cooper birthday at Pig and Whistle

Rosanna Londero, Grace Londero & Valerie Papas

Papas HairPhotos by www.facebook.com/tubamediaproductions

Valerie Papas, Danielle Richens, Jay Richmand & Stephanie Tkacz

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Bosz Gallery 4/9 Doggett St Fortitude Valley

Currently on ExhibitionFriday 12 Dec

Join us for champagne and nibbles from 6pm

Bosz Gallery will be closed December 25 - January 18

“Post Meridian”Evocative landscapes by

Leisa Ryan27th Jan – 14 Feb

“of droughts and flooding rains”Sculptures and etchings by Glenda Orr

17 – 28th FebruaryPreview and guest speaker

Fri 20th 6 -8 pm

Many Queenslanders have fond memories of playing under the sprinkler as a child on a hot summer’s day. The sprinkler and hose signify not only the suburban backyard and childhood play but also our changing relationship to water in a drying nation. Orr’s work explores these relationships.

A perfect opportunity to find an affordable &

unique gift from our gallery of artists.

Opening TimesTues – Fri 10 – 5 pm

Sat 10 – 4 pm

at Bosz Gallery

Ph: 3358 5156www.boszgallery.com.au

EvesdroppingIN TENERIFFEBy Stephen “Chooky” Holmes*

March 2012 villagenews

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aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

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Lorem ipsum dolor sitLorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborumin voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

IN TENERIFFEby Stephen Holmes

ON THE RIVER

BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER WEDDINGS FUNCTIONS www.evesontheriver.com

Absolute Waterfront Dining in Teneriffe

T. 3216 0726 www.evesontheriver.com 53 vernon terrAce, teneriFFe

Teneriffe JettyWe have heard a lot about the City Council’s River’s Edge strategy which includes having public access to moorings on the reaches of the Brisbane River. I have seen private marinas and moorings popping up on both sides of the Teneriffe/New Farm reach of the river but still no public access. If our Council redirected the funds from the ill-conceived restaurant in the Historic Engine Room and the wasteful legal action with local residents they could build a useful and simple public jetty which will open access to the great access to local restaurants and coffee shops. Putting it out front of laneway beside Eves is an ideal location. Gloria O GloriaI am not surprised by the number of people who stop and have their photo taken with our favourite Teneriffe gal ‘Gloria’. Standing along on the bank of the river she is missing her partner and we need to do something about this in early 2015. This is a great opportunity for the community to be part having this iconic sculpture completed. Businesses can sponsor and receive recognition for their contribution. For details please contact [email protected] Eves family grows

We have some great news with the birth of a daughter Evie to our former events manager Trudi and husband Luke. Our head chef Warren and his lovely wife Andrea have just had a son, Thomas.

February $20 specialFor the month of February we have some great specials at Eves on the River including every Wednesday $20 for a main meal during lunch and dinner. Every other day we offer $40 for a main meal and desert. Enjoy! FundraisingAt Eves we support a number of charity events as I have mentioned many times in this column and it was with joy while a touch of sadness that a some friends and I have the chance to travel to Airlie Beach last week to attend a fundraiser for my old mate Mark a local musician who has cancer. Not surprising Mark had friends and former workmates come for all over the country for the event and it appears that $40,000 was raised for him in this time of need. Airlie BeachAlthough I was drawn back to the area I called home for a decade or so it is great to see the town doing so well. For Brisbane people it is only $200 return airfares plus a $100 a night in the local Airlie Pub which is great value. Why would you want to holiday overseas when you have great places like Airlie Beach so close to home. Variety at the Story Bridge HotelCelebrating its 34th year and the now very famous Cockroach Races on Australian Day at the Story Bridge Hotel is a great fundraiser for Variety – the Children’s Charity. My mate Richard and his team do a wonderful sponsorship of this event and it is no mean feat to set up and run. I came back from Airlie Beach to attend the event which has raised in excess of $15,000 this year.

Trudi & Evie Kirke

ROBIN Maini and Vick Howard jointly celebrated they birthday with friends at Alfred & Constance.

PAPAS Hair celebrated their first birthday with clients and friends.

Page 13: Village News February 2015

villagenews February 201524 February 2015 villagenews 25

peninsulaproperty

Introducing Elystan House

12 ELYSTAN ROAD, NEW FARM

THE CONSIDERATE ELECTION 33 34

26

UNIT DEMAND BUILDS IN INNER-CITY HOT SPOTS

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0478 118 372

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e: [email protected]

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Book in for Term 1 and get ready for 2015!

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Batteries and Chargers to suit:• Mobile Phones and Battery Expanders• Cordless Phones• Digital Cameras• Laptops/Netbooks • Watches/PDA/Game Consoles• Power Tools and Hobbies• Eneloop RechargeablesAs well as Garage Remotes.

Lindsay’sNew Farm Shoe Repairs

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Now Offering:ALL BATTERY SUPPLIES AND GARAGE REMOTES

• Pet tags• Pens• Plastic name badges• Trophies• Jewellery • Glass• Plastic signs made to

order

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keeping your brand strong + consistent across all media

Page 14: Village News February 2015

Introducing Elystan House....

New Farm, 12 Elystan Road

Sitting proudly above the quiet and picturesque Elystan

Road, this historic New Farm property has a street

presence that is second to none. A true statement of

lifestyle and opulence, this gorgeous home has been

renovated and restored by renowned architect Kevin

Hayes, to incorporate every modern luxury imaginable,

including a sandstone pool, temperature controlled wine

cellar and architecturally designed landscaped gardens.

Ray White New Farm

Auction

Saturday 7th March at 11am,

On Site if not SOLD prior

Matt Lancshire 0416 476 480

[email protected]

Josh Brown 0403 139 397

[email protected]

rwnf.com.au

6 5 3

• Sprawling 1,518sqm of prime New Farm real estate,

occupying a 30.2m frontage

• Extensive offering that simply cannot be matched or

replicated in an inner city home

• This is one of the finest examples of a grand family

home ever to be built

Page 15: Village News February 2015

The Ultimate Riverfront Apartment at Cutters Landing

New Farm 1421/22 Refinery Parade, New FarmWith a perfect North-East aspect, this stunning 208m2 riverfront apartment is positioned within the exclusive and admirable Flinders building. Located in the heart of the flagship Cutters Landing precinct, this apartment offers a balanced lifestyle and is the ultimate in luxury living. Its elevated position on the fourth floor offers the perfect balance to ensure absolute privacy, but maintaining a connection to the river. This expansive apartment is designed to complement the incredibly convenient lifestyle that is at your door step.

3 2 2 1

Ray White New Farm

Auction

Thursday 26th February at 6:00pm,

In Rooms 612 Brunswick Street, if not SOLD prior

Matt Lancashire 0416 476 480

[email protected]

Karla Lynch 0447 384 908

[email protected]

rwnf.com

07 3358 0604

Luxurious, Award Winning WarehouseSPRING HILL, 264A Water Street

Multi-award winning ‘Rossignol’ is a highly acclaimed and widely publicised warehouse conversion

designed by architect Yuri Dillon. Constructed circa 1920 and operating first as a blacksmith shop,

this landmark property underwent a five year metamorphosis emerging in 2010 as a cutting edge

city abode.

4 4 2

Ray White New Farm

Sale

$1,900,000+

Sam Mayes 0402 094 553

[email protected]

raywhite.com

12 Boutique Bowen Hills Units AvailableBOWEN HILLS, 1 Hurworth Street

Located just a five minute stroll from top end hot spots such as The Emporium, James Street,

Gasworks and so much more; Fame, a boutique complex of 18 executive style apartments offers

convenience at its best. Easily access the new RNA developments, Clem 7 tunnel, Hospitals and

the CBD with endless transport options close by.

1 1 1

Ray White New Farm

Expressions of Interest

Closes 9th March 2015

Sam Mayes 0402 094 553

[email protected]

raywhite.com

Just Listed

Just Listed

Page 16: Village News February 2015

CHRISTINE RUDOLPH 0400 943 984

PHILLIP HARRIGAN 0400 043 426

SAM MAYES0402 094 553

SCOTT DARWON0401 151 090

SIMON PETRIE0439 668 867

SABINE FREITAG 0488 332 256

YOUR LOCAL MARKET LEADERS

TOM LYNE 0423 696 862

JEREMY SZYMANSKI0418 856 487

TRACK RECORDNumber of Properties

SOLD in 2014

DAYS ON MARKETOn average we

sell our properties in days

Total volume of propertiesSOLD in 2014

Circa $330MCompared to Brisbane’s average of approximately 80 days.

23

$

330+

AUCTION SUCCESS RATE

So far this year we have successfully sold 72% of our

advertised auctions either before or on the auction date.

72%Disclaimer: This information is being provided by Australian Property Monitors, Price Finder and MyDesktop (Ray White New Farm’s CRM System) based on settled sales as of 31 December 2014. It’s accuracy

can not be guaranteed. Parties should rely on their own enquiries and Ray White New Farm will not be liable for errors or admissions herein.

RAY WHITE NEW FARM

RAY WHITE NEW FARM

@rwnewfarm @rwnewfarm

MATT LANCASHIRE0416 476 480

AMY JORGENSEN0411 483 474

ANJANETTE PARKER 0411 526 490

BRANDON WORTLEY0447 269 591

HAMISH BOWMAN0410 044 463

IVO KORNEL0412 301 439

NICHOLAS GIVEN0439 193 920

KIRRALEE COUCH0418 871 554

RWNF 2014 RESULTS

RWNF IN-ROOM AUCTIONS Ray White New Farm will showcase a wide range of inner Brisbane homes, apartments and townhouses

on Thursday 26th February at 612 Brunswick Street. Registrations for the auction event will start at 6pm with Auctions to officially kick off at 6:30pm. If you would like more information about this event please call 3254 1022.

RAY WHITE NEW FARM ARE

MARKET SHARE MARKET SHARE OF NEW LISTINGS MARKET SHARE OF SOLD LISTINGS

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# 1Agency

units >

# 1Agency

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# 1Agency

HOUSES >

# 1Agency

50%RWNF

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24%RWNF 26.5%

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Page 17: Village News February 2015

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The considerate electionI’ve been a real estate agent in Brisbane since the 90’s and in that time I’ve learnt that the market gets as distracted ‘as a schoolboy in math class’ every time there’s an election. If there’s a big world wide news event the number of enquiries drop. If the weather is bad the inspections drop. And if there’s an election, the market can’t focus on anything other than hypothesising what may happen afterwards! And with three levels of government that means that every other year there is a period of time that a slight stall hits the market as buyers say “let’s just wait and see what happens at this election”.

But not so much this time! Campbell Newman calling the election in January has in fact given real estate and similar industries a distraction when their market was already distracted. Sure, buyers will still be saying “I’m going to wait till after the election”, but the number of buyers, sellers and agents that are active in the January market is far less that at any other time of the year. To give you an example I call roughly 45 auctions per month, yet I called none - that’s right ZERO, in Brisbane in January. So where do these buyers the market go in January? Mainly to the coasts. And on the coast, seasonally, holiday time is when these markets peak. So the obvious question to ask is: have these coastal regions stalled? To answer this I called Andrew Bell the principal of Ray White Surfers Paradise who has just conducted 125 auctions over the Australia Day long weekend. He said mid-year elections definitely upset the day to day operations. However he went on to say that in January their buyers were less engaged with those style of matters. Their window to purchase whilst on holiday was short and this year was one of their most successful with 120 property auctions and over $20 million worth of real estate sold on the day! Maybe elections aren’t as influential in all regions and in all seasons as Brissy?

From where I stand (usually behind the podium) elections and new governments have played strong roles in stimulating and extinguishing markets over last ten years. It can make them raise their hands and bid or hang on to the insides of their pockets! It’s notable that this government has made radical changes inside the real estate industry cutting costs to owners and removing unnecessary forms. There could be more to come with the REIQ issuing a wish list to lobby for lower stamp duty and a reintroduction of first home owners grants for existing homes amongst other things.

Whichever way you vote the sun will still rise the next day and life will move on. However your asset value continue could rise or start to diminish. Either way like many other small business owners across our state I was thrilled when a quick election was called during a traditional ‘holiday period’.

NICHOLASGIVEN

NICHOLAS GIVEN m: 0439 193 920 e: [email protected]

PROFIT FROM MY EXPERIENCE

IF YOU THINK IT’S EXPENSIVE TO HIRE A PROFESSIONAL WAIT UNTIL YOU HIRE AN AMATEUR

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Page 18: Village News February 2015

villagenews February 201534

In the January edition the Village News commissioned a report by the Real Estate Institute of Queensland on the suburbs of New Farm, Newstead and Teneriffe, This month they report on Spring Hill, Kangaroo Point and Fortitude Valley.

Inner-Brisbane suburbs continue to perform strongly as buyer demand heats up across the city. The inner-city unit market is in full swing with strong investor activity being reported by REIQ member agents.

REIQ research analyst Yvette Burton said the suburbs of Spring Hill, Kangaroo Point and Fortitude Valley were no exceptions.

“Across the majority of inner-Brisbane suburbs, unit sales volumes over the September quarter were up on the June quarter,” she said.

“These results exclude off-the-plan sales which do not get officially recorded until the unit sale settles.

Fortitude Valley recorded an increase of 23 preliminary sales – the third highest increase across Brisbane, after Toowong and New Farm; while Spring Hill also recorded more than 10 extra unit sales compared to the previous quarter.

While Kangaroo Point unit sales volumes remained relatively stable over the quarter, around 60 preliminary sales were recorded - making Kangaroo Point the third highest selling Brisbane suburb in absolute terms after Brisbane CBD, New Farm and Fortitude Valley, Ms Burton said.

“Unit sales in the sub-$500,000 price point have been strong across these three suburbs also, with Fortitude Valley seeing a surge in activity over the September quarter.

“So while the new apartment market has been

popular, so too is the established, more affordable stock in these suburbs, which are providing investors with relatively good rental returns.

“In Spring Hill unit rentals are achieving an average 6.6 per cent indicative gross yield, while Fortitude Valley is sitting at 5.5 per cent – both results above the Brisbane average of 5.1 per cent.”

According to Ms Burton, the house market in these suburbs record a much smaller proportion of sales. Continued on Page 40>

peninsulaproperty

Aaron Woolard:generating record prices in your area.

REIQ Awards

QLD LARGE RESIDENTIAL AGENCY OF THE YEAR

2011QLD LARGE

RESIDENTIAL AGENCY OF THE YEAR

2012REIQ LARGE RESIDENTIAL AGENCY OF THE YEAR

2009REIQ LARGE RESIDENTIAL AGENCY OF THE YEAR

2010AUSTRALIA’S BEST MAJOR

INDEPENDENT AGENCY

2014 AUSTRALIA’S BEST MAJOR

INDEPENDENT AGENCY

2013

Australian Real Estate Awards

Place Awards

SALESPERSONPLACE

2013/2014

No.8

If you’re looking to maximise the price of your property this year, talk to Aaron before you make a move. Call or SMS 0421 145 386 or via email [email protected].

*Approximate percentage based on the previous sale price achieved of similar property in either building or street.

Brookes Street

Brookes Street

8% Increase

8% Increase

If you’re looking to maximise the price off yyoooooouuuurr property this

PLC-NF1244

Brookes Street5.37% Increase

Robertson Street9.4% Increase

Bowen Terrace8.3% Increase

Doggett Street9.5% Increase

Skyring Terrace 12% Increase

Macquarie Street 13% Increase

Moreton Street44% Increase Oxlade Drive

6.5% Increase

Moray Street23% Increase

Sydney Street12% Increase

Jordan Terrace173% Increase

Ballow Street6% Increase

PLC-NF1244_275x235_1PP_4C_Village News_Aaron Woolard_V2.indd 1 27/01/2015 11:19 am

“PETER, we’ve been looking for you!” Victor Hensley* exclaimed upon stumbling across Peter Hutton from Style Estate Agents in an unexpected meeting.

“Where have you been? We need you to sell our apartment.”The Hensleys had purchased another New Farm apartment with Peter a few years

back.So a meeting was set up with Victor, his wife Denise and Peter. And another meeting,

and then a final meeting. Although they’d been looking for Peter, they weren’t making it easy for him.

The problem was, the apartment had been on the market for $1,295,000 with another agent for two months prior without receiving a single written offer. Peter pointed out the growing stigma of it being ‘over-priced’ and ‘something-wrong-with-it’ was scaring buyers off.

The solution came in re-positioning the property to not only attract new buyers but to motivate into action buyers who had already seen the property.

So a customised, ‘story-driven’ marketing campaign was created and Peter’s stylist, Karen, brought in to declutter and style.

A strikingly different apartment was presented to the market. The result? Not only did it sell in under a week, it sold for $1,300,000.

“A brilliant outcome!” enthused Victor and Denise after the sale.For the month of February, Peter is offering free decluttering and styling sessions to all

new vendors (worth $350 each).

Call Peter now on 0488 018 170 or email [email protected]

*names have been changed for privacy reasons

New Farm Apartment Owners Benefit From A Chance Encounter

Unit demand builds in inner-city hot spots

REIQ Research Analyst Yvette Burton.

Page 19: Village News February 2015

“BRISBANE REAL ESTATE MARKET TO BE THE TOP

PERFORMER IN 2015” – PUMPEDONPROPERTY.COM.AU

We at Place New Farm are looking forward to the new opportunities

brought on by 2015. While last year was our biggest year to date (with over

$300 million in sales), our resolution is to raise the bar in what is shaping

up to be a very successful year for the Brisbane property market.

SOLD

Whether you’re buying or selling in 2015,

we would love to assist you at our Place with

all of your property needs. eplace.com.au

3107 5111

PLC-NF1267_Village News Febraury 2015_DPS.indd All Pages 27/01/2015 10:58 am

Page 20: Village News February 2015

Great Value Buying29/53 Warry Street, Fortitude Valley

Panoramic Views!10/321 Main Street, Kangaroo Point

Cavity Brick Gem8/309 Bowen Terrace, New Farm

Stylish Renovation! 6/186 Harcourt Street, New Farm

Sensational Vista 16 Bede Street, Balmoral

Architect Designed 41 Steptoe Street, Chapel Hill

Cosmopolitan Lifestyle 164/71 Beeston Street, Teneriffe

Top Floor Magic 7/2 Macquarie Street, Teneriffe

Brand New Luxury 23 Burke Street, Cooparoo

Inner City Lifestyle 2/2 Macquarie Street, Teneriffe

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Call Lorna or Rod to guarantee the best possible outcome for your property.

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Lorna Bailey0410 609 [email protected]

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Outstanding results don’t happen by accident.

36/53 Warry Street, FORTITUDE VALLEY

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6/97 Moray Street, NEW FARM

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Experience. Longevity.Proven Strategies. Success.

Lee Paul 0418 733 818 [email protected]

Lorna Bailey 0410 609 789 [email protected]

Our years of experience, proven marketing strategies and extensive database are achieving record sales results for our sellers.

Contact Lee or Lorna to guarantee the best possible outcome for your property.

Fortitude Valley • Bowen Hills • Newstead • Spring Hill • Kangaroo Point

Exceptional KnowledgeExceptional ServiceExceptional Results

Grand Colonial in New Farm’s best street11 Abbot Street, New Farm This timelessy elegant home embodies all the charm and character of this era blending authentic original features with contemporary comforts. 488m2 easy care block.

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2 2 2 1 Clifftop Position – Spectacular city, Story Bridge and Brisbane river views6/16 Moray Street, New FarmLocated in the exclusive “River Manor” Complex, this spacious 135m2 open plan apartment showcases stunning “never to be built out views”

Lee PaulPrincipal0418 733 [email protected] New Farm since 1986

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36/53 Warry Street, FORTITUDE VALLEY

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6/120 Commercial Rd, TENERIFFE

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6/97 Moray Street, NEW FARM

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6/64 Mark Street, NEW FARM

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Experience. Longevity.Proven Strategies. Success.

Lee Paul 0418 733 818 [email protected]

Lorna Bailey 0410 609 789 [email protected]

Our years of experience, proven marketing strategies and extensive database are achieving record sales results for our sellers.

Contact Lee or Lorna to guarantee the best possible outcome for your property.

Fortitude Valley • Bowen Hills • Newstead • Spring Hill • Kangaroo Point

rh.com.au

AUCTION - Sat 28th February 2015 12:30pm On-Site

Page 21: Village News February 2015

villagenews February 201540

peninsulaproperty

A PROFESSIONAL APPROACH TO BRISBANE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

Any real estate agent can lease a property. The skill is in obtaining the highest possible price with the most suitable tenants given the current market. This is what sets Joshua George and the team at Ray White East Brisbane apart.

We develop targeted marketing campaigns designed to establish awareness and interest in your property using a variety of media.

Contact Joshua to list your property with Ray White East Brisbane during the month of February to receive a complimentary professional advertising package.

Joshua George Business Development Manager

0407 706 760www.joshuageorge.raywhite.com

McGrath New FarmT 3638 1400W mcgrath.com.au

There is no substitute for having our ear to the ground in this dynamic area, so we have decided to become even more accessible to our valued clients with a dedicated sales office in New Farm. Our team of local agents and property managers are operating at the forefront of the industry and possess an intimate knowledge of your community. Dedicated to the New Farm area, we will ensure that no stone is left unturned in the pursuit of obtaining the best results for your property.

If you are thinking of buying, selling or leasing, or if you are an investor looking to entrust your asset to the best in the business, contact the McGrath New Farm team today.

now evenmore local

Continued from Page 34>“As inner-city suburbs, house sales are a rarity with detached houses

in all three suburbs accounting for less than 15 per cent of all housing stock.

“Over the September quarter, preliminary sales records show less than 10 house sales were recorded in each of these suburbs.”

In Fortitude Valley, where 93 per cent of properties were units, just one house was sold – a prestige town home on a block no more than 300sq m selling for in excess of $1 million, she said.

“Median house prices for Kangaroo Point and Spring Hill recorded double digit growth over the 12 months to September.

“Over the past 10 years, these two suburbs recorded healthy average annual increases of 5.6 and 7.4 per cent respectively, compared to 4.4 per cent for the Brisbane City Council area.

“This is evidence that buyer demand for inner city living, particularly for houses, will always remain strong.

However, given the inevitable growth in unit developments, in response to our capital cities’ increasing population, detached houses in the inner city would become even rarer as the years went by, Ms Burton said.

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LANDSCAPING expert and Selling Houses Australia star Charlie Albone will be attending the grand reveal of Mirvac’s Waterfront balcony display on Saturday February 28, 2015. Albone and his wife, stylist Juliet Love, designed the display as part of Mirvac’s Beautiful Balconies campaign. The sales display will be open from 10am–5pm with Albone available from 11am–2pm to meet with the public and offer landscaping hints and tips. The sales display is located at 43 Eveyln St, Newstead.

Selling Houses Australia star

Juliet Love and Charlie Albone.

Page 22: Village News February 2015

mcgrath.com.au/239697

This spacious two level, two bedroom, two bathroom apartment has recently been refreshed and is ready to move straight into. Representing an outstanding opportunity to buy in a central location in New Farm. It is set in a boutique complex of five, the master bedroom enhanced with walk-in robe and ensuite. Designed for easy entertaining with the living room and second bedroom opening onto a generous north east facing balcony, just a short stroll to cafés, restaurants, cinema, shops and transport.

NEW FARM 4/19 Annie StreetAuction Wednesday 4th February 5.30pmView by appointment Charmaine Henrickson 0438 437 464Call 3638 1415

2 2 1

mcgrath.com.au/250940

Located on prestigious Teneriffe Hill, this master crafted multi-level home enhanced by designer tropical gardens is an ultra-desirable sanctuary. Clearly defined architectural styles encompassing a restored cottage transition to an expertly detailed contemporary extension. Sleek main living areas flow outdoors to a private poolside entertaining retreat, while on ground level are self-contained guests´ quarters. It´s situated near schools, shops and the river.

TENERIFFE 18 Beeston StreetAuction Thursday 26th February 5.30pmView by appointment Sandie Oxley 0407 118 883Call 3638 1411

5 3 2

mcgrath.com.au/243398

A contemporary inner city sanctuary of sheer luxury, this top floor Rive North Tower apartment fuses sophistication with convenience for ultimate liveability. The up scaled living area with designer appointments effortlessly meets the demands of discerning professionals while the entertaining balcony has a perfect vantage point to enjoy views of Hamilton Hill. Residents have access to a pool and minutes from the door is The Breakfast Creek Hotel and transport.

ALBION 86/32 Agnes StreetAuction Thursday 5th March 6.00pmView by appointmentJulie Jackson-Lemaire 0420 309 557Call 3638 1428

2 2 1

mcgrath.com.au/247687

Generous Saratoga Woolstore apartment (187sqm) offers rare indoor/outdoor terrace and natural light across two levels of living. This apartment enjoys an open plan layout with three generous bedrooms, each with own bathroom. Character features like original floorboards and soaring sawtooth ceilings deliver charm and a sense of space. This great lifestyle offer is further complimented with electronic blinds, air conditioning, additional storage and study zone.

TENERIFFE 50 Macquarie Street For Sale over $800,000View by appointmentJulie Jackson-Lemaire 0420 309 557Call 3638 1428

3 3 1

Page 23: Village News February 2015

villagenews February 201544 February 2015 villagenews 45

peninsulapropertypeninsulaproperty

e [email protected] 0410 391 811Michelle Rasmussen

INNER‐CITY VIBE, VIEWS AND VALUE!

Whether you are looking to be close to work or close to ‘the action’, this smart, fully‐furnished apartment will keep you in the heart of it all! Offering both spectacular views and proximity to the cultural, sporting and leisure epicentre of Brisbane, this address is the place to live and invest.

For Sale

304/311 Vulture Street, South Brisbane 2 BED 1 BATH 1 CAR

PRIVATE, PEACEFUL RESIDENCE… JUST OFF JAMES!

Set back from the road, just footsteps from the dynamic James Street precinct, is this modern townhouse offering quiet, yet incredibly convenient, inner‐city living. Superbly maintained, with nothing more to do, the home’s split‐level floorplan offers lower level indoor‐outdoor living spaces, with the main bed and bathrooms upstairs.

For Sale

1/205 Kent Street New Farm

0410 391 811Michelle Rasmussene [email protected]

3 BED 2 BATH 1 CAR

0410 391 811Michelle Rasmussene [email protected]

LUXURIOUS, LOW‐MAINTENANCE LIFESTYLE…

Positioned in one of New Farm’s most central, yet peaceful streets, is an exceptionally‐designed home, with so much to offer families and busy professionals. Dual‐level living offers space, versatility and easy entertaining, whilst the coveted location promises the perfect blend of cosmopolitan and suburban lifestyles.

49 Villiers Street, New Farm

AUCTION

4 BED 2 BATH 2 CAR

Glen BoyleSenior Sales & Marketing Executive

0431 766 567@ [email protected]

@urlocalagent

WIN 1,000,000 Qantas Points

TO GO IN

THE DRAW

Local knowledge, innovative marketing & expert advice.

LJ Hooker New Farm 3146 5400 newfarm.ljhooker.com.au

simply have an

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Page 24: Village News February 2015

JED DZIUMA#1 Agent in Fortitude Valley

0409 888 190@ www.jeddziuma.com.au

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For your chance to win visitwww.jeddziuma.com.au

Check-in with LJ Hooker to WIN* the trip of a lifetime!Whether you’re selling or staying, grab a property appraisal with LJ Hooker

before 31 March 2015 and you could WIN 1,000,000 Qantas Points!

Page 25: Village News February 2015