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Gold Coast development: Gerry Harvey dumps plans for luxury apartments at Runaway Bay

No-nonsense billionaire Gerry Harvey has torn up plans for a luxury apartment venture on the Gold Coast.

Amazon had a free kick: Gerry Harvey

NO-nonsense billionaire Gerry Harvey has torn up plans for a luxury apartment venture at Runaway Bay.

The co-owner of the Magic Millions is going to sell the bulk of his $22 million-plus landholding beside the Broadwater.

The 79-year-old retailer hoped to build 31 posh apartments on the larger of two holdings in Poinsettia Ave and 11 on another site two doors away.

The ventures, all up, could have been worth more than $70 million and delivered apartments where owners could have enjoyed such treats as relaxing in plunge pools while they watched boats cruise by.

Gerry Harvey's canned project at Runaway Bay. Photo: Supplied
Gerry Harvey's canned project at Runaway Bay. Photo: Supplied

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The city council in January last year vetoed the bigger project and a development application for the other one has been allowed to lapse.

The ‘big’ refusal clearly irked the joint founder of Harvey Norman because three weeks after the knock-back he filed an appeal with the Planning and Environment Court.

Now, more than a year on, he’s withdrawn that appeal and has aborted the 31-apartment plan.

He’s asked the fellow who handled his purchase of the five-title lot, General Realty’s Mark Feltell, to sell it, either as one lot or in pieces.

Gerry’s believed to be tossing up what to do with his smaller Poinsettia site.

No doubt fellow owners in Poinsettia Ave and nearby streets will be dead keen to see what he decides.

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Gerry Harvey. (AAP Image/David Crosling)
Gerry Harvey. (AAP Image/David Crosling)

The larger of Gerry’s projects drew a raft of objections and they might well have swayed the council.

One objector, from across the water in Howard St, described the planned Harvey building as bulky, boring and monstrous.

The city council decided the project, at four levels, was too high, not appropriate for the area, and covered too much of the site.

It also was deemed as not achieving a “high quality urban design outcome”.

Gerry’s not the first person to have grand plans for the waterfront end of Poinsettia Ave, a tranquil street that has the Runaway Bay marina property on its northern side.

Eddy Groves, while his ABC Learning group was in its heyday and solvent in 2006, snared three adjoining lots at a cost of $8.7 million.

Katie Page also recently cancelled plans to build in Labrador. John Feder/The Australian
Katie Page also recently cancelled plans to build in Labrador. John Feder/The Australian

He planned a pavilion-style mansion with an adjoin guesthouse but aborted the idea and tried to sell the 2784 sqm holding for $12.5 million.

After a 2007 auction failed, Gerry rolled up with an $11 million offer and he and Eddy did business.

That was the start of Gerry’s ‘business’ in the street — he added two adjoining properties to create a 3905 sqm site with both Broadwater and canal frontages.

The super-retailer also snared nearby two sites totalling 1234 sqm.

Gerry’s decision to abort his major Poinsettia project comes on the heels of his wife, Katie Page, canning plans to build a 16-level tower beside the Broadwater at Labrador.

The tower, Ripple, was destined for a site overlooking the Broadwater bought in 2007, the same year Gerry paid Eddy $11 million.

The seller to Katie was none other than you-know-who, yes, Eddy Groves!

OTHER BUSINESS NEWS

* AMIR Main, property agency principal, appears set to head to the beachfront in Millionaires’ Row, Mermaid Beach’s Hedges Ave.

He’s the mooted buyer of an older three-level home that’s sold for $4.725 million, a property once owned by Soul super-tower co-developer Shaun Juniper.

Amir, who runs a prestige agency that carries his name, and wife Soraya sold their Sovereign Islands home of eight years for $4.025 million in September.

* THE listed GDI group appears to have taken out an insurance policy in the wake of the $48.75 million buy of the Gold Coast biggest office tower more than three years ago.

The ‘policy’ was the quiet $1.24 million purchase of space in strata-title building Cavill Park, which adjoins GDI’s Fifty Cavill Avenue tower.

The buy would enable GDI to stymie any move to redevelop the Cavill Park site and, if passed on, give any Fifty Cavill buyer a similar ability.

* TIGHT wraps on the pre-auction sale a Cape Cod mansion in Southport’s Brighton Pde haven’t stopped the name of San Francisco resident Jeremy Cooper slipping out as the buyer.

The wraps are holding on the price, which is believed to be in the mid-$3 million area.

Jackson Paradise, the Ray White agent who sold the home, isn’t saying boo but he appears to have been a double winner — he’s listed the Cooper house on Burleigh’s Skyline Tce.

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Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/business/quentin-tod-gerry-harvey-cans-plans-for-luxury-apartments-at-runaway-bay/news-story/22a496120009066b22171ebad3ada349