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Sovereign Islands: Final chapter in exclusive enclave’s property saga

A new chapter, perhaps the final one, is on the way in a property saga that started inside the Gold Coast’s exclusive Sovereign Islands enclave more than six years ago.

Gold Coast housing prices skyrocket

A new chapter, perhaps the final one, is on the way in a property saga that started at Paradise Point glamour estate Sovereign Islands more than six years ago.

The saga involves land on which plans for the islands’ first apartments, Sovereign Residences, were unveiled in 2018 and quickly stirred rabid opposition from residents.

Move ahead to today and the Royal Albert Cres holding remains vacant, with plans in 2022 by a new owner, Finite Properties, to fire up the apartment venture being aborted fairly quickly.

15-19 Royal Albert Crescent Sovereign Islands
15-19 Royal Albert Crescent Sovereign Islands

Finite paid a gutsy $12.65 million for the 2566 sqm of canal-front land, renamed the project Windsor on Royal Albert, but struggled to sell apartments that started at close to $5 million.

The upshot was that more than $14 million was accumulated in debt.

Receivers moved in and attempts to sell the three-title holding, even by auction nine months ago, have been fruitless.

The best tilt at the land, according to the agent who auctioned it, was $8 million.

The holder of the first mortgage has stepped forward and a new auction bid is about to be mounted via two fellows who first looked for a buyer three years ago, Tony and Adam Grbcic, of Kollosche.

Windsor on Royal Albert
Windsor on Royal Albert

The ambitious venture has turned into a disaster for the two shareholders in Finite Properties, fellows who were out to ‘have a go’.

One, Brad Neale, has been forced to sell his home.

Meanwhile, a chap who was an original promoter of Sovereign Residences, Ian Chester, is facing fraud charges over the use of investors’ money and is at risk of going to jail.

Ian spruiked the planned apartments as an exclusive opportunity for the elite and downsizers ‘looking to live like a king or queen’.

There have been two major winners out of the apartments drama.

Mark Murray and Akiko Sho paid $4.78 million for the canal-front land in 2019 and put it on the market in 2021 after the project failed to go ahead.

The Royal Albert Crescent apartments that have not got off the ground
The Royal Albert Crescent apartments that have not got off the ground

Their chances of the purchase price being recouped looked rosy at the time, with one source suggesting that if the holding was sold as three housing lots, it could be worth up to $6 million or so.

Mark and Akiko, a year later, received Finite’s $12.65 million.

The Finite buy at $12.65 million was an eye-opener to property watchers – the rate paid for each square metre was $1700 higher than any previous Sovereign land buy.

The first-mortgage holder is Wollongong’s PCL Money, linked to Martin Anstee, and which as of last year was owed $8 million.

Robina resident Glenn Campbell’s Panoramic Capital Group lent $2.6 million, not necessarily all on the Sovereign site, and has been repaid more than $2.7 million.

Ching Chiat Kwong
Ching Chiat Kwong

That said, Panoramic apparently is claiming around $1.2 million more, courtesy of interest, rollover fees, and legal costs,

Brad’s sold his home to make repayments and the future of Finite partner Grant Fairley’s home is up in the air.

Meanwhile, another apartments-like plan has been given the thumbs up at Sovereign Islands – this one at the estate’s front gate.

Singaporean developer Ching Chiat Kwong intends building 10 luxury marina-front villas costing from $6 million to $25 million.

PAYMENT SETTLES STOUCHE

Andrew Hopkins. Photo: Supplied
Andrew Hopkins. Photo: Supplied

Andrew Hopkins, who suddenly left the then Gold Coast-based AMA crash-repair business in 2021, has paid the company some cash in a legal stoush settlement.

Andrew was chased for $2.38 million after suddenly departing as the CEO of the listed AMA amid an allegation of misuse of company funds.

AMA, today based in Melbourne, hasn’t revealed how much it’s been paid under what it terms ‘a confidential settlement’.

A Hopkins company bought a Bundall office block for $9 million in 2019, with AMA installing its head office there, and sold it for $13.1 million two years later.

BURLEIGH BUY

Tony Hazel at the Avani site when it was under construction in 2016.
Tony Hazel at the Avani site when it was under construction in 2016.

Tony Hazell, a Brisbane property funder and investor, has emerged as being behind the $6.15 million purchase at a receiver auction of a highway-front Burleigh site.

Tony and his Anthony Moreton Group are no strangers to the Gold Coast – a decade ago they were the instigators of The Beach tower at Broadbeach, a building today called Avani.

The Burleigh buy involves a 1012 sqm corner site with a frontage to Fifth Ave and which has a 7-Eleven store as a tenant.

A Sydney receiver took control of the property from a company owned by Edward Masterton, a joint owner of Synergy Property Partners.

DRAWING UP MIAMI PLANS

Bayden Goddard, whose architectural skills have been employed on many up-market Gold

Architect Bayden Goddard. Picture Glenn Hampson
Architect Bayden Goddard. Picture Glenn Hampson

Coast homes, looks set to become a developer of commercial property at Miami.

Bayden and partners have paid $4.8 million for a highway-front property that housed the original Flannerys health-food store.

It appears the plan is to build an office building on the holding, which also has a Hillcrest Pde frontage.

Bayden’s fellow directors in the company that has bought the holding are Kiwi John Dell, owner of a Paradise Waters super-mansion, and builder Lance Dummett, who has a Sovereign Islands home on the market at close to $8 million.

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Original URL: https://www.goldcoastbulletin.com.au/property/sovereign-islands-final-chapter-in-exclusive-enclaves-property-saga/news-story/111d3f2587e5534b5d234222e677e365