In Glen Lorne, a home set on half a hectare of established grounds, with mature trees throughout and a natural garden that has clearly been growing for years.
The property runs on a solar system alongside reliable grid supply, and one borehole draws from the land itself useful on a plot this size where surface irrigation alone would be demanding. Two lounges give the interior room to breathe; one is an octagonal space with exposed timber roof beams, skylights, and multi-pane windows on multiple sides a room that reads as the architectural centrepiece of the house. Hexagonal terracotta-tiled flooring runs through parts of the living areas, and wooden floors carry through the upper-level rooms. The fitted kitchen has wooden cabinetry and a stovetop. A fireplace adds weight to the interior in the cooler months.
Two bedrooms and two bathrooms serve the main house. There is also a dedicated office or study, a dining room, and staff quarters on the property. Pets are allowed.
The internal staircase is a mix of wood and metal well-suited to the character of the architecture rather than a standard fit-out. The bathroom is fully tiled with a bathtub.
From an aerial view, the extent of the grounds becomes clear: mature canopy across much of the plot, with the house sitting within rather than dominating the land.
The octagonal room's skylights sit directly above the timber beams, pulling light down into the centre of the space.