First look: New apartments set for Bondi Beach's Campbell Parade
The prolific Bondi Beach developers Eduard Litver and Allen Linz are back developing on the beachfront.
Litver, who runs Capit.el Group, and Linz, of Rebel Property Group, are teaming up with fellow eastern suburbs property developer Gil Baron to create a boutique project at 14-18 Campbell Parade, which runs all the way along the beach front.
The trio, under the development name Bondi Residence Pty Ltd, spent $15 million early last year on a commercial building at the south end of the beach opposite Notts Avenue, the exclusive street of Icebergs and some of Bondi's most expensive apartments. Currently the building is home to Bondi Beach Chemist and Kelp Hairdressing, and a handful of apartments.
The original building on the site was named the Cliff House Hotel, and was built around 1880. The Cliff House was demolished in the early 1920s and a new hotel (now Hotel Astra), was built by Jack Shaw around 1926. The remainder of the site was subdivided and sold, and the current building was constructed a few years later.
Litver, Linz and Baron are proposing the redevelopment of the block, creating seven apartments.
Brian Meyerson's MHNDU note in their design statement that the proposed development aims to contextually `fit in’ with both its immediate neighbours and the wider suburb.
"The proposed new building had been designed to retain the form and understanding of the Inter-war Flat Building when viewed from the public domain," the design statement submitted to Waverley Council read.
They state the different apartment types and sizes are deemed suitable for the desired character of the area, aiming to attract a range of owners from families and downsizers to young professionals.
There will be six two-bedroom apartments on offer, each occupying half a floor and spanning 86 sqm. The whole top level is crowned by a whole floor, three-bedroom apartment, complete with a fireplace and a full-width, ocean-facing terrace.
"The building is designed generous apartment sizes and internal dimensions to create usable, functional and highly saleable apartments of excellent quality", MHNDU added.
"The apartments facing Campbell Parade are furnished with generous private open spaces overlooking the street which will enjoy direct beach and water views and are considered highly amenable.
"As these apartments are generally East facing they will receive direct morning sunlight and the design aims to maximise this will full width sliding glazed doors to each apartment.
"Coupled with this are the enclosed bay windows which aim to be extensions of living rooms offering a truly inside/outside space and are designed to be habitable all throughout the year and even on cold, wet, windy days."
A focus on the design was to minimise energy use and maximise the efficient use of resources.
Each apartment has a 100 per cent rate of natural cross ventilation, while balcony projections help to control solar access and heat gain by limiting summer sun penetration whilst allowing the lower winter sun to penetrate deep in to the plan and private open spaces.
The ground floor is planned for a single retail tenancy.
Litver, Linz and Baron have all teamed up previously in Bondi. In 2016 they spent $19.12 million on the former Bates milk bar at 124 Campbell Parade.
Litver and Linz are well known for their redevelopment of the Bondi Pacific building up the street.