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'Lang Syne' was built in 1924 by boot and shoe manufacturer, George Wolf. The family owned the home until 1959, when radio and TV personality Harry Griffiths, and his wife Dimity, paid the ...
'Lang Syne', which sat along the famed Bondi to Bronte walk, was sold last May for $45 million. Now sits a pile of rubble. ... Perched on the headland of Tamarama beach, ...
Tamarama has changed a lot since the headland house Lang Syne was built almost a century ago, ... think James Packer’s $29 million Bondi Beach bachelor pad and Tamarama’s high of $29.2 ...
Lang Syne has an unobscured view of the beach and a massive 1,100-square-metres of land between Mackenzies Bay and Tamarama Beach Lang Syne was originally built in 1924 by George Wolf, a boot maker.
For a century, Sydneysiders traversing the Bondi to Bronte walkway have marvelled at the stock-standard bungalow known as Lang Syne perched on the headland at Tamarama Beach: humble real estate ...
Perched on its own small peninsular along the famed Bondi to Bronte walk, the original 1920s bungalow has set a staggering new record. Known as 'Lang Syne', the home is understood to have sold at ...
David Droga is working with Luigi Rosselli Architects to turn his beach land at Tamarama in Sydney’s eastern suburbs into a unique house to match the location, aiming to create an Australian icon.
The previous building's sale set a Sydney record at the time in 2023 for $45 million. Lang Syne was owned by Dimity Griffiths and her husband, the late radio host Harry Griffiths, for almost 65 years.
The duplex at 3 Gaerloch Ave, Tamarama — across from the old Californian bungalow Lang Syne that sold for $45m last May — fetched $20m when sold via Simon Exleton of Pillinger last week, local ...
David Droga, founder of Droga5, Accenture Song CEO and AdNews' Hall of Fame inductee, has reportedly snapped up Lang Syne, a 100-year-old oceanfront bungalow in Sydney's Tamarama, for around $45 ...