Driscoll and Reid

Driscoll and Reid We specialize in Sale and Leasing of Residential and Commercial Properties and also broker Business in the local and surrounding metropolitan areas.

Driscoll & Reid Real Estate Services has been a family owned and operated business first by Ambrose Driscoll & Norman Reid followed by the Nucifora Family for over 40 years and now Sarina the daughter of Sam Nucifora and her husband Mark Sandford have re-opened Driscoll & Reid Real Estate. We are also proud to be long standing members of the Real Estate Institute of NSW. Established since 1942, Dr

iscoll & Reid Real Estate has directly gained over 70 years of experience and is still gaining strength as a result of hard work and updating of systems, so necessary to remain so successful and the dominating Real Estate Services in the District! Driscoll & Reid Real Estate Services have become the market leaders in the North West Sydney Area through our vast Internet Exposure and our past and continuing support of Local Organisations, Training of local young adults and our Professional Service that only can be had through this experience. Whatever your needs in Real Estate, Driscoll & Reid Real Estate have the time and experience to help you make the right decisions. Driscoll & Reid Real Estate Services is the "only choice" when you need to buy, sell, rent or lease a property in the Riverstone and surrounding district.

Very Interesting Design
20/05/2022

Very Interesting Design

4 bedroom house for Sale at 8 Cypress Court, Minyama QLD 4575. View property photos, floor plans, local school catchments & lots more on Domain.com.au. 2017812005

Leased! LEASED!8  Trumble Place,   ROUSE HILL  $   740 Per WeekGenerous 4 Bedroom & 2 Bathroom Home with Secured Private...
16/04/2022

Leased! LEASED!

8 Trumble Place, ROUSE HILL
$ 740 Per Week
Generous 4 Bedroom & 2 Bathroom Home with Secured Private Yard, Double Garage

Driscoll & Reid Re wish to introduce this delightful modern 4 bedroom home its position creates peace and privacy as it is
located within a private cul de sac with an abundance of
inclusions are:

- Four bedrooms with en-suite and walk robe to main - built in wardrobes to remaining three bedrooms
- Double lock up garage with internal access and auto opening
- Separate lounge room
- Stylish kitchen newly renovated with quality appliances, gas cook top & hotwater system
- Dining / Familyroom area combined
- 1st floor office / study nook
- 1x split system air conditioner & tiled flooring to ground floor & ducted air conditioning and carpeted flooring to 1st floor area
- Large covered alfresco off dining / family room
- Public transport, schools, parks and shops are near by
- Auto closing gates to front entry & Alarm System
Fully fenced level / landscaped yard and expansive covered outdoor entertaining area provide the perfect setting for those relaxing days entertaining family and friends.
STRICTLY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY!

LEASED! LEASED!9 Oleander Cres, RIVERSTONE$ 505 Per WeekModern 3 Bedroom Brick Veneer Home with Mod Kitchen, Freshly Ren...
16/04/2022

LEASED! LEASED!

9 Oleander Cres, RIVERSTONE
$ 505 Per Week
Modern 3 Bedroom Brick Veneer Home with Mod Kitchen, Freshly Renovated New Bathroom
Driscoll & Reid Re proudly presents this delightful modern brick Veneer home
features
• Modern kitchen with Range hood , modern appliances, dishwasher
• Dining room timber flooring (off kitchen)
• Living room, R /c split system polished timber floors
• Internal/external Laundry, Floor to ceiling Double door Linen press (in Hallway)
• Recent renovated bathroom separate Shower recess, vanity, also separate WC
• All 3 bedrooms fitted with floor to ceiling built-in wardrooms
• Drive thru carport to spacious yard area of approx. 633 sq mtr
STRICTLY BY APPOINTMENT ONLY!

Leased as of 27 April 202036 Robinson Street Riverstone NSW 2765$420 Per Week3 Bedroom Home Open Plan Living & Covered S...
21/04/2020

Leased as of 27 April 2020

36 Robinson Street Riverstone NSW 2765

$420 Per Week

3 Bedroom Home Open Plan Living & Covered Secured 3 Car Parking

This charming open plan 3 bedroom home is air conditioned, polished timber flooring with built in wardrobes to all bedrooms, modern bathroom and separate W/C, internal laundry, covered rear entertaining area, double carport and garage with workshop area / storeage.

LEASED Shop 6 / 15 Pitt Street Riverstone NSW 2765$1,008.07 GST Inclusive Per MonthSHOP AREA of Approx. 56m2.Opportunity...
09/11/2018

LEASED
Shop 6 / 15 Pitt Street Riverstone NSW 2765

$1,008.07 GST Inclusive Per Month

SHOP AREA of Approx. 56m2.

Opportunity to lease a shop of approx. 56 meters square
Shop features are kitchen area, shop area of approx. 56 meter square. Amenities are shared male & female.
This shop has great exposure on street parking and rear entrance, plenty of space for deliveries and on street customer parking and only short distance to shopping centre car park, NBN connected.
Advertised price is $917.00 + GST Exclusive Per Month or $11,004.00 + GST Exclusive Per Year.

SORRY PROPERTY IS LEASED39 Oxford Street Riverstone NSW$395 Per WeekFor Lease 2 Bedroom  Easy-Care Home  Fully A/C & Clo...
14/07/2018

SORRY PROPERTY IS LEASED

39 Oxford Street Riverstone NSW

$395 Per Week

For Lease 2 Bedroom Easy-Care Home Fully A/C & Close to Transport/Shops

This two bedroom home has built-in wardrobes & split air conditioning to both bedrooms, modern kitchen and laundry (internal access), separate lounge room with split air conditioner & separate office or dining room, timber flooring throughout. Double carport and large garden shed.

No Longer Available YARD / HARDSTAND $2,400 Per Month GST Inclusive53a Fourth Avenue, Llandilo NSW,2747This rural proper...
11/07/2018

No Longer Available

YARD / HARDSTAND

$2,400 Per Month GST Inclusive

53a Fourth Avenue, Llandilo NSW,2747

This rural property has a hardstand and yard area of approx. 1340 meters square to sub-let. Suitable for heavy vehicle parking etc.

Inspections Strictly by Appointment

Withdrawn From Sale29 Rifle Range Road Bligh Park,NSW,2756$670,000 All Offers ConsideredMODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME WITH 3 CAR...
11/07/2018

Withdrawn From Sale

29 Rifle Range Road Bligh Park,NSW,2756

$670,000 All Offers Considered

MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME WITH 3 CAR GARAGE & WORKSHOP
This modern 3 bedroom home has a renovated bathroom & kitchen, features a open living plan to the lounge room / dining room / kitchen areas with tiled flooring and new split air conditioner, all bedrooms are carpeted with built In robes and ceiling fans to main bedroom & 2nd bedroom. There is a large covered entertaining area just through the back glass sliding door. 3 car garaging (2 in large colour bond garage/workshop with single car garage attached to house), backyard is secured, garden shed and ABN connected.
Land Size 632.4 m2
Suitable first home buyer , down sizing or investor alike.

By Appointment Only

11/07/2018

Building cheap, buying expensive: Australia’s fundamental property headache
Hannah Blackiston May 16, 2018

Sydney sits at number 19 on a list of the world’s most expensive construction markets, according to a recent report from consultancy firm Arcadis, with Melbourne following at 21 and Brisbane at 22.
While this news might seem bleak at the outset, experts have quickly pointed out that median house prices in those three cities significantly outstrip prices in several of the cities that outrank them in terms of construction costs, highlighting other factors driving housing affordability concerns in Australia.
Construction costs are far higher in major US cities like Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia and San Francisco – which tops the list – while several European cities also outrank Australian capitals for building costs.
Most expensive cities in the world for construction costs
Rank City
1. San Fancisco
2. New York
3. Hong Kong
4. Toronto
5. Boston
6. Philadelphia
7. Chicago
8. London
9. Macau
10. Geneva
11. Copenhagen
12. Tokyo
13. Washington DC
14. Stockholm
15. Frankfurt
16. Dallas
17. Houston
18. Paris
19. Sydney
20. Brussels
21. Melbourne
22. Brisbane
23. Rio de Janeiro
24. Riyadh
25. Jeddah
Source: Arcadis, International Construction Costs Report 2018
“The build price in Australia compares quite favourably with other parts of the world, but the problem, as we see it, is the cost of the land, and also at the tax end,” Housing Industry Association senior economist Shane Garrett said.
“Research has shown that if you look at the Sydney market, at least 44 per cent of the cost of a new home is accounted for by taxation in one form or another. That includes stamp duties, both of the purchase of the land and the final purchase price of the house, also GST thrown in, and the impact of excessive delays in the planning system.”
“The report is further proof that the artificial scarcity of land fostered by governments of all political persuasions is the chief culprit in Australia’s housing affordability crisis.”UDIA executive director Kirk Coningham
One key example is San Francisco, the most expensive city in the world for construction according to the report, where homes cost 70 per cent more to build than they do in Sydney, but have a similar median house price.
Two tough property markets by the numbers
Sydney San Francisco
Cost to build $395,000 $671,500
Median home price $1,170,000 $1,200,000
Building costs as a percentage of house price 33% 56%
Median income $91,500 $132,600
Price as a multiple of median income 12.9x 9.1x
Demographia Unaffordability rank 2nd 6th
Arcadis median cost of building index 70 119
Sydney
33%
San Francisco
56%

Building cost as a percentage of property price
Source: Urban Development Institute of Australia

11/07/2018

It undermines all other rights’: Rental reforms futile if ‘no grounds’ evictions remain, experts warn
Tawar Razaghitwitter May 16, 2018

Sweeping changes to rental laws in New South Wales will have little impact unless “no grounds” evictions are brought to a halt, experts warn.
Minister for Better Regulation Matt Kean is set to announce the changes in the coming months following the first comprehensive overhaul of rental legislation in more than 20 years.
The proposed changes come at a time when there are more tenants in Sydney than ever before – 34 per cent of the population rents, according to census data.
“[No grounds eviction] undermines all of the other legislated rights tenants have,” said Chris Martin,a research fellow at UNSW’s City Future Research Centre. “It hangs over people’s heads when they’re considering asserting their rights as tenants.”
Failing to remove “no grounds” evictions could negate any attempts at improving renters’ security, according to Dr Martin.
“It’s the single most important tenancy reform that the government should be pursuing,” he said.
A statutory review of the Residential Tenancy Act by NSW Fair Trading two years ago made 27 recommendations in a bid to “modernise” laws to strike an “appropriate balance between the interests of tenants and landlords”.
While some of the less contentious issues have already been amended such as the Rental Bonds Online register, other complex points – such as greater rental protections for domestic violence victims – are yet to be introduced.
The advocacy and research officer at Tenants’ Union of NSW Leo Patterson Ross said the suite of changes would have no impact unless the provision was addressed.
“It so fundamentally messes with the power balance. It’s so out of whack that renters accept things you wouldn’t accept from any other service provider.”
Newtown MP and Greens spokeswoman for housing Jenny Leong outlined the party’s priorities in a speech in parliament yesterday with an end to unfair “no grounds” evictions at the top of the list.
She said renters made up the majority of her electorate, and those of the Premier and the housing minister, and needed to be afforded more assurances.
“This is a serious issue where now people are long-term renters they need to be provided with security and protection,” said Ms Leong.
“We need to recognise that there are reforms needed to tip the balance back so that renters have that security and have a right to call a place home.”
Ms Leong said limiting annual rent increases to CPI, establishing rental housing standards, improving flexibility for tenants in domestic violence cases and providing greater protections for people living in share houses were priorities.
Changes to ‘no grounds’ evictions wouldn’t be to the detriment of landlords, according to Dr Martin, if the government amended the act to give more specific grounds for termination such as the premises needing renovation or the landlord moving in themselves.
“Landlords could be accommodated and it would be no skin off their nose. It would be only a disadvantage to those who are lazy or incompetent and who use it as a trump card to get out of doing the right thing by tenants,” said Dr Martin.
Mr Patterson Ross said the review was a ‘big step forward’ by a coalition government that has acknowledged the problems associated with a shift to renting. But he said while Labor have backed removing ‘no grounds’ evictions from the legislation, it didn’t look like the government was willing to tackle this key issue.
Minister for Innovation and Better Regulation Matt Kean said the government needed to focus on ways to improve life for tenants.
“The government has committed to stronger protections for victims of domestic violence, fairer lease-break fees for tenants, and strengthening their rights to get repairs done,” he said.

22/05/2018

STORY FROM DOMAIN
Building cheap, buying expensive: Australia’s fundamental property headache
Hannah Blackiston May 16, 2018

Sydney sits at number 19 on a list of the world’s most expensive construction markets, according to a recent report from consultancy firm Arcadis, with Melbourne following at 21 and Brisbane at 22.
While this news might seem bleak at the outset, experts have quickly pointed out that median house prices in those three cities significantly outstrip prices in several of the cities that outrank them in terms of construction costs, highlighting other factors driving housing affordability concerns in Australia.
Construction costs are far higher in major US cities like Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia and San Francisco – which tops the list – while several European cities also outrank Australian capitals for building costs.
Most expensive cities in the world for construction costs
Rank City
1. San Fancisco
2. New York
3. Hong Kong
4. Toronto
5. Boston
6. Philadelphia
7. Chicago
8. London
9. Macau
10. Geneva
11. Copenhagen
12. Tokyo
13. Washington DC
14. Stockholm
15. Frankfurt
16. Dallas
17. Houston
18. Paris
19. Sydney
20. Brussels
21. Melbourne
22. Brisbane
23. Rio de Janeiro
24. Riyadh
25. Jeddah
Source: Arcadis, International Construction Costs Report 2018
“The build price in Australia compares quite favourably with other parts of the world, but the problem, as we see it, is the cost of the land, and also at the tax end,” Housing Industry Association senior economist Shane Garrett said.
“Research has shown that if you look at the Sydney market, at least 44 per cent of the cost of a new home is accounted for by taxation in one form or another. That includes stamp duties, both of the purchase of the land and the final purchase price of the house, also GST thrown in, and the impact of excessive delays in the planning system.”
“The report is further proof that the artificial scarcity of land fostered by governments of all political persuasions is the chief culprit in Australia’s housing affordability crisis.”UDIA executive director Kirk Coningham
One key example is San Francisco, the most expensive city in the world for construction according to the report, where homes cost 70 per cent more to build than they do in Sydney, but have a similar median house price.
Two tough property markets by the numbers
Sydney San Francisco
Cost to build $395,000 $671,500
Median home price $1,170,000 $1,200,000
Building costs as a percentage of house price 33% 56%
Median income $91,500 $132,600
Price as a multiple of median income 12.9x 9.1x
Demographia Unaffordability rank 2nd 6th
Arcadis median cost of building index 70 119
Sydney
33%
San Francisco
56%

Building cost as a percentage of property price
Source: Urban Development Institute of Australia

An artificial scarcity of land is to blame for the issues raised in the report, according to Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA) executive director Kirk Coningham.
“The report is further proof that the artificial scarcity of land fostered by governments of all political persuasions is the chief culprit in Australia’s housing affordability crisis,” Mr Coningham said in response to the Arcadis report.
“As well as being significantly cheaper to build, Australia has 12 times more land per capita than America. On any measure Australians should expect their homes to be cheaper – but that’s not the case.”
UDIA pointed to a recent Reserve Bank study, released in March, that founds costs associated with zoning added a significant amount to the cost of detached housing across Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth.
The view is echoed by HIA’s Shane Garrett, who says that for a piece of land to go from planning to being available for construction often takes between 10 and 12 years, which hampers affordability.
But Arcadis national director of costs and commercial management Matthew Mackey sees three Australian cities in the top 25 as making it hard to call Australian construction “cheap”.
“The cost of construction has always been high in Australia due to its geographic isolation and the associated costs of import taxes, travel and transporting materials that this brings,” Mr Mackey said.
But ongoing Chinese investment and growth of 1.2 per cent in the construction market after a three-year decline points to a good outlook for new residential construction in Australia, according to Arcadis.

22/05/2018

STORY From DOMAIN
It undermines all other rights’: Rental reforms futile if ‘no grounds’ evictions remain, experts warn
Tawar Razaghitwitter May 16, 2018

Sweeping changes to rental laws in New South Wales will have little impact unless “no grounds” evictions are brought to a halt, experts warn.
Minister for Better Regulation Matt Kean is set to announce the changes in the coming months following the first comprehensive overhaul of rental legislation in more than 20 years.
The proposed changes come at a time when there are more tenants in Sydney than ever before – 34 per cent of the population rents, according to census data.
“[No grounds eviction] undermines all of the other legislated rights tenants have,” said Chris Martin,a research fellow at UNSW’s City Future Research Centre. “It hangs over people’s heads when they’re considering asserting their rights as tenants.”
Failing to remove “no grounds” evictions could negate any attempts at improving renters’ security, according to Dr Martin.
“It’s the single most important tenancy reform that the government should be pursuing,” he said.
A statutory review of the Residential Tenancy Act by NSW Fair Trading two years ago made 27 recommendations in a bid to “modernise” laws to strike an “appropriate balance between the interests of tenants and landlords”.
While some of the less contentious issues have already been amended such as the Rental Bonds Online register, other complex points – such as greater rental protections for domestic violence victims – are yet to be introduced.
The advocacy and research officer at Tenants’ Union of NSW Leo Patterson Ross said the suite of changes would have no impact unless the provision was addressed.
“It so fundamentally messes with the power balance. It’s so out of whack that renters accept things you wouldn’t accept from any other service provider.”
Newtown MP and Greens spokeswoman for housing Jenny Leong outlined the party’s priorities in a speech in parliament yesterday with an end to unfair “no grounds” evictions at the top of the list.
She said renters made up the majority of her electorate, and those of the Premier and the housing minister, and needed to be afforded more assurances.
“This is a serious issue where now people are long-term renters they need to be provided with security and protection,” said Ms Leong.
“We need to recognise that there are reforms needed to tip the balance back so that renters have that security and have a right to call a place home.”
Ms Leong said limiting annual rent increases to CPI, establishing rental housing standards, improving flexibility for tenants in domestic violence cases and providing greater protections for people living in share houses were priorities.
Changes to ‘no grounds’ evictions wouldn’t be to the detriment of landlords, according to Dr Martin, if the government amended the act to give more specific grounds for termination such as the premises needing renovation or the landlord moving in themselves.
“Landlords could be accommodated and it would be no skin off their nose. It would be only a disadvantage to those who are lazy or incompetent and who use it as a trump card to get out of doing the right thing by tenants,” said Dr Martin.
Mr Patterson Ross said the review was a ‘big step forward’ by a coalition government that has acknowledged the problems associated with a shift to renting. But he said while Labor have backed removing ‘no grounds’ evictions from the legislation, it didn’t look like the government was willing to tackle this key issue.
Minister for Innovation and Better Regulation Matt Kean said the government needed to focus on ways to improve life for tenants.
“The government has committed to stronger protections for victims of domestic violence, fairer lease-break fees for tenants, and strengthening their rights to get repairs done,” he said.

Address

Riverstone, NSW
2765

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

+61284430201

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