WATERFRONT LAND PRICES SET TO SOAR - 02/04/03
“If you dream of spending your retirement in a house by
the sea, now is definitely the time to move”, says Christie
Leet, whose real estate office, Ray White in Airlie Beach is
the current number one Ray White office in Australia based on turnover. “We’re
seeing an unprecedented number of city dwellers wanting to make
the seachange to this part of the world, partly buoyed along by
the healthy real estate market down south and partly because the
desire to live with your toes in salt water seems to be stronger
than ever.”
Trends in world population are reflected in the pressures on the
North Queensland coast. In 2001, the global population was 6.1
billion and this is expected to grow to 9.3 billion in 2050, at
which time there will be three times more people over 60 and five
times more people over 80. Growing numbers are expected to locate
closer to the coast, with 50% of world population within 150 km
of coast in 2001 growing by 2025 to 75% (6.3 billion.) [Intercoast,
2002.]
This trend is set to become particularly apparent in Australia,
where a lifestyle by the coast has replaced a quarter acre in the ‘burbs
as the great Australian dream.
The beach today represents escape, freedom, self-fulfilment, the
Right Path. It represents the way our lives should be. [McGregor,
2000]
Ironically, legislation currently in the mill at all levels of
government will soon radically curtail availability of waterfront
land.
Noted KPMG demographer and economist Bernart Salt sums up the
trend to coastal dwelling with his catchy one liner that “the
beach is best” for close to 3 million Austalians who now
live in provincial coastal based towns.
The Salt Report’s Big Shift [Salt,2001] points to a significant
change in Australian population distribution from the characteristic
split between bush and ’burbs in the 1950s to the bush, the ‘burbs
and the beach in the 1990s. Currently, one in five (or 3.6 million)
Australians is a provincial coastal town dweller. Over the 20 years
to 2021, the number living in non-metropolitan coastal Australia
will rise to 4.3 million [Salt, 2001:59]. All up it is estimated
that the population of the NSW coast will increase by more than
60% over the next 25 years. This makes the Whitsundays’ growth
rate of 3.5% even more remarkable.
“The Whitsundays is Queensland’s fastest growing tourist
region and little wonder”,
says Janet Hogan, one of the developers at Botanica Waterfront,
a 20 lot waterfront subdivision fringing the Coral Sea just 8 minutes
from Airlie Beach. “ People are drawn here because of the
incredible natural beauty, the spectacular waterways and the refreshingly
easygoing, friendly character of small community living.”
Growth is being generated from both a demand for leisure, lifestyle
and retirement coupled with increased visitor numbers. Travel and
tourism is the world’s largest industry and generator of
quality jobs, estimated to have generated US $3.5 trillion and
almost 200 million jobs worldwide in 1999 [WTTC, 1999:3] Coastal-based
tourism is the fastest growing area of contemporary tourism.
“All this points to the fact that areas such as our beautiful
Whitsundays will come under increasing pressure. But that’s
not to say that if you haven’t bought in already, you’ve
missed the boat. In fact, at Botanica Estate, you can still buy
25 metre wide absolute waterfront blocks from $395,000 with virtually
no esplanade and over ½ acre of gently sloping usable land,
with stunning views of Airlie Beach all the way out to Hayman and
the islands. That’s ridiculously cheap when you think a 10
metre artificial canal frontage down south can now cost in excess
of $1 million.”
Based on current trends, waterfront land will continue to appreciate
at a much greater rate than the overall property market. With recent
changes to capital gains tax legislation decreasing by 50% the
amount of tax sellers pay when taking advantage of a capital profit
on the sale of vacant land, many more investors are entering the
market.
“You could do worse than simply buy a waterfront block today,
sit on it and do nothing, then sell it at twice the price in the
not too distant future”says Christie Leet as he gazes out
onto the azure expanse of the Coral Sea from his brand new Mustang
cruiser “…and I can certainly think of harder ways
to make a buck.”
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