8 Dean Place
8 Dean Place, Charnwood ACT 2615, Australia
Sales history
| Event | Date | Price | Price per m² |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sold | Nov 2021 | $700,000 | $1,125 |
Price per m² based on land size of 622 m².
Key details
- Locality
- Charnwood
- State
- ACT
- GNAF PID
A unique ID for this address in Australia's national address database.
- GAACT714848095
- Legal parcel ID
The official land parcel identifier used on property titles and plans.
- BELC/CHAR/77/2
- Commonwealth electorate
The federal electorate this address is in (for Australia's Parliament).
- Fenner
- State lower house
The state electorate this address is in (lower house).
- Ginninderra
- Remoteness area
- Metro
- Property type
- House
- Land size
- 622 m²
- Internal area
- -
- Land Use Category
What the land is mainly used for, such as Residential, Commercial, Industrial or Other.
- Residential
Real Estate Agencies
Nearby schools
Frequently asked questions
What is the size of the land that 8 Dean Place occupies?
The property sits on a 622 m² block of land.
How is the suburb of Charnwood laid out for pedestrians?
Charnwood was designed using the Radburn principle, aiming for houses to face common parkland and a network of walkways that allow residents to move around the suburb without crossing roads directly.
What shopping and service options are nearby?
The Charnwood centre shopping area, located within roughly half a kilometre, includes fast‑food outlets, a Woolworths supermarket, a Shell service station and a Labor Club.
Where is the closest emergency services station?
An emergency services station housing ambulance, fire and rescue units is situated near the Charnwood shops at the south‑west corner of Lhotsky Street and Tillyard Drive, about 0.5 km from the property.
What sporting facilities are close to 8 Dean Place?
The Charnwood District Playing Fields, home to the Ginninderra "The Tigers" athletics club during the track season, are located approximately 1 km away.
What geological features are characteristic of the Charnwood area?
Charnwood sits on Silurian‑age rocks, predominantly Deakin Volcanics purple rhyodacite, with the Deakin Fault marking a transition to Hawkins Volcanics green‑grey dacite and quartz‑andesite in the north‑east.