3 Pearcey Place
3 Pearcey Place, Dunlop ACT 2615, Australia
Sales history
| Event | Date | Price | Price per m² |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sold | May 2005 | $335,000 | $604 |
| Sold | Apr 2000 | $44,500 | $80 |
Price per m² based on land size of 554 m².
Key details
- Locality
- Dunlop
- State
- ACT
- GNAF PID
A unique ID for this address in Australia's national address database.
- GAACT714847072
- Legal parcel ID
The official land parcel identifier used on property titles and plans.
- BELC/DUNL/36/33
- 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
- 554 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 type of property is 3 Pearcey Place and how many bedrooms does it have?
3 Pearcey Place is a house featuring two bedrooms.
How large is the land parcel for this property?
The residence sits on a 554 m² block of land.
Where is 3 Pearcey Place located within Canberra?
It is situated in the suburb of Dunlop, roughly 11.6 km north‑west of Canberra’s city centre.
What natural reserves or parks are nearby?
Dunlop borders the Canberra Nature Park areas including Dunlop Grasslands Nature Reserve, West Belconnen Ponds, Jarramlee Pond and Fassifern Pond, and The Boslem and Harte Park is about 1.5 km away.
How far is the nearest shopping centre?
Kippax Fair Shopping Centre is approximately 2.3 km from the property.
Which electoral divisions cover this address?
Federally, the property is in the Division of Fenner, and for ACT Legislative Assembly elections it falls within the Ginninderra electorate.
What is the geological composition of the Dunlop area?
The suburb sits on Silurian‑age Deakin Volcanics purple rhyodacite, with grey tuff from the Laidlaw Volcanics in the south‑west and the Deakin Fault running along its north‑east edge.