124 William Webb Drive
124 William Webb Drive, Evatt ACT 2617, Australia
Sales history
| Event | Date | Price | Price per m² |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sold | Apr 2025 | $1,000,000 | $1,196 |
Price per m² based on land size of 836 m².
Key details
- Locality
- Evatt
- State
- ACT
- GNAF PID
A unique ID for this address in Australia's national address database.
- GAACT714859304
- Legal parcel ID
The official land parcel identifier used on property titles and plans.
- BELC/EVAT/90/19
- Remoteness area
- Metro
- Property type
- House
- Land size
- 836 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 located at 124 William Webb Drive?
124 William Webb Drive is a standalone house set on a land parcel of 836 m².
Which major roads define the borders of the suburb where the property is situated?
Evatt is bounded by Copland Drive, Owen Dixon Drive, William Webb Drive and Ginninderra Drive.
What nearby facilities or points of interest are within walking distance of 124 William Webb Drive?
Within about 1 km you’ll find the National Health Co‑op Evatt, while the Belconnen United Football Club is roughly 1.3 km away. The Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre is around 1.7 km distant.
In which electoral divisions does Evatt fall for federal and ACT elections?
For Australian federal elections Evatt is part of the Division of Fenner, and for ACT Legislative Assembly elections it lies in the Ginninderra electorate.
Who was the suburb of Evatt named after?
The suburb is named after Herbert Vere Evatt (1894–1965), who served as a Justice of the High Court and was Leader of the Opposition in the 1950s.
When was the suburb of Evatt officially gazetted?
Evatt was officially gazetted on 2 November 1972.
What are the main geological features found beneath Evatt?
Most of Evatt sits on a green‑grey dacitic intrusive porphyry with large white feldspar crystals. A strip of Glebe Farm adamellite intrusion lies just south of Moynihan Street, and the south‑west corner contains green‑grey dacitic tuff, a patch of calcareous shale, and is cut by the Deakin fault near Brebner Street.