4 Boswell Crescent
4 Boswell Crescent, Florey ACT 2615, Australia
Sales history
| Event | Date | Price | Price per m² |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sold | Nov 2006 | $168,000 | $208 |
Price per m² based on land size of 807 m².
Key details
- Locality
- Florey
- State
- ACT
- GNAF PID
A unique ID for this address in Australia's national address database.
- GAACT714859777
- Legal parcel ID
The official land parcel identifier used on property titles and plans.
- BELC/FLOR/122/2
- Remoteness area
- Metro
- Property type
- House
- Land size
- 807 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 land size of the property at 4 Boswell Crescent?
The house sits on a parcel of land measuring 807 m².
How far is the property from the Belconnen Town Centre?
Belconnen Town Centre is about 0.5 km away, making it a very short walk or quick drive.
What public transport options serve the Florey area?
Florey is serviced by three ACTION bus routes – 2, 3 and 40 – providing regular connections to surrounding suburbs and the city centre.
Which community facilities are within easy reach of 4 Boswell Crescent?
The Florey Shopping Centre, the Hindu Temple and Cultural Centre, and the Florey Medical Centre are all located within the suburb and are accessible on foot or by a short drive.
Why is the suburb of Florey named that way?
Florey is named after Howard Florey, Baron Florey, who shared the 1945 Nobel Prize for his work on penicillin; the suburb’s streets are also named after Australian scientists.
Has there been any recent environmental work in the neighbourhood?
In 2018, the ACT Healthy Waterways Project restored sections of Tattersall Crescent’s drainage channel to a more natural creek‑like state, helping to slow and clean stormwater flowing into Ginninderra Creek.
What is notable about the geology of the Florey area?
The suburb sits on Silurian‑age rocks, including green‑grey dacite, quartz‑andesite, and various rhyodacite and rhyolite formations, with the Deakin Fault running through the region.