About this property
Also written as Unit 5, 44 Sutton Terrace.
Marleston SA 5033, Australia
Also written as Unit 5, 44 Sutton Terrace.
Based on curated rent estimate.
Confidence ratings show how closely the estimate matches the comparable property data we currently have.
There is a stronger pool of recent, relevant comparison data and the subject property lines up closely with those comparable properties.
There is a reasonable amount of comparison data, but the closest matches may vary more in type, size, timing or location.
There are fewer recent comparable properties available, or the known examples are less similar to the subject property.
These figures are estimates and broad indications only. They are generated from recorded property attributes and available third-party market data, without a physical inspection of the property.
They are not a professional valuation, appraisal, legal opinion or financial recommendation. No person should rely on them as the sole basis for a purchase, sale, lease, lending or investment decision.
Yardize does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of any rent estimate, value estimate, range or confidence score, and no legal claim can be made against us for reliance on this information.
Based on the comparable property evidence currently available.
It is a unit situated on a 136 m² parcel of land. The property is classified simply as a unit with its own land area
The unit sits on a land area of 136 m². This provides a modest footprint typical for inner‑suburban units
Kurralta Park Reserve is about 0.5 km away, and Weigal Oval is roughly 1.0 km distant. Richmond Oval, a larger sporting complex, lies approximately 1.5 km from the unit
Netley is just 0.5 km away, followed by Marleston at 0.6 km, Plympton at 0.7 km, Richmond at 0.8 km, and Kurralta Park at 0.9 km
Apollo Stadium, a former multi‑purpose hall, is about 1.1 km away, and the historic Roxy Theatre in Everard Park is roughly 1.6 km from the property
Marleston’s European settlement began with Donald McLean in 1837, who cultivated wheat on his 80‑acre selection. The land was later subdivided by John Marles in 1879, and after World War I a housing boom for returned servicemen further shaped the suburb
At the 2021 census Marleston had 1,950 residents, with a roughly even gender split (49% male, 50.8% female). The community is multicultural, with 58.5% Australian‑born and notable groups from India, China, Nepal, England, and Greece
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