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Friday July 3rd

75 Acres, an 1862 Cottage, and a Private Lake — Inside Pepper Tree Creek

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Bowral, Robertson, Kangaloon — the Southern Highlands has always attracted a particular kind of attention. Not loud, not passing. The kind that arrives slowly, deepens with every visit, and eventually becomes permanent.

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A Tarragindi Landmark on 810m² With Endless Potential

Why You'll Love It

For more than 70 years, this iconic post-war residence has been held by the same family, becoming one of Tarragindi's most recognisable homes. Positioned on a commanding 810m² corner allotment with an extraordinary 37.1-metre frontage to Shaftesbury Street, the property presents a once-in-a-generation opportunity to secure a landmark holding in one of Brisbane's most tightly held suburbs.

Whether you're looking to preserve and renovate, landbank for the future, or explore the potential to remove the existing dwelling and create two brand-new residences (STCA), opportunities of this scale and prominence are becoming increasingly rare. Surrounded by quality homes and occupying a highly visible position opposite Shaftesbury Street Park, this is a property that offers both immediate enjoyment and exceptional future upside.

Located within walking distance of Wellers Hill State School, St Elizabeth's Primary School, local cafes, parks and transport, while remaining just moments from Toohey Forest and less than 10 kilometres from the Brisbane CBD, this is a chance to secure one of Tarragindi's most significant landholdings.

Best Suited For:

Developers and builders seeking a rare opportunity to create two brand-new homes (STCA) on one of Tarragindi's most prominent and tightly held sites. Equally appealing to families looking to secure a landmark property with rich local history and the opportunity to renovate, extend or enjoy an exceptional landholding in a blue-chip location.

Pepper Tree Creek

Where history writes tomorrow

Bowral, Robertson, Kangaloon — the Southern Highlands has always attracted a particular kind of attention. Not loud, not passing. The kind that arrives slowly, deepens with every visit, and eventually becomes permanent.

It's this quality — patience rewarded — that defines Pepper Tree Creek Estate. Established in 1862 on 75 acres of rolling East Kangaloon farmland, the property spent much of its recent history in quiet decline. When Kathy and George Sartorel acquired the estate in 2019, the original stone buildings were derelict. What followed was a transformation guided by resilience, vision, and an uncommon respect for what was already there.

Today, Pepper Tree Creek is one of the most complete private estates in the Southern Highlands — a place where heritage architecture, designed landscape, and working land coexist in considered balance.

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An 1862 cottage

Quarried from its own land

The original cottage, built with stone quarried on the property itself, now forms the heart of a five-bedroom homestead that has been expanded with the same attention to material honesty that guided its first builders over 160 years ago. Bespoke joinery, curated interiors, and proportions that feel generous without being grand — the kind of restraint that comes from building with a site rather than against it.

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Multiple living zones open to expansive undercover entertaining areas designed to work in any season. Heated floors, fireplaces, and home automation sit quietly beneath surfaces of natural stone and timber — technology in service of comfort, never the other way around.

The Old Dairy, once a working outbuilding, has been reimagined as a self-contained one-bedroom guest cottage. It's the kind of detail that shifts a property from impressive to genuinely liveable — a place where visitors have their own private retreat rather than a spare room at the end of a hallway.

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The architecturally inspired gardens at Pepper Tree Creek

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Private spring-fed lake with timber jetty at the centre of it all

The Terraces

Sixteen acres that perform in every season

The gardens at Pepper Tree Creek — known as The Terraces — are not decorative. They are architectural. Sixteen acres of terraced hillside planting where European formality meets Australian native beauty: cloud-pruned cypress and topiary courts give way to woodland walks through remnant rainforest. Hydrangeas line the drive in spring. Maples colour the canopy in autumn. A birch grove catches the low afternoon light in winter.

At the centre, a private spring-fed lake with timber jetty anchors the landscape — less a water feature than a gathering point, a place where the estate's scale becomes intimate. Walking paths trace the creek lines. A pool sits within the gardens, oriented to the view.

These are gardens that perform in every season. They were designed not just to be looked at but to be walked through, hosted in, and returned to.

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Land In Balance

Off-grid capable, connected by choice

Beyond the gardens, the estate's 75 acres include fertile paddocks on prime alluvial soil, dry stone walls from the original settlement period, and restored creek lines threaded with native plantings. The land isn't ornamental — it's productive, ecologically considered, and resilient.

Sustainability here is infrastructure, not afterthought. Comprehensive solar services the estate. All paddocks are fed by gravity-fed and spring-fed troughs. Irrigation draws from the property's own spring water via timer systems. A redesigned dam supports natural flood management. Creek restoration and native plantings strengthen the estate's connection to its broader landscape. The estate is connected to town water but operates with genuine self-sufficiency — the kind of quiet capability that increasingly defines the best Highlands holdings.

Visit peppertreecreek.atlas.com.au

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A Region, Complete

Bowral, Mittagong, Moss Vale — and Saturday mornings

East Kangaloon sits minutes from Bowral's acclaimed dining scene, boutique wineries, heritage villages, and the creative community that gives the Highlands its particular character. Cool-climate vineyards pair with restaurants that draw from the region rather than importing a city formula. Galleries, antique dealers, and weekend markets fill the villages between Mittagong and Moss Vale.

The four seasons here aren't a marketing line. They're the rhythm of daily life — spring hydrangea blooms, summer lakeside afternoons, autumn fires, winter stillness. Pepper Tree Creek doesn't insulate you from that rhythm. It places you at its centre.

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Bowral's acclaimed dining scene, boutique wineries, heritage villages and creative community

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Galleries, antique dealers, and weekend markets fill the villages

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