4 Furness Crescent Sinnamon Park QLD 4073
4 Furness Crescent Sinnamon Park QLD 4073
4 bed house on 703mΒ² lot |Built 2000 with pool/spa |Est. value $1.7-1.9m |Bushfire/flood overlays noted | 138 characters
This four-bedroom house on a 703sqm block suits established families prioritising backyard space and school catchments in a residential setting.
The 703sqm lot provides ample room for practical family living, with its in-ground pool and spa supporting year-round outdoor use despite the 42% building coverage leaving space for gardens or extensions. Built in 2000, the 297sqm structure aligns with mid-2000s designs common on Furness Crescent, a short street of 14 similar family homes where consistent lot sizes foster a cohesive neighbourhood feel. Bushfire and flood overlays warrant due diligence for risk-averse buyers, though no heritage constraints allow flexibility for updates. Families drawn to properties like this often seek the double garage and study for homework routines and secure parking in a fully fenced yard. In the local market, comparable four-bedroom houses on 700sqm lots have held steady values, buoyed by proximity to Jindalee State School and Centenary State High, with estimates ranging $1.62m to $1.95m reflecting high confidence in recent appraisals. Solar panels add efficiency appeal for holding owners mindful of rising costs. Long-term, the land’s residential zoning and NBN connectivity position it well for enduring demand from upsizers avoiding smaller inner-city blocks. Its street’s low turnover suggests reliable neighbour stability, enhancing appeal over flashier new builds.
Independent, Unbiased Research Report for this property by PropCred Analyst teamΒ
Market Insight:
Sinnamon Park (4073) is sought after for its riverside, family-friendly character, larger blocks and strong local schools, with convenient road and public-transport links into Brisbane that drive owner-occupier demand. Buyers are attracted by lifestyle, solid rental appeal and constrained developable land that supports medium-to-long-term capital growth. Risks include river?edge flood pockets and interest?rate sensitivity, while opportunities stem from limited supply and southeast?Queensland infrastructure demand; prices have been broadly stable to modestly rising over the six months to March 3, 2026.