Queensland Property & Lifestyle
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12 months
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6 issues
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Special Winter 2008 Offer!
Subscribe to Queensland Property and Lifestyle and receive 6 copies for the price of 4 - SAVE 50%
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Queensland Property & Lifestyle is your one stop shop for property research data and consumer information for buying and selling Queensland real estate. Queensland is the top investment hotspot, and South East Queensland is the fastest growing region in Australia.
WINTER 2008 ISSUE OUT NOW
Each issue of Queensland Property & Lifestyle magazine includes the complete range of quarterly research data from the Real Estate Institute of Queensland. Receive median sale price statistics for houses, units/townhouses and land, suburb-by-suburb throughout the State, with quarterly, annual and five-yearly percentage changes. The magazine also includes median weekly rents for three bedroom houses and two bedroom units in suburbs throughout Queensland, along with rental vacancy rates.
COVER STORY: Choose your own utopia
Imagine a leafy suburb where neighbours still wave to each other; where kids play in the street; where there's no "dodgy side of town"; and where the homes aren't a bewildering patchwork of conflicting architectural styles. It might sound like something out of a 1050s soapie - but as the modern world slides ever closer to paranoia and moral panic, buyers are increasingly on the hunt for exactly this kind of little slice of safety and security for themselves and their kids.
Too hot to handle: What next for Australia's cooling economy
It's a truth universally acknowledged that when one thing is going spectacularly well, something else falls spectacularly to pieces. Or so Bridget Jones attested in the movie of her famous diary in 2001. But perhaps Bridget was closer to the truth than she could have possibly imagined? What else can explain the strange ways of economics, especially monetary policy, to a lay-person?
Future-proofing your home: How green should you go?
It is possible to improve the sustainability of a property, without having to endure the expense and inconvenience of having to purchase a new home. Richard Reed and Sara Wilkinson examine some of the practical measures that you can take to improve energy efficiency while increasing value.