Opened plan single level two bedroom townhouse offering quality fixtures and fittings throughout. Spacious kitchen, with a large kitchen island bench space, stainless steel Bosch gas cook top, and dishwasher.

North facing living area, which open out onto the enclosed court yard through double doors. Quality bathroom with floor to ceiling porcelain tiles, fantastic full length shower and a full size bathtub. Reverse cycle heating and cooling. Internal laundry including dryer and Bosch alarm system.

One carport plus storage, and easy access to the Belconnen prescient, schools and transport

No Current EER Available.

Suburb Snapshot
Weetangera is named after the property “Spring Vale”, which in turn had been given a name of Aboriginal origin,[5] due to a spring near the site of the original Public School called “Wittanjirra” in the local Aboriginal dialect, meaning “to suck, to drink greedily”. Samuel Shumack lived at “Spring Vale” between 1866 and 1915. Shumack and his father had taken up the land for farming when Samuel was eight years old. Samuel Shumack lived on the property with his family until it was claimed as land for the nation’s capital in 1915.
Weetangera was also the name for the Weetangera parish, which included the land from Ginninderra Creek to the Molonglo River. The Southwell family were significant to this property, and various members of the family are buried in the Weetangera Cemetery and former Methodist Church now sited to the west of the adjoining suburb, Hawker.

Weetangera has a small shopping centre containing a bakery, beauty salon, dentist, coffee shop, gym, Pakistani restaurant and cleaner.
The suburb is also home to the Weetangera Neighbourhood Oval. The ACT Government announced restoration plans for the oval in June 2012, committing $4 million to three ovals, including the Weetangera oval, over a three-year period. The money is for the installation of irrigation systems, synthetic cricket wickets and practice nets, floodlights and a small pavilion and toilet block.
The first Public School (pre-High School) was sited on land of the original farming property, and opened on 27 April 1875, with 27 students. The first teacher was Mr Ewan Cameron, a member of the Weetangera community and a parent of a student.
The site is between (beside) the present Belconnen Way (north) and Smith and Kinleyside Streets (south). It now a park, with children’s play area, with several lines of pine trees that were planted by students of the original school in about 1919 and 1928/9 (Arbor Day).

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