![]() ![]() District views of Connells Point from the living room flowing seamlessly to the outdoor area. Automatic garage with internal access to the outdoor courtyard for ease of convenience. ![]() ![]() Excellent Feng Shui layout with a nice breeze, low maintenance surrounds and lovely neighbours. Set within a boutique block, concrete floors, low turnover and with majority owner-occupied. Modern kitchen features a chefs oven, range hood, dishwasher and stone benchtops. Superb child-friendly outdoor backyard/courtyard area for all year entertaining. North/North East facing aspect for quality natural sunlight and a welcoming ambience. Defined separation between the open plan living, dining and kitchen areas with breakfast bar. One original owner with meticulous attention to detail, pet-friendly subject to strata. Three bedrooms, two with built-in wardrobes, flexible floorplan and set in a quiet area. A walk to everywhere address with bus transport direct to Hurstville Train Station, bustling cafes, waterways, restaurants, shops, Poulton Park synthetic fields, parklands, supermarkets and Pinnacle RSL. For those driven by school catchment, the villa is located within minutes of popular Connells Point Primary School and Blakehurst High School. The ease of convenience is at your fingertips combined with an exceptionally private indoor to outdoor flow plus space for a home office. With one original owner, this property is on the market for the first time in over 27 years and will suit those upsizing, essential workers, superannuation buyers, multigenerational families, those downsizing from multimillion-dollar accommodation, investors, professional couples, newlyweds, home workers, young families and retirees. There is abundant space to integrate a home office for those working remotely plus it has been designed with bespoke joinery, an innovative palette of textures, landscaped common areas and caters to the practicalities of family life. Well-appointed and presenting a flexible floor plan, this villa is sure to tick the boxes for those wanting an entry-level home with timeless appeal. In 2019, TLLF granted $5 million to an affordable housing campaign in Charlotte, and the Levine Children's Hospital is doing some cool stuff for patients who need stem cell transplants.A fantastic prestigious location, boutique block of 10 and just minutes from a bustling lifestyle community is this exceptional villa with minimal stairs for ultimate enjoyment all year round. By 2013, Levine had given away more than $75 million through the foundation. To date, TLLF has made countless donations. Large donations continued, including $10 million for construction of The Levine Science Research Center at Duke University in 1991, $1 million to name the Levine Museum of the New South, $2 million for the Levine Ramah Center at Camp Ramah Darom in 2000, and so on. Operating out of where else but Charlotte, North Carolina, the foundation invests in nonprofits and projects with "a focus on sustainability in the areas of healthcare, education, Jewish values, and human services." The couple was soon making big moves with the foundation, donating $1 million to the creation of Shalom Park in 1980, and The Sandra and Leon Levine Jewish Community Center was soon named after them. Inspired, Levine, now married and a father, opened the first Family Dollar later that year. (It should also be noted that Levine's other brother, Al Levine, founded Pic-n-Pay in 1957.) By 1959, Levine had sold the bedspread factory and made one important trip - he visited a dollar store in Kentucky. This was near Wingate College, where Leon attended business classes in the morning before running the factory in the afternoon. A teenage Leon was soon running The Hub and was even vice president of the store from 1954 to 1957.ĭuring his vice presidency, Levine and his brother, back from the Korean conflict, bought a chenille bedspread factory called Union Craft Company. His father died in 1949, and his brother was drafted into the Korean War. Then, a series of events threw Levine into a more demanding role. As a kid, Levine and his brothers worked in their father's department store called The Hub. But Leon Levine, the Family Dollar founder, was not without experience in the discount shop game.
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