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原帖由 MO^OM 于 2007-11-22 09:46 发表
I would like to buy a new house in Narre Warren North,
but they require $400k+ for a single storey big house with 650m2 land there, only on the half mount , 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 garages.. ...
在这些新建的开发区买房,需要注意小区内的房子是否过于拥挤,房子的隐私空间如何,基础设施是否已经成型或正在兴建,中小学幼儿园、公共交通状况,开发商、建筑公司的声誉口碑,建材用料是否偷工减料。。。。。。等等
一年前的一则新闻报道,仅供参考:

Houses going up at Point Cook, west of the city. Planners and architects say Melbourne's new estates and the houses on them are cheaply and poorly designed.
墨尔本新开发居民住宅区的弊端
如今在墨尔本西部,象Point Cook这些新开放的居民住宅区新房林立,价格也便宜,距离市中心也不远,但是,地产开发商以利润为中心的“指导思想”造成这些新区的规划建设出现越来越多的问题。
前天的墨尔本大报《The Age》周末版专文探讨了这种现象,并援引建筑设计规划专家的话表示,这些新区的房产规划设计廉宜而糟糕,对居住在那里的居民生活造成极大影响,并将无法适应下一代人对生活品质的要求。(Houses going up at Point Cook, west of the city.Planners and architects say Melbourne's new estates and the houses on them are cheaply and poorly designed.Poor planning, indifferent design and cost-cutting in Melbourne's newest suburbs are condemning residents to a a life of misery,‘failing future generations')
http://www.theage.com.au/news/na ... /1160851138134.html

Paul Bradley: "Didn't anyone think what people would want in the future?"
这种现象不仅仅发生在墨尔本西部的新开发住宅区,东南更偏远一些区如Narre Warren South等也同样存在这种问题。
Growing pains leave residents aching for more
October 21, 2006 http://www.theage.com.au/news/na ... /1160851138137.html
TEN years ago, Paul Bradley and his wife bought their house on the Woodlands Estate at Narre Warren South.
Back then, Mr Bradley could stand on the roof of his house and see nothing but grasslands to the east.
"Now, there are estates as far as the eye can see," he said. "From the roof of my house, you can just see a sea of roofs."
The Bradleys and their five children love their home.
But a shortage of public transport through their suburb and a lack of child care has left them wondering how many fringe suburbs got approved in the first place.
"Didn't anyone think what people would want in the future?" Mr Bradley said.
"Smaller problems are now becoming big problems because nobody planned properly."
Roads around Narre Warren South had not been made wide enough for buses and originally had terrible surfaces.
"The developer wanted the neighbourhood to be cobblestoned avenues, complete with elms," Mr Bradley said. "But they had to rip up all these cobblestones and put down asphalt to let the buses go through."
The child-care shortage in new estates was also disturbing, Mr Bradley said.
Sprawling "McMansions" were a problem in some estates, because houses were too close together.
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