Property Negotiation Service in Warrawee NSW 2074

Are you buying or selling in Warrawee? iREC provides an independent property negotiation service to help buyers secure homes without overpaying, and sellers achieve stronger results. Having an expert negotiator on your side ensures you make the right moves in Warrawee

👉 Backed by extensive expertise iREC offers negotiation support tailored to the Warrawee property market.


Why Use a Property Negotiation Service in Warrawee?

  • Level the playing field – A skilled negotiator ensures you don’t overpay as a buyer and that you maximise value as a seller.

  • Independent advice – Unlike real estate agents, who represent one side of the deal, a negotiation service works solely in your best interest.

  • Maximise outcomes – For sellers in Warrawee, that might mean thousands more at sale. For buyers in Warrawee, it could mean securing your dream property without stretching beyond your budget.

  • Local negotiation expertise- helps you understand where you can push harder—or when it’s smarter to compromise.


How iREC Helps Buyers in Warrawee

  • Assessing fair market value before you make an offer.

  • Handling negotiations with real estate agents.

  • Preventing emotional decisions that lead to overpaying.


How iREC Helps Sellers in Warrawee

  • Comparing multiple agent proposals.

  • Negotiating lower commission fees while ensuring strong sales campaigns.

  • Protecting your bottom line during buyer offers.


Looking beyond Warrawee? See our full Property Negotiation Service NSW page for other regions we cover.


Ready to buy or sell in Warrawee?

Get in touch with iREC today for independent property negotiation advice that protects your interests.

👉 Contact Us


About Warrawee (NSW 2074)

Warrawee should not be confused with Wirawee, the fictional small country town in the Tomorrow series of books for young people by John Marsden and the film derived from the first book, Tomorrow when the war began.

Warrawee is believed to have come from an Aboriginal word meaning rest a while, stop here or to stand.

The earliest significant homes were Pibrac (1888), Cheddington (1890) and Wirepe (1893), all very fine houses.

In 1888, the public servant and patron of exploration Frederick Ecclestone du Faur built his house Pibrac in Pibrac Avenue. The house was designed by John Horbury Hunt, a Canadian architect who settled in Australia and favoured the Arts and Crafts style, as well as the North American Shingle style, which he introduced to Australia. Later alterations were carried out by B.J. Waterhouse. The house is composed predominantly of timber, with extensive use of timber shingles, on a sandstone base. It is considered a good example of Hunt's work and is listed on the Register of the National Estate.

Cheddington, the oldest home in established Hastings Road, is also attributed to Horbury Hunt, of brick and slate, with characteristic shingling.

Wirepe, designed by M.B. Halligan for architect Walter Traill, used deep verandahs and high ceilings to elicit a homestead atmosphere, with fine corbelled chimneys and cedar shingles. The brickwork is of Colonial Bond design, and the house sits at the heart of the Ku-ring-gai heritage precinct on Hastings Road.

Upton Grey (now Kooyong) was built in 1894 to a John Sulman design; its English features are a local landmark. Across the century it has served as a government social services home, a CSIRO field station, and a boarding house for Knox Grammar School. It is now in private hands and retains features replicated at Sulman's important Ingleholme.

As all North Shore suburbs with aboriginal names, Warrawee was the name of a railway station which became attached to the surrounding suburb. Warrawee had developed in the 1900s as an exclusive residential district with no shops, offices, post office, public school, churches or through roads. All the blocks were kept to between one and four acres and the form of houses tightly controlled. Joseph Beresford Grant used his money to guarantee the exclusiveness of the development. The architect William Hardy Wilson built his home, Purulia, in Fox Valley Road in 1913. The house was relatively unusual at the time, but became a significant influence over the years. It is heritage-listed.


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