Since 2018, the demand for shops for rent in Melbourne has increased due to international retailers setting their shops in the city. This change was brought on by the influx of people to Melbourne nationally and internationally. Owing to these encouraging changes, many retail business owners have relocated or opened a branch of their brand in Melbourne. Even experts are recommending renting shops in Melbourne for local and national retailers to boost their business and gain brand recognition. So, if you are interested too, have a look at these amazing properties. Ground Floor Retail /Office Space With Dwelling Rent this fantastic retail space in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs. It offers direct street access and has high footfall. The total land area is 245sqm with 100sqm lettable area with a retail area of 30sqm. There are 3 additional rooms. Amenities like a toilet, kitchen, and bathroom are available. The space is excellent for signage exposure. There is parking space in the rear. Location of this shop for rent in Melbourne is enviable, as it is minutes from Chadstone Shopping Centre and opposite Hughesdale train station. The quotes rent for this space is $29,000 per annum + GST + Outgoings. https://www.commercialproperty2sell.com.au/details/ground-floor-retail-office-space-with-dwelling.php Retail Opportunity In Chadstone! It is a rare leasing opportunity with a 75sqm retail space directly opposite Holmesglen Tafe in Chadstone. It is at a walking distance from Holmesglen train station. These factors make the space visible and have excellent footfall. The shop is on the street with an expansive shop front. It has an open-plan design making this space suitable for any retail business. What’s more, it has 3 x phase power, a kitchenette, toilet, and a rear yard. For retail usage, this shop for rent in Melbourne has Commercial 1 Zoning (C1Z). It is vacant at present and ready to move-in. The quoted rent is $34,000 p/a + GST + Outgoings. https://www.commercialproperty2sell.com.au/details/retail-opportunity-opposite-holmesglen-tafe.php Wrapping Up
Both these properties are lucrative opportunities. You can visit them for internal and external review anytime after fixing an apportionment. They are well-located, and the neighbourhoods are safe. These shops for rent in Melbourne are ideal for boosting any retail business. However, if you wish to explore more such options, you can look for them online. My favoured website is this one https://www.commercialproperty2sell.com.au/for-lease/vic/melbourne-western-suburbs/retail/. You can find numerous affordable shops for rent here and shortlist the ones that meet your location, space, and budget requirements. Make sure you weigh the pros & cons of each property before leasing.
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Uyghurs living in Australia are lobbying the Federal Government to provide urgent refugee protection through the creation of a special humanitarian visa.
Community representatives last week visited Canberra to meet with Government and Opposition MPs to outline their case, amid increasing international concern over China's treatment of the ethnic minority. The visit included a meeting with Liberal backbencher Andrew Hastie for assistance in making representations to Immigration Minister David Coleman. This week, the United States and more than 30 other countries condemned the country's "horrific campaign of repression" against the Uyghur people living in the western region of Xinjiang. Video footage also emerged of blindfolded Uyghurs, with shaved heads and in shackles, being herded by Chinese police. Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-09-27/australian-uyghurs-call-on-federal-government-for-protection/11541626 The Australian government is developing the next cybersecurity strategy to protect Australians from cyber threats. The current version was launched in 2016 and, while novel for its day, was largely underfunded when considering the task ahead. It’s now time to learn the lessons from that experience.
Every organisation uses technology—in service delivery, product development, manufacturing and a multitude of other instances. However, many organisations don’t fully appreciate how tech-heavy they actually are. One of the cybersecurity sector’s biggest issues is to get organisations to undertake basic risk management processes and develop an understanding of what technology means to them. It is there that the next strategy should focus. Getting corporate Australia to take ownership of detecting and deterring cyber attackers targeting their organisations is where the rubber needs to hit the road. There are many aspects of the online environment affecting Australian governments, the private sector, non-profits and individuals that could be covered in the 2020 strategy. However, it should focus on doing a few things very well. One of these is get corporate Australia to do the simple things first, and that starts with understanding the cyber risk and taking a strategic view. Read more: https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/cybersecurity-strategy-should-focus-on-corporate-australia/ Aaron Finch averaged fewer than 20 runs as a Test opener last summer, yet he considers his dream of a national recall still alive.
That may speak in volumes about his never-say-die attitude, but it paints a damning picture of Australia’s Test batting, too. It’s telling that the 32-year-old considered his Test career had “probably slipped away” from him in May, but now has eyes on one more run in the five-day game. Read more: https://www.foxsports.com.au/cricket/australia/cricket-australia-pakistan-test-series-sheffield-shield-201920-aaron-finch-says-his-dream-is-still-alive/news-story/69503c9f3f26fe1b3a0e9118b76c30b6 Scott Morrison signalled that Australia is unlikely to update its emissions reduction commitments under the Paris agreement before a speech to the UN in which he declared that the media was misrepresenting the country’s climate change record.
During a press conference before his UN speech at a recycling facility in Brooklyn, the prime minister said he wouldn’t characterise “misrepresentations” about Australia’s climate stance as fake news. But he suggested that negative media coverage fuelled criticism that was “completely false and completely misleading”. People expressed “prejudiced” views about Australia’s climate policy, he said – “Now where do they get their information from? Who knows, maybe they read it.” Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/sep/26/scott-morrison-says-australias-record-on-climate-change-misrepresented-by-media After a couple of weeks, I am moving out of my current rental place. With each passing day, my stress level is increasing because I am not sure how to clean the entire property properly and satisfy the landlord. On the other hand, my wife was always looking for some information or guidance on this topic. And she found one informative article that I am sharing here. In this article, the methods are practical and easy to follow. I must say, I am quite impressed with the strategies and would follow fort sure. If you are also looking for something similar, have a look.
https://www.bondcleaninginmelbourne.com.au/5-simple-tips-to-get-your-bond-back-at-the-end-of-tenancy/ Beyond a chain link fence littered with abandoned trolleys, seagulls swoop and ships the size of small cities stacked high with containers dock at Port Melbourne.
It's here that Joe Riordan performs his six-weekly ritual: peering into a sentinel bee hive for signs of danger. That danger is the varroa mite: a tiny parasite which could threaten our beekeeping industry and the farmers that rely on them. Australia is the last inhabited continent on Earth that is free of the mite, which has crippled honey bees everywhere it has taken hold. For apiarists like Joe, and urban and commercial beekeepers, the threat is real — but they're preparing to meet it head on. 'The risk is getting higher and higher' It was just over a year ago that Australia's bee biosecurity program was set on red alert: a ship captain arriving from the United States reported dead bees on board. Joe and the team at Agriculture Victoria sprang into action, and found varroa mite inside a crate. "This is the day, it's happened," Joe recalls. Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-09-18/the-beekeepers-ready-to-fight-varroa-mite-in-australia/11505370 The contract standoff between Collingwood and Brodie Grundy is only getting messier.
Plus Melbourne has been urged to ignore its 2019 trade targets and save up for a big fish in 2020. HUGE CONTRACT GAP DRIVING GRUNDY IMPASSE Collingwood’s contract standoff with Brodie Grundy isn’t getting any closer to a resolution, reports Herald Sun journalist Sam Edmund. Grundy is contracted until the end of next season but the 25-year-old is keen to gain some long-term security with a seven-year extension. Read more: https://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/afl-trades-magpies-in-messy-standoff-with-brodie-grundy-dees-must-go-all-in-on-lachie-whitfield/news-story/660b6075a8843c8b5caefcf4d32fd283 It's not just Sledgehammer Games that's taking root in Australia. This morning we can reveal that the creative genius behind Knights of the Old Republic's HK-47, the lead writer on Dragon Age: Origins and the author behind Dragon Age's prequel books, David Gaider, is opening up a new studio in Melbourne with the help of GX Australia co-director and Beamdog alumni Liam Esler.
The studio will be called Summerfall Studios and and will be creating an "illustrated character-driven adventure", which will be officially unveiled during Melbourne International Games Week during the Friday of PAX Australia (October 11-13). Read more: https://www.kotaku.com.au/2019/09/biowares-former-lead-writer-is-starting-an-australian-studio/ Iranian authorities have now confirmed the nation is detaining three Australians, with one of them accused of spying for a third country.
The details are contained in a brief report from the semi-official Fars news agency, which contains the first information from within Iran about the detention of three Australians. It quotes an Iranian judiciary official saying two Australian travel bloggers were arrested after taking pictures in military areas, and says the third Australian — presumably Kylie Moore-Gilbert — was detained for allegedly spying for a third country. "The news is true and there are two dossiers and bills of indictments have been issued for both cases," judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili said. The ABC understands Dr Moore-Gilbert was arrested in the second half of last year after travelling to Iran to attend a course in the city of Qom, about two hours' drive from Tehran. She had official permission and the correct visas to attend that course. "The act of espionage was not for the native country of the person but for another country," Mr Esmaili said. It had been reported that Dr Moore-Gilbert had been convicted and sentenced to 10 years' jail, but a spokesman for Iran's judiciary said "the court will decide whether this person is guilty or not". Read more: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-09-17/iranian-authorities-confirm-detention-of-three-australians/11522082 |
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