Scott Cam has finally put his Gisborne home on the market after building it in 2022 alongside The Block: Tree Change contestants.
The lifestyle television presenter, 60, has asked for $4.1-$4.3million, which was the price guide set at last year’s auction, reported Realestate.com.au.
While most contestants failed to sell their Gisborne homes for that price last year, Scott appears confident his renovation will fly off the market for millions.
Regular Block bidder Frank Valentic predicts the media personality will have no problem finding a buyer for his circa-1866 home.
‘I think when [Scott] renovated it, it was very, very popular. I’d be surprised if it wasn’t popular again. It had the period style the other homes didn’t have,’ Frank said.
Scott Cam, 60, (pictured) has finally put his Gisborne home on the market after building it in 2022 alongside The Block: Tree Change contestants
He added that the home, which sits on 4.04ha, ‘looks like a real country cottage’ and was labelled ‘the best house’ on last year’s season of The Block.
Dubbed the Camalot, Scott’s house boasts a stunning fountain, a 3D-printed concrete cabana alongside the pool, and an outdoor kitchen with a pizza oven.
The four-bedroom home includes a massive kitchen with a reclaimed timber island bench and butcher’s block, two wine fridges and a large butler’s pantry.
The lifestyle television presenter has asked for $4.1-$4.3million, which was the price guide set at last year’s auction, reported Realestate.com.au
While most contestants failed to sell their Gisborne homes for that price last year, Scott appears confident his renovation will fly off the market for millions
A wraparound veranda and gorgeous established gardens will be the talk of potential buyers, as well as the separate home office and studio.
The Block Auction last year ended in disaster when only two houses managed to make it over the $4.3M reserve price.
Omar Slaimankhel and Ozman ‘Oz’ Abu Malik managed to net a record-breaking $1.6million profit for their home at the auction.
Regular Block bidder Frank Valentic predicts the media personality will have no problem finding a buyer for his circa-1866 home
Tom Calleja and Sarah-Jane Wilson barely made it over reserve, and Rachel and Ryan Carr passed their house in to negotiate a profit of just under $170,000.
Meanwhile, Sharon Johal and Ankur Dogra from House 3 and Dylan Adams and Jenny Heath from House 4 also passed in but they failed to find buyers for their homes.
Later, Sharon and Ankur sold their build for $4.25million to high-stakes bidder Adrian Portelli who raffled it off through his LMCT+ promotions business.
Dylan and Jenny had a less fortunate end, with their home selling months later to a private buyer for $180,000 less than the reserve price.
‘I think when [Scott] renovated it, it was very, very popular. I’d be surprised if it wasn’t popular again. It had the period style the other homes didn’t have,’ Frank said