Gutted Northwood property worth twice as much after suspicious’ fire

The $24million waterfront property that was gutted in a ‘suspicious’ fire may now actually be worth more than twice as much in the wake of the blaze.

The 20-metre-high flames that destroyed the 1915 mansion at Northwood on Sydney’s exclusive lower north shore on Saturday unlocked significant value in the prestigious property, according to a local property expert.

The shock increase in the property’s value comes as arson investigators confirmed a fire accelerant was detected in the ruins.

Specialist Fire and Rescue NSW sniffer dogs picked up traces of an accelerant on Monday, a development certain to become a key part of investigations.

The property expert told Daily Mail Australia how the block’s value would now surge despite the destruction of the mansion on the Cliff Road site.  

‘Now the heritage house has gone up in smoke the property could be worth $60 million,’ said the expert, who declined to be named in order to speak candidly.

‘Now the heritage house (pictured) has gone up in smoke the property could be worth $60million,’ the property expert said

The heritage-listed house was itself the subject of a development battle, with neighbours including Mr Chen objecting to a Rossi family proposal that two houses be built on the tennis court

The heritage-listed house was itself the subject of a development battle, with neighbours including Mr Chen objecting to a Rossi family proposal that two houses be built on the tennis court

‘It is one of the largest properties with water frontage in Sydney and there was previously a development application to put two additional houses on the tennis court.

‘That DA was objected to by neighbours and didn’t go through. (But) there’s no heritage impediment any more.’

The prestigious street in the ‘old money’ suburb where the heritage-listed house is now just a charred wreck has been embroiled in neighbourhood property battles going back five years.

The gutted house was itself part of a failed development application by its long time owners – TV pioneer and travel business owner Mary Rossi and her husband Theo, who bought it in 1961, raised their ten children there and called it home for 60 years.

The Rossi clan recently sought to build two houses on their championship-size tennis court – a move that was opposed by neighbour and fund manager ‘Owen’ Ouyang Cheng and other locals.

The Rossi family and others then objected to Mr Chen’s own expansive rebuild plans of the home next door.

However, in a twist of fate, they ultimately sold him their own plantation-style home, some nine months before last Saturday’s fire. 

Pictured: The charred remains of 62 Cliff Rd in Northwood, in Sydney's lower North Shore

Pictured: The charred remains of 62 Cliff Rd in Northwood, in Sydney’s lower North Shore

Emma Rossi, who is second from the right, with other members of her family at the home in Northwood, which has been destroyed by fire

Emma Rossi, who is second from the right, with other members of her family at the home in Northwood, which has been destroyed by fire

One of the largest pieces of privately-owned land in the city, 62 Cliff Road, Northwood, boasts a wide, 46m water frontage. 

The almost 5000-square metre property juts down to the Lane Cove River and is bordered by federation-style properties.

It is an area that rarely sees hellish scenes and hears ‘bomb-like’ blasts such as those caused by the fire that engulfed the home about 11pm last Saturday. 

Pictured: An artist's impression of Mr Chen's proposal, next door to the heritage-listed 62 Cliff Road

Pictured: An artist’s impression of Mr Chen’s proposal, next door to the heritage-listed 62 Cliff Road

Lane Cove Council records reveal that it was the Rossi family’s 2017 DA which first caused disquiet in the leafy neighbourhood.

That year, the Rossis put in a DA to subdivide 62 Cliff Road, Northwood, compliant with its heritage features including the stone fences, columns, the roof and the verandah.

The Rossi’s DA proposed the existing subdivision of two allotments to three allotments, partial demolition of the existing dwelling and garages, and construction of an access driveway.

Daily Mail Australia understands that several neighbours objected to the proposal, including Owen Chen, whose next door house overlooked the tennis court where two dwellings were proposed. 

Theo and Mary Rossi, the TV and travel pioneer, raised ten children in their family home at Northwood, bought in 1961 and lived in for 60 years

Theo and Mary Rossi, the TV and travel pioneer, raised ten children in their family home at Northwood, bought in 1961 and lived in for 60 years

The massive property on just under 5000 square metres has a competition sixed tennis court on which the Rossis had proposed putting two other houses, while preserving the heritage family home

The massive property on just under 5000 square metres has a competition sixed tennis court on which the Rossis had proposed putting two other houses, while preserving the heritage family home

One objection against the DA, by an adjacent owner, expressed concerns about encroachment of native trees on the fenceline, and the elevated driveway overshadowing an outdoor barbecue area making it less private and more noisy.

The council refused the DA, principally because of the proposed driveway, which was essential for accessing the tennis court houses. The Rossis did not pursue the application further in the NSW Land & Environment Court. 

In 2020, Owen Chen – whose family is believed to own several houses in Northwood and the adjacent suburb of Longueville – made plans to develop his own property at 60 Cliff Road, Northwood.

In August last year,  Mr Chen lodged a DA with Lane Cove Council requesting permission to demolish his house and build a $5million four-storey mansion with a swimming pool.

The house had three linked pavilions, which Mr Chen told a neighbour were intended as separate living areas for different family members. 

Neighbours made objections about their compromised privacy, substantial loss of water views, excessive height and overly large bulk and scale.

TIMELINE OF A GRAND MANSION TURNED TO ASHES

1915: Mansion is built at 62 Cliff Road, Northwood in ‘plantation-style’ on a massive block of land almost an acre running down to a 46m wide frontage on the Lane Cove River

1961: Travel industry and tv pioneer Mary Rossi and her husband Theo buy the house and bring up their family of the children for over 50 years at the home

2010: Theo Rossi dies, but Mary aged in her mid-80s stays on, making sure she remains across modern TV trends with her grandchildren

2017: The Rossi family put in Development Application to Lane Cove council to subdivide the land into three, preserving the heritage-listed original home but having two new houses built on the tennis court

2018: After the council rejects the DA following objections from neighbours, the Rossis decide to retreat from their plans

August, 2021: Next door neighbour Owen Chen puts in a DA for his property at 60 Cliff Road to be demolished and a four storey house with pool constructed 

October 2021: After neighbours’ objections, the DA is rejected and Mr Chen stars making plans for a revised DA

November-December 2021: In the wake of the death of Mary Rossi, her children finally decide to place the house on the market and Mr Chen makes a winning offer of $24m and the house is settled before Christmas

July 2022: Mr Chen puts in a modified proposal of his DA, which also draws objections from neighbours

September 3, 2022: A fire breaks out at around 11pm at 62 Cliff Road and a series of explosions shatter the neighbourhood, with the mansion engulfed by flames and destroyed in under an hour

September  5, 2022: After accelerant detector dogs were brought in to the gutted property, police reveal they are treating the fire as ‘suspicious’ and that CCTV from a nearby property has caught a person fleeing the house just before the fire took hold

The interior of the Rossi family's beloved former home which was gutted by a fierce blaze last Saturday evening, which ripped through the house in a series of explosions

The interior of the Rossi family’s beloved former home which was gutted by a fierce blaze last Saturday evening, which ripped through the house in a series of explosions

In 2021, Mary Rossi died aged 95, leaving her estate to her children, whose lawyer made a submission to the council objecting to Mr Chen’s plans, citing impacts relating to building bulk, privacy and heritage.

The Rossi submission in fact warned that the tennis court, ‘an area of high activity’ could cause noise disturbance for the dwellers of the proposed development and ‘conflict with the neighbours’ peaceful enjoyment of their future home’.

The council rejected Mr Chen’s DA in October last year for reasons including size and bulk, and it having ‘an unacceptable impact on the heritage’ house next door. 

The Rossi siblings then put up their mother’s house for sale and Owen Chen and his wife Xiao Hong Li were the successful bidders, paying just over $24m and taking possession of it last December. 

Their new property, now destroyed, had panoramic views of the river, the city and Anzac Bridge, a huge tennis court, a large orchard, parklike gardens and lawns set into cascading sandstone terraces down to a boathouse with launching ramp. 

Neighbours say the house has not been lived in since being vacated by the Rossis, and that Mr Chen stayed occasionally in the next door house at 60 Cliff Road, with his beloved pet Rottweiler. 

After his DA was rejected last year, Mr Chen put in a modified proposal in July this year, which also drew objections from neighbours.

It is not suggested that any of the development applications referred to in this article had anything to do with the fire, simply that it is the recent history of the street. 

Last Saturday night as members of the Rossi clan were enjoying a family wedding, 62 Cliff Road, Northwood caught on fire. 

The house (pictured, before the fire) was built in 1915, bought in 1961 by the Rossi family and  and sold last year for $24million

The house (pictured, before the fire) was built in 1915, bought in 1961 by the Rossi family and  and sold last year for $24million

Firefighters raced to the burning mansion (pictured) at about 11pm on Saturday night could not save the home from being engulfed by flames

Firefighters raced to the burning mansion (pictured) at about 11pm on Saturday night could not save the home from being engulfed by flames

Neighbours heard an explosion at 10.55pm, followed by further blasts for the next 40 minutes as the old house began to burn fiercely and firefighters evacuated neighbouring residents and used a crane to try and douse the flames.

Emma Rossi, the ninth of Mary Rossi’s ten children, who lives nearby, said she had arrived home from the wedding and let the dog out when she became aware that her old family home was ablaze. 

Detectives from the North Shore Area Command and the Financial Crimes Squad’s arson unit were in the area on Monday, speaking to neighbours and trying to work out what happened.

Police believe the fire was deliberately lit. Daily Mail Australia is not suggesting Mr Chen or any of the persons referred to in this article had anything to do with the blaze at his house. 

Neighbours reported that the dog had been home alone at  60 Cliff Road at the time of the fire and was taken from the house for safety reasons and tethered to a fence five door up the street.  

Pictured: Mr Chen's house at 60 Cliff Road, Northwood. He lodged an application to demolish it and build a four-storey home with swimming pool

Pictured: Mr Chen’s house at 60 Cliff Road, Northwood. He lodged an application to demolish it and build a four-storey home with swimming pool

Police spoke with neighbours trying to get an idea of what happened and seized CCTV from a property which they said showed a figure fleeing the house just before the fire took hold

Police spoke with neighbours trying to get an idea of what happened and seized CCTV from a property which they said showed a figure fleeing the house just before the fire took hold

Despite the best efforts of two trucks and 50 firefighters, the house was gutted by the huge fire, one of the neighbours saying that by the time they got out on the street ‘you could se the house was gone’.

‘There were kids in their pyjamas, embers in the air and they had to get the hydrant from the top of the street going, but it was too late,’ the neighbour said.

Emma Rossi said that friends and former neighbours had been ringing her since the fire offering ‘their support and love’ and that they along with the Rossi family were grieving the house’s loss. 

‘It’s funny seeing it written up in the media as a mansion,’  said Ms Rossi, 55, a communications consultant.

‘We never thought of it as a mansion, it was just a home.

‘It was a home you walked in and just got this sense of love the minute you walked in the front door. It was palpable.

‘It’s the end of an era. That’s for sure.’ 

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