Kostas Stamoulis; Personal information; Full name: Konstantinos Stamoulis: Date of birth 29 October 2000 (age 19) Place of birth: Patras, Greece: Height: 1.73 m (5 …

He sold the company in 2004 and later created a real estate and investment business. Harry has a net worth of approximately $459 million.

He’s also the founder of the Melbourne’s Hellenic Museum.The Stamoulis family’s worth is estimated at $540 million and derives from the refreshment company Gold Metal, founded by the ever memorable Spyros Stamoulis.

"In fact, Fishermans Bend was not one of the Liberals' election policies in 2010.In April, Labor planning minister Richard Wynne said he would "recast" plans for Fishermans Bend – a move he said reflected the high level of government, community and property industry concern about the project.But he now faces the difficult decision of how far to go given a string of approvals have already been granted and land values have been geared to the premium of high rise residential development.Mr Burnes is overseas and did not return calls or emails. A property developer has been convicted and fined $5000 for illegally cutting down a dozen trees on the site of his planned $20 million Toorak mansion according to a report in The Age. High rise development is allowed on the site and a permit for such development would dramatically increase the property's value. The company’s near future agenda also involves the development of a large residence compound on a total budget of $750 million.Moreover, Harry Stamoulis is the owner of 3XY Greek radio station, Hellas television channel and Ta Nea newspaper in Melbourne.The Stamoulis family also owns the island of Nausika (Oxia) in the Ionian Sea.Subscribe to our newsletter and you will receive updates about our new articles, activities and Greeks who are thriving everywhere, all around the globe.Συνεχίζοντας σε αυτό τον ιστότοπο αποδέχεστε την χρήση των cookies στη συσκευή σας όπως περιγράφεται στην πολιτική cookies. John Ayre is a shareholder of ULR Automotive, which donated $25,000 to the Liberals in 2013. Knight Frank's Gab Pascuzzi, Danny Clark and James Templeton marketed 18-22 Salmon Street. ONE of Melbourne's prominent Greek families has funded a new museum in the CBD.The Hellenic Museum was the dream of multimillionaire businessman Spiros Stamoulis, but he died in May last year.His family, including his property-developer son Harry Stamoulis, have carried on the project, quietly opening it in recent weeks in the heritage-listed Royal Mint building in William Street.On Monday, Labor MP John Pandazopoulos will open the museum's inaugural exhibition, It consists of photographs by journalist Garrie Hutchinson and Peter Ewer of monuments in Greece to World War II Australian soldiers who fought there.The Hellenic Museum is dedicated to the memory of Spiros Stamoulis' daughter, Nafsika, who died, aged 24, in Athens four years ago. So too has he refused to answer a specific questions about his actions.Instead he issued a written statement: "Melbourne is growing by nearly 2000 people every week and Fishermans Bend is a vital part of meeting these housing needs and that is why it was one of our election policies in 2010. Ms Stamoulis is a sister of Harry Stamoulis, who bought the former Baillieu family home at 39 St Georges Road and built a new mansion on the site. ‘‘The apartment has 360 degree views and you can watch the air show, Grand Prix, Moomba parade and hot air balloons rising over the city. The group has also developed the Vogue offices and stores compound of 30.000 square meters in the suburb of South Yarra in Melbourne. Harry Stamoulis is the Head of Stamoulis Property Group, founded by his father, and together with his sister Melina he currently runs the company. Agents estimate the current value of his Normanby Road property at more than $20 million. "He died of a broken heart," said the source.His family, including wife Helen and two surviving children, and six grandchildren continue to manage an extensive property portfolio across Melbourne, the Gold Coast and in Greece.The Stamoulis family's wealth was this year listed by Born in 1937, Spiros Stamoulis emigrated from Greece as a 12-year-old. He personally donated $13,500 in 2013-2014. Senior Liberal party figures and donors, including the party's federal treasurer, have reaped multi-million windfalls from the former Baillieu government's signature urban renewal project in inner Melbourne.An investigation into the controversial Fishermans Bend project has found Liberals' honorary treasurer Andrew Burnes is among a slew of party activists and donors who either bought into the renewal precinct before it was rezoned or were long-term property owners that pressed for redevelopment of the area.In July 2012, then planning minister Matthew Guy stunned the political and property worlds when he rezoned a massive 250 hectares of low-rise industrial South Melbourne and Port Melbourne to "capital city", effectively doubling the size of the Melbourne CBD.It was the most contentious decision by a Victorian planning minister for decades.The widely criticised move triggered a dramatic increase in land values and a development frenzy of 46 apartment towers – some reaching more than 60 storeys – that have been proposed or approved in the precinct since January 2014.In October 2014, CBRE commercial property director Mark Wizel​ estimated land values had increased up to 500 per cent since the rezoning.For sites where developers have won planning approval for high-rise towers, the increase is greater still.The biggest winners from the rezoning were those who already held property, or were in the process of buying into, Fishermans Bend.Among them is Liberal party honorary treasurer Andrew Burnes, a close friend of former Federal treasurer Joe Hockey.Mr Burnes and his travel company, Australian Outback Travel, donated at least $150,000 to the Liberals in the past 15 years, including $80,000 in the year 2013-2014.He paid just over $7 million for new offices for his business at Laconia House at 179 Normanby Road, near the West Gate freeway in March 2012, the most expensive of about 80 land acquisitions in Fishermans Bend in the 16-month period between the drawing of the boundaries and the July rezoning.