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Harcourts Ascot face floods along with clients

It took less than an hour for Harcourts Ascot to go from being one of the most stylish offices in the group to being a metre under water.

At 12pm on Sunday, 27 February, the agency in Brisbaneโ€™s north east looked pristine, but by 1pm water from the nearby Brisbane River was lapping at the top of the agentsโ€™ desks.

Harcourts Ascot Director Jacqui Bartholomeusz said she was alerted to the rapidly unfolding crisis by her son.

โ€œWe have a coffee cart in our courtyard area and my son was sitting there having coffee at 12pm and then at 1pm the coffee man called him and said, โ€˜Thereโ€™s a metre of water through the officeโ€™,โ€ she said.

โ€œEverything was perfectly OK at 12pm but by 1pm it was very different.

โ€œThe trouble was, the water came down the street and took all of the bark from the park, which then blocked up all the drains.

โ€œOnce that was cleared the water disappeared as quickly as it came, but the damage was done.

โ€œWe had a metre of water right through the shop, up to the top of the desk.โ€

But thereโ€™s nothing like a crisis to bring out the best in people, and Jacqui said within minutes the team and their extended families, along with some clients, had arrived to start the clean-up.

She said it was a shock to see the office, which only opened in 2020, in such a state, given it had not long ago won the Office Presentation of the Year award for Harcourts.

โ€œNow weโ€™ve got the challenge in front of us to win that award twice,โ€ Ms Bartholomeusz said with optimism.

โ€œWe got the whole place gutted and the carpet pulled up and everything done by Sunday afternoon, which I think has saved our walls and an awful extra lot of work.โ€

Ms Bartholomeusz said her other offices at Clayfield, Nundah and Banyo were all unaffected and phones had been diverted to Clayfield, while extra office space had been set up at that agency too.

โ€œThereโ€™s been zero business interruption,โ€ she said.

โ€œWe knew that come Monday, everything would have to be about all of our tenants and owners, so thatโ€™s why getting everything else done on Sunday was so important.โ€

The Harcourts Ascot team banded together to clean up the flooded office. Picture: Harcourts Ascot.

Ms Bartholomeusz said about 120 of the agencyโ€™s rental properties had been flood affected and now the property managers were fielding calls about damages, repairs, and finding some tenants new homes.

But she said the number one task was to โ€œlisten to peopleโ€.

โ€œThatโ€™s our top priority, to listen to people,โ€ she said.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got extra staff in and part-time staff are working full-time to field all of the calls, to listen to people and to get back to people.

โ€œCommunication is so important, itโ€™s the tenantโ€™s home and they are anxious about wet carpet and all of those sorts of things.

โ€œWeโ€™re getting dryers in and we have a fantastic band of tradespeople that we work with that are doing an amazing amount of work.โ€

But Ms Bartholomeusz said there was one awful situation she could do little to change and yet it still weighs heavily on her mind.

โ€œItโ€™s the heartbreak of only being able to lease one property to one person and to have five families that have all lost their homes,โ€ she explained.

โ€œThey all want that one property and we can only give it away once.

โ€œThatโ€™s something I had forgotten from the last Brisbane floods, but Iโ€™ve remembered it very quickly because there are people with tears in their eyes because we didnโ€™t give them a property.

โ€œAll of the applications are equally deserving but literally only one family can have it.โ€

Ms Bartholomeusz said she expected there to be more cases like that in the coming days, especially considering there were already low vacancy rates.

โ€œThatโ€™s the hardest part, you just want to help everyone and thereโ€™s only so many properties available,โ€ she said.

โ€œOn top of that so many investment properties were sold over the past 12 months so there is going to be a real struggle for appropriate housing, especially in areas with schools and where families live.โ€

Ms Bartholomeusz said the ramifications of the floods would be felt for a while yet. She said some tenants had been unable to vacate on time as roads were cut, while others were unable to move in for the same reasons.

She said the key in the coming days and weeks would be communication, patience and understanding as property managers, landlords and tenants worked together.

Ms Bartholomeusz paid homage to her teamโ€™s dedication, especially given some of them had suffered flood damage at home as well.

โ€œIโ€™ve also had messages from other Harcourts business owners from Mackay to the Gold Coast offering to get on the phones or log into our system to help us,โ€ she said.

โ€œThe support you feel in times like this is amazing.โ€

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Kylie Dulhunty

Former Elite Agent Editor Kylie Dulhunty is a freelance content producer for the Elite Agent audience, leveraging her extensive copywriting and real estate expertise.