Issue 73 I The Property Development Review

THE PROPERTY DEVELOPMENT REVIEW

point when helping build the Skytower basement on Brisbane’s Margaret Street for Hutchinson Builders. “We lost money [on the job]. But it turned the business around, because the Tier 1 builders realised, this guy can actually concrete pump. Within three years, I was the number one concrete pumper on the Gold Coast and in Brisbane.” That hands-on construction experience gave Panettiere insight into builder operations that is more valuable now than ever. “My advice to everyone in this room is to go buy a pair of steel cap boots, because times have changed,” Panettiere said. “The days of sitting behind a desk managing trades are over.” Self-performing at Little Italy Panettiere continued to walk the talk, especially as construction prices continue to climb. “We’re starting to get prices that are ridiculous. Subbies are adding in all their overhead costs, putting 30 or 40 per cent margin on top, and also adding in clauses with escalation.” After receiving a $3 million quote for a four-level basement, self-performing the trades seemed not just logical but inevitable. Heading back to the auction house, Panettiere acquired six excavators, six truck and dogs, added a diesel mechanic to the ranks, and is on track to complete the dig for $1.5 million. Panettiere remains unfazed by labour challenges.

The Carr-designed scheme features the 30-storey Oro residential tower.

From sales to accidental concreter By this point, a major Brisbane concrete pumping company had gone bust, and Panettiere took his now-88-year-old father Filippo to an auction to pick up a small line pump but missed out. “My dad, being an old Italian, is pretty pissed. We stayed until the end of the auction, and up comes the 52m Putzmeister starting at $700,000,” Panettiere said. “Before I could say anything, my dad puts his hand up, and the hammer drops. I now own the biggest concrete pump in Australia.” With four repossessed pumps and a new acquisition, Panettiere approached the biggest operator in the country to offload them. “I go to [them] and I say, ‘Do you want them?’” Panettiere said. The concreter respectfully said no. But with some true Italian spavalderia, Panettiere warned on the way out that he could become a competitor. “He slammed the door in my face and told me to get out.

Panettiere Property Group's dreams of an Italian-inspired piazza are even closer to fruition.

“Everyone says to me, how are you going to get the guys? Easy, I’m going to pay them more than what they’re getting paid now, because at the end of the day, I don’t have to have margin on that trade. I can afford to pay these mid-Tier-1 rates. “And if you can self perform and hire directly, you’ll get your job done.” Panettiere and his family have sold their houses to live on site - a sign of just how much this project means to them. “The Italians have had a very strong influence in Brisbane. But for some strange reason, we’ve never had our own precinct - a place where you can have an espresso, a plate of pasta.” Soon, with the help of some steel toe caps, that will change.

So I go to work.” Walking the talk

That was perhaps an understatement. Panettiere hired the former employees of the collapsed Brisbane company and learnt everything he could about concreting, reaching a turning

The former working-class riverside suburb of Newstead is one of the best for multi-res, Panettiere said.

June / July 2026 – 51

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