“It’s a deeply personal project for us…this is our
forever home.”
The randy property developer DJ Fisher, once a pro
surfer but now better know for techno anthems celebrating lube and
pussy juice and shaved babylike snatches, has revealed an
artist’s impression of his luxury $50 million Gold Coast tower.
His eight-storey tower on Jefferson Lane in Palm Beach is called
Pescado, the Spanish word for fish, and has six full-floor units
plus the big ol’ four-bed penthouse with its own rooftop terrace
which Fisher will live in with his wife Chloe and chillun,
one-year-old Bobbi.
For years, DJ Fisher, who turns forty in November, had been
quietly buying up exceptional pieces of beachfront land at Palm
Beach on Queensland’s Gold Coast. In 2020, he spent $A2.1 million
for a 4000 square foot parcel and followed that up when he bought
the neighbouring block three years later for $A3.1 mill.
“After weeks on the road, all I can think about is getting home,
(and) that feeling of calm, of being fully present, is what we want
to bring to Pescado,” DJ Fisher said.
“Palm Beach is part of my DNA, and that’s reflected in Pescado’s
design, which captures the natural rhythm and energy of the
coastline – it’s wavy and groovy, just like my music. We wanted to
create a space where people can entertain, bring their friends
over, and truly enjoy the coastal lifestyle. Pescado is not just
another luxury development – it’s a deeply personal project for us
(because) we’re not just building this place and moving on; this is
our forever home.”
The apartments, all of ‘em with three bedrooms, start at $5.25
mill.
The last time we saw DJ Fisher on these pages, a man with a
crown as barren as a mountaintop, was in December when he debuted a
classic Caesar look with short, horizontally straight cut
bangs.
The hair was courtesy of the wizardry of Brisbane-based hair
transplant expert Dr Rukshan Senanayake who plugged the hair into
Fisher’s crown with a painstaking 8369 hair grafts.
The operation, you’ll recall, is a gory ballet of scalp
manipulation where the surgeon slices into the donor area, usually
at the back of the head, extracting strips of hair-covered flesh
with a scalpel.
The harvested strip is then diced into tiny grafts, each one a
clump of follicles with bits of tissue clinging on. These grafts
are meticulously poked into bald patches with needle-like tools,
causing more bleeding and swelling.
The scalp is dotted with blood, scabs forming where each graft
has been implanted. The patient leaves with a head bandaged, hiding
the macabre scene underneath.