3 bedroom end of terrace house for sale
Key information
Features and description
- Tenure: Freehold
- End terrace
- 907sqft
- Three bedrooms
- Two open plan receptions
- Extended kitchen/breakfast room
- Enclosed rear garden
- Retained character
- Useful loft room
- Double glazing & GCH
- Bathroom & separate W.C
Rear extended, gloriously open plan and cleverly divided - this end terraced 907sqft character beauty looks out onto Brickfields parkland at the rear and is handily located just above the Two Tunnels cyclepath.
A wonderfully flowing ground floor with two open reception areas (and woodburner in pride of place) leading onto a bright full width kitchen/breakfast room and then out to the enclosed west facing rear garden. The first floor houses three bedrooms, a bathroom and separate WC thanks to some clever re-arrangement and there's even a useful loft room accessed via ladder.
Meticulously presented with double glazed timber sash windows, GCH via Worcester combi boiler, retained features & fireplaces and a handbuilt kitchen.
EPC rating D
Council tax band C
Tenure Freehold
Rooms
Accommodation
Ground floor hall, open plan sitting and dining rooms, kitchen side extended into breakfast room.
First floor houses three bedrooms, bathroom and separate W.C
14ft9 x 10ft7 max loft room accessed via pull down ladder from first floor landing.
External Amenities
18ft x 17ft west facing enclosed gardens - primarily paved with raised borders. Fences to side and rear, gated side access, glazed rear canopy, tap, side return storage area with lean to bike shed.
Location
Ideally located for Brickfields green space (directly behind the property across Victoria Close), Moorland Road shops (0.4miles), Two Tunnels walks (via Millmead Rd bridge) and Oldfield station. City centre 1.5miles northeast.
Agents Notes
Once called Bath Lane (when Lymore Avenue was Limer Lane), Dartmouth Avenue as we know it was built in several phases from 1905 onwards. The street grew up around the Victoria Brick and Tile Company (based on what is now the Brickfields), established in 1887 by Thomas May. In 1911, the occupations of the residents included six listed as labourers, two masons, a harness maker, a gamekeeper, four railway workers, a butcher and a baker (but no candlestick maker).
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