4 bedroom detached house for sale
Key information
Features and description
- Tenure: Freehold
- 4 5 bedrooms
- 2 3 reception rooms
- 2 bathrooms
- 0.37 acres
- Outbuildings
- Period
- Conservatory
- Detached
- Garden
- Terrace
Historically, the building is Grade II listed and sits within the village Conservation Area. There are four floors to the house that include what is a useful converted cellar (not quite full head height) as well as a number of period features that include exposed wooden beams and stone, an inglenook fireplace and even a well in the orangery topped with glass.
The accommodation is practical in both its proportion and the way it is arranged. There is a contemporary styled kitchen/breakfast room complete with an Aga, a large utility room and WC, a versatile orangery perfect for dining and then a dual level open plan sitting room that focuses on the ingle nook and fire.
On the first floor, there is a principal bedroom with an en-suite shower room, two bedrooms connected by a secret wardrobe (one leading into the other), a further double bedroom and a large family bathroom. The second floor is a vaulted attic bedroom that makes a charming child's bedroom.
Heading across the courtyard - extending to approximately 2,004 square feet, the barn is a substantial two storey brick building that offers a huge amount of opportunity. Internally, the building is divided into three parts that are currently used as storage, garaging, with some rooms converted (lit and insulated) to create comfortable workshop spaces. The barn lends itself to being converted to a variety of uses subject to the necessary consents.
A gravelled courtyard separates the barn from the house with the main area of garden located beyond the barn. Well-established with mature hedge and tree boundaries, the garden is very pretty and faces due south. Under the pergola, overlooking the garden, there is a delightful enclosed patio area, perfect for entertaining. In the opposite corner of the garden is a garden house that has been converted into a bar. This steps out onto a raised garden terrace overlooking the duck pond and enjoying the setting sun in the evenings.
Services: All mains services are connected.
Historic Listing: Grade II listed.
Situated just north of Cheltenham on the edge of the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, the well-patronised village of Bredon sits under the backdrop of the landmark Bredon Hill and overlooking the River Avon.
The village enjoys an excellent range of local amenities and recreational facilities that include public houses, village shop and Post Office, a highly regarded primary school, local surgery and pharmacy and of course, the church of St. Giles. Recreational facilities include a rugby club, football club, floodlit tennis courts and a bowls club.
The nearby historic riverside town of Tewkesbury and
Georgian market town of Pershore offer a wide range
of everyday amenities whilst the Regency spa town of
Cheltenham offers a comprehensive shopping experience, a variety of festivals including literature, food, science and jazz, not to mention National Hunt racing.
Excellent private schooling can be found at Cheltenham including Cheltenham Ladies College, Cheltenham College and Dean Close and in Worcestershire is King's, RGS, St Mary's, Malvern College and Bredon School to name but a few.
Bredon has excellent communication links to the larger centres of Birmingham and Bristol via the M5 (J9) which runs north and south and to Wales via the M50. There are mainline railway stations at Ashchurch and Pershore and international airports at Birmingham and Bristol.
Tewkesbury 3 miles, M5 junction 9 (N&S) 3 miles, Evesham 11 miles, Broadway 14 miles, Cheltenham 12 miles, Worcester 15 miles, Stratford-Upon-Avon 25 miles, Oxford 50 miles, (Distances approximate).