4 bedroom detached house
Key information
Features and description
Chalk Cottage is a particularly attractive detached cottage, constructed of stone, beneath a clay pantile roof and is set within extensive grounds of over half an acre. The property has a huge amount of character and benefits from surprisingly spacious and well-proportioned rooms, especially in view of its age. Understood to have started life as a row of three cottages, within the last few years, the property has been significantly upgraded with a tasteful scheme of interior decoration, new central heating boiler, a re-fitted house bathroom and a stylishly updated dining kitchen with beautiful cabinetry by Hovingham Interiors.
The accommodation amounts to approximately 2,100ft2 and briefly comprises porch, entrance hall, guest cloakroom, 23ft triple aspect sitting room with log burner, study/play room, garden room, 23ft dining kitchen, pantry/utility, boiler room and ground floor shower room. Upstairs there are four good-size bedrooms and new house bathroom. Given the space around the property there is endless scope to extend, if required. There is oil-fired central heating throughout, and double-glazed Yorkshire sliding sash windows contribute to the intrinsic charm and character of the cottage.
Enjoying a good level of privacy from the village street, the property is approached via electric wrought iron gates to a gravelled driveway which wraps around the cottage and leads to a double garage. The total plot amounts to approximately 0.6 acres to include extensive gardens, which are mostly laid to lawn and adjoin open countryside.
Located off the A64 at the foot of the Yorkshire Wolds with the Wolds Way nearby, Potter Brompton is a quiet rural hamlet within the parish of Ganton. It is within easy reach of the coastal resorts of Scarborough and Filey, 13 miles from Malton and 30 miles from York. Within Potter Brompton there is a farm bakery and shop, whilst at Ganton, only ½ a mile away there is a church, pub and prestigious championship golf course. Potter Brompton was listed in The Doomsday Book when it was known as Brunetona. After 1630 the village became part of the Ganton Estate and shortly after the Potter Brompton Manor House was demolished.
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