Restaurant for sale
Property description & features
Railway Inn and Restaurant. Lindal in Furness. LA120LL
Here is a great opportunity to acquire a truly beautifully fitted and presented Pub and Restaurant of such a reasonable size it could easily be operated to a team of just 2 persons. It occupies a good location in the Furness village of Lindal, being only a few miles from the industrial centre of Barrow (The Nuclear Submarine building capital of the world).and the charming Market Town of Ulverston.
The Restaurant has 30 covers, and the bar itself is particularly attractive with a cast iron woodburner. Outside is a delightful Garden Area. The Kitchen is fully equipped, of course, and the Cellar runs the full length of the property.
Upstairs, there are 4 Bedrooms ( 3 doubles and 1 single), a delightful Bathroom and a cosy Lounge
The Property is or sale on teh retirement of the present Owners, and so it includes all the fixtures and fittings ready for immediate operation by the new Owners.
Services are all “Mains”, it is fully Double Glazed and has a gas-fired Central Heating System.
It should be noted that immediately adjacent to The Railway Inn and Restaurant is a superior housing estate currently in the course of construction.
Please examine the photographs to see what a lovely property this is.
A great opportunity to enter the lucrative Pub and Restaurant business.
The Railway Inn and Restaurant is truly Tickety Boo!
Approximate Dimensions;
Restaurant; 4.00m x 7.25m. Bar Area; 4.00m x 7.45m. Kitchen; 3.95m x 3.50m. Bedrrom1; 2.96m x 3.66m. Lounge; 3.95m x 3.50m. Bedroom 2; 3.66m x 2.62m. Bedroom 3; 3.00m x 3.90m. Bedroom 4 ; 1.75m x 2.65m. Bathroom; 2.28m x 2.65m
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Place names in Cumbria arise from a variety of languages and periods of history. These include Old English, spoken by the Anglo-Saxons from the 6th to 12th centuries, and Old Norse, spoken by the Norwegians who colonised north west England from the 9th to the 12th centuries.
The name Lindal (originally Lindale) is probably of Norse origin, derived from 'Linden', an alternative name for a Lime tree, and 'dale' meaning valley, ie valley of Lime trees. However, it is also possible that the name is of Celtic origin, meaning village around a deep pond.
Lindal and Marton are in an area that was once known as 'Dalton and Plain Furness'. This was a fertile land, and considerable-sized plots were brought into cultivation by the monks, using the latest scientific techniques. Both villages exhibit the ancient pattern of settlements in such areas, originally concentrated around tarns. Marton was recorded as a grange (a farm of about 100 acres) belonging to Furness Abbey in 1190. Lindal-in-Furness was recorded as a grange of Furness Abbey in 1220, and it is known that iron ore mining took place in the Lindal Moor area at that time. There are references to iron mining at Marton in 1396, when William de Merton granted rights to the Abbott and monks of Furness Abbey to freely dig for minerals in his lands at Merton. Furness Abbey was dissolved in 1537, and its lands were annexed to the Duchy of Lancaster by Act of Parliament in 1540.
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