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Front
Front
Paddocks
£1,850,000
Added > 14 days

4 bedroom equestrian property for sale

Hogshaw, Buckingham, Buckinghamshire, MK18
Study
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Equestrian property
4 bed
3 bath
5,712 sq ft / 531 sq m

Key information

Tenure: Freehold
Council tax: Band G
Water: Ask agent
Heating: Ask agent
Electricity: Ask agent
Sewerage: Ask agent
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Property description & features

  • Tenure: Freehold
  • A 19th Century detached equestrian farmhouse
  • Four double bedrooms, two en suites, family bathroom
  • Kitchen/breakfast room, Utility/cloakroom
  • Five reception rooms, boot room
  • Detached one bedroom annexe
  • 5.63 Acres, additional 7.19 acres by separate negotiation
  • Barn/stables, 164 ft. by 82 ft. manège
  • Gated access, triple carport, garage/workshop
A detached period equestrian property with gardens, paddocks, a barn/stable block and a manège, a separate annexe and a detached triple carport and garage with driveway parking surrounded by open countryside. The house has approx. 2,981 sq. ft. of accommodation arranged over two floors with a cellar. The ground floor has an original entrance porch and etched glass front door, but is currently entered through the back via a new entrance with a boot room and a glazed reception hall. This hall accesses the open plan kitchen/breakfast and dining/family area, or opens into the hall which accesses the utility/cloakroom, the morning room, the sitting room, and the study. At the end of the hall is the formal front door. The staircase in the hall has a door to the cellar beneath, and rises to the upstairs landing, which accesses the four first floor double bedrooms, two of which have en suite shower rooms, and the family bathroom. Surrounded by its own land, Hogshaw Farmhouse also has a courtyard garden and a further garden at the front laid to lawn.

Rooms

Design and Specification
Constructed of brick under a slate roof, this early 19th-century property was built as a foursquare, double-fronted working farmhouse, set in its own farmland in the Aylesbury Vale, a few miles from local villages. It takes its name from one of two ancient nearby settlements, Hogshaw and Fulbrook, both lost before the 17th century. Careful to retain the integrity of the original building, the current owners have conserved and restored the fabric of the farmhouse, emphasising the elegance of room proportions, and replacing lost features such as fireplaces, cornicing and skirting boards, refitting sash windows with shutters, and relaying wooden floors. The result is a contemporary and practical family home with over five acres of surrounding paddocks with accompanying equestrian facilities. Also with an agricultural heritage, is an adjacent brick-built drying barn, which has been restored and repurposed as a one bedroom annexe, behind which is the triple carport and garage (truncated)

Boot Room, Reception Hall, Hall and Cellar
The current owners have added a new entrance to the house. This comprises a brick-built space with a pitched slate roof, a glazed gable, a window and a wooden entrance door; a second area has a pitched, glazed roof and floor-to-ceiling glass panels. Internally, this area is bisected by a partial wall on the left of the entrance door, which encloses the tile-floored boot room (with a built-in coat cupboard), and a door to the reception hall. Due to the inclusion of glass, the reception hall is light. It has wooden floor boards and a built-in cupboard housing a fridge/freezer. A door from the reception hall accesses the hall, which has the formal front door and the staircase to the first floor. Under the staircase, a door opens to stone steps leading to the cellar, with a quarry tiled floor and window. Doors off the hall access the reception rooms, the kitchen area, and the utility/cloakroom. From the reception hall, a walk-through with a reclaimed lintel, also accesses the (truncated)

Kitchen/Breakfast Area
Accessed from the hall or from the reception hall, the open plan kitchen/breakfast area has a Travertine stone tiled floor and, like the entrance hall and boot room, underfloor heating. Once the 19th-century dairy, the kitchen has an oil-fired Aga set into a chimney breast with a wooden mantel and a tiled back. There is a range of hand-made wooden painted base and wall units (matching the cupboard in the reception hall), some of which are glazed, a plate rack and a pantry cupboard. Under a sash window, the marble worksurface has an inset double butler’s sink with a hot and cold filtered water tap and an InSinkErator. The same marble infills the shape created by a 90 degree curved oak breakfast bar, which has wine storage below, an inset induction hob and seating. Integrated appliances include a separate fridge and freezer, a dishwasher, and an oven (all Hotpoint).

Dining/Family Area
Another walk-through with a reclaimed lintel, accesses the new dining/family area. The room has the same Travertine floor and a vaulted roof with exposed structural timbers. There is a bay with floor-to-ceiling windows, a glazed gable and double French doors (all Idigbo hardwood) opening onto a terrace overlooking the front. The end wall has a modern exposed brick inglenook fireplace with a reclaimed lintel and an inset Stovax wood burner on a stone hearth. In the alcoves flanking the chimney breast, are built-in oak, glazed cupboards with drawers underneath.

Utility/Cloakroom
The utility/cloakroom has floor-to-ceiling cupboards which house the hot water tank and the Worcester boiler; there is also hanging space and an airing cupboard. There is a marble worksurface with an integrated Samsung washing machine and a Bosch tumble dryer below. On the opposite wall is a white Victorian pedestal basin and a WC with a traditional high cistern. The floor and walls have porcelain marble effect tiles.

Sitting Room, Morning Room and Study
On each side of the front door, with doors opposite one another in front of the staircase, the two reception rooms are double aspect with fireplace surrounds and stone hearths. The sitting room has two full-sized sash windows, the morning room has a full-sized sash window over the front and a smaller window at the side with panelling beneath. (Both rooms have window shutters.) The morning room fireplace has panelling above the mantel to the cornice and a Victorian column radiator. At the other end of the hall, by the cellar door, is a door to the study. Almost square in plan like the other two reception rooms, the study has a dado rail and a modern brick open fireplace with a herringbone brick hearth. Floor-to-ceiling shelving has been built into the alcoves beside the chimney breast, on one side these shelves have glazed louvred doors.

First Floor
The original panelled flight of stairs rises from the wooden floorboarded hall near the formal front door. The straight staircase has a turned painted newel post and turned balusters, the steps are painted wood with traditional brass rods holding down the runner. All three bedrooms and the family bathroom are accessed from the first-floor galleried landing which runs from the front to the back of the house, with a sash window at each end. The rooms have moulded skirting boards and panelled doors with moulded frames.

Principal Bedroom, En Suite Shower Room
With such a regular plan, the principal bedroom resembles the morning room below, with one sash window overlooking the front and a smaller one to the side. It has a stone fireplace with a wooden mantelpiece and a column radiator. This bedroom has window shutters and a deep door with a panelled recess into an en suite shower room with porcelain marble effect tiles on the floor and walls and an obscure window to the side. There is a traditional WC with a high cistern, a corner shower and a round stone basin on a painted wooden cabinet.

Bedrooms Two, En Suite Bathroom and Family Bathroom
Bedroom two has a sash window, the lower half obscured, overlooking the side and a three piece en suite shower room with a WC, a corner shower and a pedestal basin. Ceramic tiles are on the walls and floor. The family bathroom, used by bedrooms three and four, has ceramic floor tiles and tongue-and-groove panelled walls to dado height and around the panelled bath which has a hand-held shower fitting. There is a WC, a pedestal basin and a heated towel rail as well as loft access in the ceiling.

Bedrooms Three and Four
Like the sitting room beneath, bedroom three is nearly square and double aspect with sash windows overlooking the front and side and a reclaimed column radiator. The plan of bedroom four again resembles the study below. Nearly square, it has a sash window with shutters overlooking the side and a radiator with a cover. There are two sets of built-in floor-to-ceiling painted wooden wardrobes with double doors

Annexe
The old grain dryer, now converted to an annexe known as Digby’s Brew House, has been painstakingly restored and, like the farmhouse, there is a new slate roof and the brickwork has been repointed. Access to the slate-floored ground floor is via a wooden door with a glazed panel. The triple aspect sitting area is open plan to a dining area (with room for a table seating six), and the kitchen. There are base and wall units and a granite worksurface with an inset butler’s sink. Integrated appliances include a Hotpoint double oven with an induction hob and an extractor above, a washing machine and a Neff dishwasher. French doors in the sitting area access a paved outside space and there is a brick fireplace with a two-sided wood burning stove. A brick arch on one side of the fireplace accesses a staircase, an arch on the other side leads to the dining/kitchen area. The wrought iron and wooden staircase rises to a bedroom with a vaulted roof, exposed timbers and a window (truncated)

Outside
A turning off the Clayton Road accesses a stone chipped driveway that curves round the back of the stable block and reaches the enclosed area in front of the annexe. The same turning has the option of an electronically operated set of gates that open to the farmhouse drive, which curves past a statue of a wild boar, round the paddock and alongside the gardens, leading to the gravelled parking area in front of the garages.

Gardens
In front of the new entrance at the side of the house, is a paved outside seating area. Accessed through an arch in a brick wall opposite the garaging is a courtyard garden which can also be accessed from the French doors in the seating/dining area and is overlooked by the kitchen window. This area is paved and enclosed with established shrub borders. Beyond the courtyard adjacent to the house, is a gravelled area with an enclosed oil tank. The garden at the front and other side of the house is mainly laid to lawn with established trees and is enclosed by fencing with mature shrub borders, indigenous or hornbeam hedging, punctuated by immature pear trees.

Barn/Stable Block and Paddocks
The three-year-old timber clad steel barn, with a pitched roof, was built as a stable block and now only needs completion. It is accessed from the farmhouse drive and has a sliding door in the gable end and four stable doors along the 50 ft. length. There are transparent panels in the corrugated roof, a concrete floor, and water and electricity connected. Directly in front of the stable doors are two turnout pens enclosed by post and rail fencing. In front of the turnout pens, closer to the house, is a 164 ft. by 82 ft. manège with silica sand and turf float. Between the manège and the house are three paddocks enclosed by post and rail fencing accessed by various farm gates off the drive. Behind the stable block and in a strip on the right, are larger paddocks, all enclosed by hedges or post and rail fencing, and fulfilling the 5.63 acreage. All the paddocks (and the Quainton Hills beyond), can be seen from the farmhouse.

Triple Carport and Garage
Behind the annexe, enclosed by wooden fencing, are the wooden framed carports, which resemble an agricultural barn with weatherboarding, a clock gable, and a slate roof. There are three open bays with vertical wooden piers on stone blocks with arched braces and gravelled floors. At the end there is an enclosed bay/workshop with an electrically operated roller door, a concrete floor, and an extended back area with a corrugated roof with a transparent panel for natural light. Water and electricity are connected.

Locality
The property is surrounded by countryside with a network of bridlepaths easily accessible. It is located in the Aylesbury Vale between East Claydon and Quainton, which is about 4.5 miles away (about 10 minutes’ drive) and has a Church of England school, a village store, tennis courts, a playground, a windmill, a church and The George and Dragon public house and tea room. North Marston village is about 8 minutes’ drive or 45 minutes’ walk across the fields and has a community shop, a Church of England Primary school rated good by Ofsted, and a pub, The Pilgrim, which was rated as a best local restaurant in the Good Food Guide. The property is also only 11 minutes’ drive from amenities in the market town of Winslow which include a range of shops, cafes and restaurants, and a farmers’ market on Wednesdays. A new station on the east west rail line is being constructed in Winslow and is expected to open in 2024. A wider range of facilities are available in Aylesbury (10 (truncated)

Places of interest

    Michael Graham estate agents has been established for over 50 years and is proud to offer a distinctive image of quality and exemplary personal service for home buyers, sellers, landlords and tenants. We specialise in the most desirable town, country and equestrian properties across 8 counties. With 15 offices across the regions including offices in Kensington & Chelsea and St James’s, we are perfectly positioned to target home buyers everywhere, including Londoners looking for a home outside the capital. At Michael Graham, we go further to sell your home. We are proud of the many positive reviews we have received from hundreds of our present and past home sellers. Such reviews exemplify the reasons why home sellers continue to choose Michael Graham Estate Agents to sell their homes..

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