2 bedroom terraced house for sale
Key information
Features and description
- No chain
- Georgian cottage
- Two bedrooms
- Two open plan receptions
- West facing rear garden
- Full width extended kitchen
- Retained character
- Residents permit parking
- Double glazing & GCH
- Close to city & Oldfield Park amenities
A late Georgian artisans cottage over two storeys in a wonderfully convenient location for city access. Offered with no chain, superbly presented throughout, beautifully light and benefiting from a sheltered 30ft x 13ft west facing rear garden.
Two open plan receptions, full width kitchen and bathroom on the ground floor. Upstairs houses two bedrooms. Double glazing and GCH in situ.
Ideal first time buy, couples city base or even holiday investment.
Under a mile to the Guildhall in the city centre but also ideally placed for Moorland Rd and Oldfield station access. Permit parking on street.
EPC rating C
Council tax band C
Tenure Leasehold (999yr residue with 805yrs remaining, £2.50 per year ground rent). Please note freeholder willing to sell freehold to new owner for £250 + legal fees
Rooms
Accommodation
Ground floor hall, two open plan receptions, full width extended kitchen, rear lobby and bathroom.
First floor landing and two bedrooms.
External Amenities
Rear garden - 30ft x 13ft min plus side return. West facing with deck adjacent to property, gravelled terrace, shrub borders, mature apple trees and a shed. Walls and fences to side and rear. Tap.
Residents permit parking on street.
Location
Superbly located for city access - 0.8miles to the Guildhall or convenient for Moorland Rd shops and Oldfield Park station.
Agents Notes
Prior to the construction of the majority of the Oldfield Park suburb, Brougham Hayes was a cul de sac ending in the grounds of Crandale Nursery (next to the Somerset Certified Industrial Home for Boys – now Hayesfield Lower School). On 1882 Bath maps, the terrace was divided into two addresses – Twerton Hayes Buildings (south end) and Brougham Hayes Buildings (north end). Lorne Road (then called Lorne Terrace) ran behind with its own entrance onto the Lower Bristol Road, with Brougham Hayes Cottages and Brougham Hayes Terrace at the northern end of that street.
The buildings on Brougham Hayes were first occupied in the early 1830s.
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