4 bedroom detached house for sale
Key information
Features and description
- 1439sqft
- Four bedrooms
- Three receptions
- Double garage & driveway
- Detached
- Corner plot rear gardens
- Conservatory
- Two bathrooms & cloakroom
- Close to bus routes and village shops
- Double glazing & GCH
Offering 1439sqft of space over two floors, a double garage with extra large driveway and beautifully landscaped gardens to enjoy from the rear conservatory - this 1995 built detached four bedroom family home sits in a convenient position at the west end of the village.
Plenty of space on offer with a full depth 20ft10 x 11ft7 sitting room leading to conservatory and garden, a separate dining room, kitchen with attached utility, four bedrooms (three of which are doubles), bathroom, further ensuite shower room and ground floor cloakroom.
35ft x 48ft rear gardens about to burst with spring colour and an adjacent double garage with four car driveway. Double glazing and GCH.
EPC rating D
Council tax band E
Tenure Freehold
Rooms
Accommodation
Ground floor porch and hall with W.C off, dual aspect sitting room leading to conservatory, dining room and kitchen with attached utility. First floor houses four bedrooms, bathroom and an ensuite shower room.
External Amenities
Rear garden - 35ft x 48ft max - beautifully landscaped corner plot gardens with gravelled entertaining areas, lawn, raised paved sun terrace, beds and borders. Fences to side and rear. Gated side access to parking.
Double garage - 17ft2 x 16ft10 internal measurements - light and power, two garage doors, storage space above rafters.
Driveway - parking for at least four cars.
Location
Wellow Mead is located on the western edge of the village with access out onto the bypass or central village amenities (0.8miles) via Bath Road. Connectivity to Bath (7.9miles to the city centre) is excellent via the A367 with frequent bus services. Peasedown offers a wide range of local amenities including pre-school and primary school, doctors’ surgery, sports clubs (football and cricket), a community library, church and a couple of public houses.
Agents Notes
Although the site of habitation from the Iron Age onwards, with a medieval village at Eckweek, the village of Peasedown primarily dates from the opening of the Braysdown colliery in 1845. Peasedown grew from a scattering of cottages around the Red Post/Bath Road in order to house the workforce of the six local North Somerset Coalfield pits and two more modern phases of extensive development in the 1950s and 1990s have seen it grow into the one of the largest villages in Somerset.
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