3 bedroom terraced house for sale
Key information
Features and description
- 1259sqft
- Two receptions
- Three double bedrooms
- Three storeys
- Generous 85ft x 19ft gardens
- Backing onto Linear Park
- Residents permit parking
- Retained character
- First floor bathroom
- Dual aspect kitchen
Backing onto the Linear Park and moments from Windsor Bridge yet quietly tucked away in this family friendly Oldfield Park road with a generous level 85ft x 19ft west facing garden and plenty of immaculately presented accommodation over three storeys. A 1259sqft late Victorian terrace of a grander size than many in the suburb and enjoying superbly high ceilings to enhance the feeling of space.
Two original receptions, W.C and a beautifully bright kitchen on the ground floor. Three double bedrooms and bathroom arranged over the upper two storeys. Retained features carefully conserved alongside all expected modern conveniences.
Ideally placed for city access and commuter routes or a short walk through to Brook Road for Oldfield station and Moorland Rd shops.
EPC rating D
Council tax band C
Tenure Freehold
Rooms
Accommodation
Ground floor entrance hall, bayed front sitting room, dining room, W.C and rear dual aspect kitchen. First floor houses two double bedrooms and bathroom. Second floor loft conversion adds a further double bedroom.
External Amenities
West facing 85ft x 19ft rear gardens with deck, lawns, beds and borders. Mature trees and shrubs, veg and fruit beds, gated rear pedestrian access onto the Linear Park. 26ft x 4ft timber shed divided into three compartments.
Location
Tucked away seconds from Windsor Bridge/Lower Bristol Rd amenities and commuter routes. Backing onto the Linear Park. 0.3miles to Moorland Road/Oldfield Park station. 1.2miles to the city centre (Guildhall). On street parking is permit controlled.
Agents Notes
Constructed from the mid 1890s, Bellotts Road was likely named after Thomas Bellott, the household steward to Queen Elizabeth , who in 1609 endowed a hospital in Bath in Bell-tree Lane (now Beau Street) for "the reception of twelve of the poorest strangers who should come to Bath for the benefit of the waters". Mr Bellott also paid for the construction of the Queens Bath in 1597.
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