Key features
Full description
Purpose built one bedroom first floor flat in the sought after "Little Midhurst" development. The flat offers a sitting/dining room, double bedroom with full length built in wardrobes, newly refurbished bathroom and access to a loft. Outside there is a communal garden and unallocated residents parking..
Barlavington Way is a quiet no through road on the southern outskirts of town in the sought after development of Little Midhurst. The picturesque market town of Midhurst benefits from a variety of shopping facilities in addition to Hotels, Pubs and Restaurants.
EPC = C
Council Tax Band = B
MATERIAL INFORMATION:
Type of Property - First Floor Flat
Construction - Brick with Pitched Roof
Rooms - Floor Plan Available
Utility Information - Mains Electricity
Sewerage - Mains
Heating - Gas Central Heating
Broadband - TBC (Download speed available from Ofcom or your provider)
Mobile Reception - Multiple Networks Available (Information available from Ofcom)
Parking - Off road parking
Building Safety - N/A
Restrictions - N/A
Rights and Easements - N/A
Flood Risk - Very Low Risk (please see government website for further details - check long term flood risk postcode search)
Coastal Erosion - Property is not located on the coastline.
Planning Permission or Proposal for development (Local authority postcode search) - Planning applications nearby please see local authority website for further information.
Property accessibility/adaptations - Communal stairs up to flat.
Coalfield or mining area - N/A
Situation
Bedroom
Living Room
Kitchen
Bathroom
Communal Garden
Central Heating
Council Tax Band: B
Why live in Midhurst
Midhurst lies on the River Rother, just 12 miles north of Chichester, and has the remarkable claim to fame of being the home of British polo thanks to the Cowdray Park Polo Club on the local Cowdray Estate, but there’s so much more to this pretty market town. It’s centuries old, boasting more than 100 listed buildings with a charming mix of medieval, Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian architecture that sits comfortably alongside more contemporary new homes.
The narrow lanes of Midhurst’s old town offer a fantastic variety of places to shop with an abundance of small independent boutiques all housed in ancient buildings. There are plenty of places to dine in and around the town centre, too, with options ranging from up-market restaurants specialising in local produce to high street favourites and charming tearooms where you can enjoy your favourite afternoon treat.