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Dodsley Lane, Easebourne, GU29

3 Bed │ 1 Bath │ 1 Rec

Offers in Region of £650,000

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Midhurst

Matt Shepherd

Partner

Key features

  • Detached House
  • Driveway Parking
  • Private Rear Garden
  • Kitchen Breakfast Room
  • No Onward Chain
  • Integral Garage
  • Short Walk to Town Centre
  • Close to Cowdray Estate
  • In Need Of Some Modernisation

Full description

A spacious and light three bedroom detached house in need of some modernisation, with driveway parking and garage in Easebourne.

This modern family home comprises a spacious kitchen/breakfast room, a rear reception overlooking the garden, and an interconnecting dining room. There is a porch and entrance hall and ground floor WC and a staircase leads to the first floor landing and generous rear aspect principal bedroom.

There are two further good-sized bedrooms and a family bathroom and access to a loft. There is a delightful private rear garden which is mainly laid to lawn with surrounding mature shrubs and borders. Further benefits are an integral garage and large driveway for off-street parking.

Potentially appealing to investors and end users alike, and with no onward chain, this is the perfect opportunity to make this residence your own oasis, just a short walk to Midhurst town centre and the Cowdray Estate, and with bus stops closeby for regular services to Haslemere and Chichester. Easebourne also provides a village shop, a local GP surgery, Easebourne primary school and Rother college.

Situation

  • Kitchen 17' 0" x 9' 5" (5.18m x 2.87m)
  • Reception Room 19' 4" x 10' 6" (5.89m x 3.19m)
  • Dining Room 10' 5" x 9' 5" (3.17m x 2.87m)
  • WC
  • Bedroom 1 18' 6" x 10' 5" (5.65m x 3.18m)
  • Bedroom 2 14' 5" x 11' 8" (4.39m x 3.56m)
  • Bedroom 3 11' 4" x 8' 11" (3.45m x 2.72m)
  • Bathroom
  • Garage 16' 9" x 9' 6" (5.10m x 2.90m)

Council Tax Band: F

Tenure: Freehold

EPC Rating: C

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.

You’ll also find plenty to do here – when you’re not engaged in polo, fly-fishing or clay pigeon shooting on the Cowdray Estate, you could head over to the Cowdray Golf Club to enjoy some of the most scenic views in West Sussex and get involved with one of the many other clubs and societies that use it as a base. You’ll find a local camera club, the Midhurst Players, the Gardening Club and in August you could join in with the ten days of fun at the Midhurst Music, Arts and Dramatic Festival, ‘MADhurst’. There’s never a dull moment here!

As far as family life goes, we have many well-regarded schools in and around the area, all with strong Ofsted reports and excellent reputations, including Midhurst C of E Primary and Midhurst Rother College, which, between them, cater for pupils from age four to 18.

If you’d like to buy, sell or let a property in Midhurst, get in touch with your local team and discover the Henry Adams difference for yourself.

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