2 Bed │ 1 Bath │ 1 Rec
Guide Price £375,000
Key features
Full description
A fantastic opportunity to acquire a superb garden level apartment with no onward chain and offering direct access into the beautiful communal gardens with views over the surrounding countryside to the South Downs.
The apartment has been sympathetically converted from this historic Grade II * Listed former Sanitorium built in 1903 and set in 165 acres of grounds surrounded by beautiful countryside in the heart of the South Downs National Park.
The apartment is approached either through a communal entrance with a video entry phone system or directly into the living room from the gardens. An entrance hall leads to a good size open plan sitting/dining room with french doors opening into the gardens and a separate kitchen with Siemens integrated appliances; All these rooms benefit from attractive exposed wooden flooring. Two light and spacious, dual aspect double bedrooms and a luxury tiled bathroom with thermostatic shower over the bath complete the accommodation.
Directly outside is an opportunity to put a small table and chairs where you can sit and enjoy the view of the formal gardens designed by Gertrude Jekyll along with its "Measured Walks" around the estates woodland.
The property is being offered for sale with no onward chain with a secure underground parking space.
Situation
Council Tax Band: D
Tenure: Leasehold
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.