2 bedroom Flat to rent in Beulah Road Thornton Heath CR7

Rent: £1225 pcm

Thornton Heath, CR7 8JH

Flat
2 Bed(s)
-- Bath(s)
Not Available Anymore

 1455 London Road, Norbury, London,
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Street Address

Thornton Heath, CR7 8JH

Property description

Beautifully Presented, Spacious, 2 Bedroom Recently Refurbished To A Very High Standard, Converted Apartment, Free Street Parking, Close To Local Amenities And Bus Links, Easy Walking Distance To Thornton Heath BR. Available Now. First To View Will Let!

Bairstow Eves Lettings Norbury are extremely excited to offer to the market to let this fantastic recently refurbished two bedroom apartment in Thornton Heath. The property has been finished to a high standard befitting a top of the range central London apartment with brand new bathroom suite, fully fitted modern kitchen and laminate flooring throughout. Two double bedrooms and great sized lounge all newly decorated and made bright and airy with new double glazing and kept cosy with a new central heating system. This will go quickly so call to arrange viewings now.....

The original settlement of Thornton Heath was clustered around the Pond area on the London Road, but when the railway station came in 1862, the focus of development shifted to what is now Thornton Heath High Street. This latter area was called, for a while, 'New Thornton Heath'.
The older Thornton Heath, part of the Manor of Norbury, had been open heath common land for centuries. Its main claim to fame was the useful pond, for horses and cattle, and the gallows, which stood on the site. The Enclosure Act of 1799 turned it into privately-owned farmland. The Enclosure also enabled owners to sell their land for development, and within a few years there was a fair cluster of buildings around the pond area and development (mostly quite substantial houses) was spreading up the eastern side of the London Road on the way to Croydon.
As already mentioned, 'New Thornton Heath' was created by the railway. Before 1862, the area had a few farmhouses, one or two villas and, an important local industry, market-gardening. These were soon engulfed by new streets. By 1900 there was very little open land left in Thornton Heath, new or old.
Croydon Workhouse was situated in Queen's Road, after it moved there from Duppas Hill in 1865. In 1930 the Workhouse became Queen's Road Hospital, and the remaining section is now a Grade II Listed Building. Opposite is Queen's Road Cemetery, opened in 1861 when the neighbouring churchyards were getting full up.
Mayday Hospital started life in 1881 as the infirmary of the Workhouse, and was renamed Mayday in 1930. The hospital takes its name from the road, not vice versa.
Another Grade II listed building is St. Alban's Church, Grange Road. Built in 1889, it is described as a red-brick perpendicular style with stone dressing.
At the junction of the High Street and Parchmore Road, on a site previously called Walker's Green, stands the Clocktower, which was built in 1900, financed partly by public subscription.
In earlier times, Croydon was well-known for its charcoal-burners or colliers, and Colliers Water Lane commemorates this connection with that trade. Another industry connected with the area until recently was clock and bell-making. The world-famous firm of Gillett & Johnston was based in Union Road from 1844 to 1957, and its clock tower was a well-known landmark in the area until it was demolished in 1997.

Property Features :

  • Newly Refurbished 2 Bedroom Apartment
  • High Standard Finish
  • Private Garden
  • Modern Kitchen
  • Very Spacious Throughout
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