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Street Address
Oldfield Park Bath Corston, BA2 3PG
Property description
SUMMARY A delightful late Victorian two storey terrace right in the heart of Oldfield Park, with a glorious southwest facing level rear garden. Open plan pair of receptions leading to rear facing kitchen. First floor houses two double bedrooms and bathroom. Considerable potential for expansion at rear of ground floor and/or up into the loft subject to usual consents. Ideal location for access to city, Oldfield Park station and Moorland Road amenities. Offered with no onward chain. Sole Agent.
ENTRANCE HALL Double glazed front door, meters, coved ceiling, part glazed internal door, ornamental plaster arch, staircase to first floor.
SITTING ROOM Double glazed front bay window, coved ceiling, fireplace with fitted gas fire, archway to dining room.
DINING ROOM Double glazed rear window, radiator, understairs cupboard, coved ceiling, opening to kitchen with steps down.
KITCHEN Double glazed rear window, range of base and wall units with laminated worktops and inset sink/drainer, fitted fridge & freezer, fitted washing machine, wall mounted gas boiler, radiator, tiled floor, coved ceiling.
UTILITY ROOM Double glazed side lit door to rear gardens, tiled floor, worktop with space under for tumble dryer.
LANDING Loft access.
BATHROOM Double glazed rear window, radiator, pedestal basin, low level W.C, panelled bath, linen cupboard housing immersion tank, part tiled walls.
BEDROOM 2 Double glazed rear window, radiator.
BEDROOM 1 Double glazed front bay window & additional double glazed front window, built in wardrobes with cupboards over, radiator.
REAR GARDENS 38ft x 14ft min - southwest facing
Fences to side and rear, gated rear access, patio, lawn, flower beds and borders.
9ft x 7ft block built shed with window, light and power.
AGENTS NOTES There are three villages in the UK called Arlington, of which Arlington in Gloucestershire is known for being the ancestral home of John Custis II, who emigrated to the Colony of Virginia and named his palatial four-story brick mansion (built in 1675) in Northumberland County, Virginia, "Arlington" after this town. Arlington would be abandoned after just 50 years, but the name would be used by his great-great-grandson, George Washington Parke Custis, as the name for his large Arlington Estate on the south shore of the Potomac River near what is now Washington, D.C. Arlington Estate would later be owned by American Civil War General Robert E. Lee (himself a descendant of James I) and today is known as Arlington National Cemetery.
The name is derived from Ar(copper) el(people) ington(fortified village on a hill) so becomes "The people of the copper fortified village on the hill", presumably where copper and bronze were processed.