Situated in a popular area of Thelwall is this extended, semi detached, family home which is perfect as a base for your own personal style and requirements. Approached across a paved driveway that leads to a detached single garage and fronted by a low maintenance garden with well stocked plant beds, you enter the property from an entrance porch and into the main hallway. The ground floor layout has been extended to the rear and consists of a spacious through lounge dining room with patio doors opening onto the garden and an extended kitchen fitted with a range of wall, base and drawer units. On the first floor is a landing with storage cupboard, double bedrooms to the front and rear, a third front facing bedroom and a family bathroom currently containing a low level WC, vanity mounted wash hand basin, bidet and corner shower. The garden at the rear is also low maintenance with an array of low level gravel beds, mature plants and ornamental paving.
This traditional family home represents outstanding value for money and we expect a lot of interest in this fabulous project. An early viewing is highly recommended.
Porch | 5'4\" x 1'6\" (1.63m x 0.46m). Double glazed porch door and window.
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Hall | 5'4\" x 12' (1.63m x 3.66m). Glass panelled entrance door with glass panelled window. Radiator, carpeted flooring, under stair storage, ceiling light.
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Lounge Dining Room | 12' x 29'10\" (3.66m x 9.1m). Sliding double glazed patio door. Double glazed uPVC window facing the front overlooking the garden. Radiator, carpeted flooring, ceiling light.
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Kitchen | 8'6\" x 15'8\" (2.6m x 4.78m). Double glazed uPVC door opening onto the driveway. Double glazed uPVC window facing the rear overlooking the garden. Under stair storage, ceiling light. Roll top work surface, fitted units, stainless steel sink with mixer tap, freestanding oven.
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Storage Cupboard | Useful storage area.
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Landing | 7'5\" x 9'2\" (2.26m x 2.8m). Double glazed uPVC window with obscure glass facing the side. Carpeted flooring, ceiling light.
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Cupboard | Useful storage cupboard.
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Bedroom 1 | 12' x 12'3\" (3.66m x 3.73m). Double bedroom. Double glazed uPVC window facing the rear overlooking the garden. Radiator, carpeted flooring, fitted wardrobes, ceiling light.
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Bedroom 2 | 12' x 12' (3.66m x 3.66m). Double bedroom. Double glazed uPVC window facing the front overlooking the garden. Radiator, carpeted flooring, fitted wardrobes, ceiling light.
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Bedroom 3 | 7'11\" x 8'9\" (2.41m x 2.67m). Double glazed uPVC window facing the front overlooking the garden. Radiator, carpeted flooring, ceiling light.
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Bathroom | 8'1\" x 6' (2.46m x 1.83m). Double glazed uPVC window with obscure glass facing the rear. Radiator, carpeted flooring, ceiling light. Low level WC, single enclosure shower, vanity unit, shaving point.
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Outside | To the front of the property is a low maintenance garden with well stocked plant beds. A paved driveway leads to a detached garage located at the rear. The garden at the rear is also low maintenance with an array of plant beds and ornamental paving.
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Thelwall | Thelwall is a suburban village in Warrington, Cheshire, England, located close to the Lymm junction of the M6. A fortified village was established at Thelwall in 923 during the reign of King Edward the Elder. An inscription on the Pickering Arms records that \"In the year 920 King Edward the Elder founded a city here and called it Thelwall. According to Sir Peter Leycester it was \"so called from the stakes and stumps, cut from the trees, wherewith it was environed about as a wall\". It is more likely that the original meaning of Thelwall was \"pool by a plank bridge\" (the earliest record of the name is in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for 923 as \"Thelwaell\", in 1241 it occurs as \"Thelewell\"). Earthworks remain of an embankment, possibly part of these fortifications, found in the grounds of Chaigeley School. In Thelwall there are many stories of ghosts, since many of the old buildings still remain in the area.
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Thelwall Continued | However, there are also stories of witches at the well of the Old White House too, on the outskirts of Thelwall. Thomas de Thelwall, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster 1377-8, was born here in the early fourteenth century. Thelwall nowadays borders the villages of Lymm, Grappenhall, and across the Manchester Ship Canal, Latchford. It is also one of the two principal settlements of Grappenhall and Thelwall civil parish. According to the 2001 census, the population of the entire civil parish was 9,377. Thelwall is perhaps best known for the Thelwall Viaduct, which carries the M6 Motorway across the Manchester Ship Canal which opened in July 1963 and another in 1996. The village is situated between this Canal and the Bridgewater Canal, being on the east-west A56 and B5157.
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Bridgewater Canal | The Bridgewater Canal was the forerunner of all man-made canals in that it was the first canal that was dug out on an entirely new course, (not following an existing river or water course), and it was constructed in the late 18th century. The Duke of Bridgewater financed the whole enterprise, as he foresaw the benefits that he would gain from having a transport system that would enable him to move huge amounts of coal from his coal mines at Worsley up to Manchester. The Duke engaged James Brindley to engineer his canal, and he designed the route of the canal to follow contours and to be lock-free. The only complication to his route was the need to devise a method by which his canal could cross the valley of the River Irwell and for this Brindley designed a stone aqueduct, one of the first on the whole canal system.
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Stockton Heath | Stockton Heath is a civil parish and suburb of Warrington, Cheshire, England. It is located to the north of the Bridgewater Canal, which divides Stockton Heath from Latchford and North Warrington. It has a total resident population of 6,396. Victoria Square is at the centre of Stockton Heath and is on the crossroads of the A49 and A56. Until the 1970s, the Victoria Hotel stood on this square but its location has been redeveloped. North of the square is the main shopping area which includes the Forge Shopping Centre, developed on the site of the old forge (Caldwell's). Stockton Heath is home to a number of modern bars and restaurants, as well as traditional public houses. The Red Lion Inn dates back to the early 19th century and the Mulberry Tree on Victoria Square, opened in its present building (replacing earlier premises dating from 1725) in March 1907.
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