- BEST AND FINAL OFFERS BY 11AM TUEDAY 26TH NOVEMBER 2024 +
- 3 Double Bedrooms +
- Some Gorgeous Original Features +
- Large Bay Fronted Period Mid Terraced Property +
- First Floor Bathroom +
- Cottage Style Rear Garden +
- Gas Central Heating +
- Original Quarry Tiled Kitchen Floor +
- 2 Reception Rooms +
- Useful Out Houses +
BEST AND FINAL OFFERS ARE INVITED BY 11AM TUESDAY 26TH NOVEMBER 2024
To support any offer, we will need the following:
1. Proof of your cash to purchase the property or proof of your cash deposit.
2 Proof of any funding/loan/mortgage etc.
3. Two forms of Certified I.D (for each purchaser) – one with a photograph and one with a home address (passport OR driver’s licence plus an up-to-date utility bill or bank statement ideally). If you cannot provide certified I.D, you will need to call into our office with the original documents.
4. Confirmation of your solicitors’ full details including the name of the person acting on your behalf and their email address.
Property Info: - Superb opportunity to renovate this magnificent mid terraced period property (part of the original 'Flaxley Road' dating back to the 19th Century - see historical note below) which benefits from a good sized cottage style rear back garden.
Internally there is an inner hallway, 2 reception rooms (the front one with a large bay window and the most amazing original fireplace and surround), a rear pantry and kitchen with understairs storage space.
2 outhouses and an outside 'Privy'.
To the first floor are 3 double bedrooms (the rear bedroom with the original fireplace surround). House bathroom and loft access.
There is a Worcester Bosch gas combi boiler to the property (in the kitchen).
Services: Mains drainage, gas, water and electricity.
Tenure: Freehold
Council Tax - Band A. North Yorkshire Council
History - This Victorian property is part of a terrace of four houses built in the early 1890s by Frederick Ullathorne for his own family to live in. The family firm of TS Ullathorne (builders and stonemasons) worked on many local properties, including Selby Abbey. When the terrace was built Flaxley Road was still a quiet country lane, surrounded by fields and farmland. The name of the road recalls Selby's 18th and 19th century involvement in the flax-growing industry, which played a major part in the town's economy. (The flax and hemp theme continues in the name of nearby Hempbridge Farm).