- Semi Detached Home +
- Three Bedrooms +
- Two Reception Rooms +
- Modern Kitchen and Bathroom +
- Off Road Parking +
- Detached Garage and Gardens +
- Close to High School and Train Station +
Situated in the desirable location of Long Lane, Chapel-En-Le-Frith, this well-presented semi-detached house offers a comfortable and practical living space. The property features three bedrooms, a modern bathroom, and two reception rooms, providing ample accommodation for families.
The home benefits from a contemporary kitchen, and offers off-road parking alongside a detached garage for added convenience as well as garden to the front and rear.
Ideally positioned close to the local high school and train station, this property combines accessibility with a peaceful residential setting as well as being close by to various footpaths ideal for exploring the nearby countryside.
In a little more detail, the accommodation on offer comprises an entrance hallway with staircase leading to the first floor, the lounge has a double glazed window to the front, feature fireplace and opening into the dining room with double doors opening onto the garden. The kitchen has a range of fitted wall and base in white with contrasting black worktops over, inset stainless steel sink and drainer and integrated oven and hob.
The first floor houses the landing bedroom one looking out to the front, bedroom two and three look out to the rear with bedroom three having a useful fitted wardrobe. The family bathroom includes a storage cupboard, WC, wash basin and bath with shower over and glass screen, all complimented by an attractive tiled splashback.
Externally, there is a garden to the front with driveway providing off road parking leading down the side of the house to the detached garage at the rear. The rear garden has a paved patio seating area leading on to a lawned garden with gravelled area to the rear ideal for pot plants.
Chapel-en-le-Frith, known as 'The Capital of the Peak' nestles in an upland valley in the High Peak and is surrounded by dramatic landscape of gritstone ridges and shapely hills. The town takes its name from a small chapel built in 1225 by the keepers of the Royal Forest that is now the Church of St Thomas Becket, where 1,500 Scottish soldiers were imprisoned during the Civil War. The historic town centre also features a traditional marketplace which still has its original renowned stocks which the local cafe takes its name. A common phrase you here many resident say is "We are so lucky to live here" even after living in the town for decades. That is further, solid evidence, if ever it was needed that Chapel-en-le-Frith and its surrounding towns and villages are an excellent place to set up home.
Leasehold