logo
Expensively done up in 2007, classic No 29 Richmond remains a sign of the times, then, and now

Expensively done up in 2007, classic No 29 Richmond remains a sign of the times, then, and now

Irish Examiner08-06-2025
A 'NO expense spared' deep retrofit, and polished reordering, was done to No 29 Richmond, a discretely hidden bungalow between Cork City's Blackrock Road and the Boreenmanna Road.
That was back in 2007, at a time when the property market was at its zenith, and builders felt free to charge as much as they liked … a bit like now??
Timeless 29 is listed with Cohalan Downing's MD Brian Olden
Now a superbly finished three-bedroomed dormer, on a screened, low-maintenance corner site within the 1960s estate of detacheds and semi-detacheds of some design aplomb, with partial cedar cladding, brick and reconstituted stone and latter-day earned charm, No 29 Richmond was taken by the scruff of the neck before 2007 by the late Kate and Tom Burke, who at the time were planning a downsize move from a large, detached period home called Parkhurst on the Victoria Road.
First appearances deceive...
Built for a city solicitor Barry Galvin way back in 1890, on extensive gardens and the only detached along Cork's Victoria Road, Parkhurst sold at the time for the Burkes for €2.5m: it was described in these property pages as 'a museum piece.' Some of the leftover 'museum quality' pieces have ended up happily here at 29 Richmond, itself some 70 years Parkhurst's junior, along with a range of feature stained glass panels, and magnificent Georgian and Victorian furniture.
Glass act
It was a classic downsize or rightsize move for Kay (nee Lyons, a retired physiotherapist) and Tom Burke: he'd been a general surgeon in Cork hospitals, such as the Bon Secours and South Infirmary: he also operated, literally as well as figuratively, at the army's Collins Barracks, where he railed against forced army marches (and, marathon running) due to the number of knee surgeries he was had to do, recalls his brother in law, Diarmuid Lyons.
No 29 Richmond is now an executor sale, following Kay Burke's demise in January after a period in a nursing home in Kinsale; she was predeceased by her husband Tom, who died aged 95 in 2013.
Easy-keep grounds perfect for downsizers
The couple's pristine, lightly lived in, and proudly maintained home at 29 is listed this weekend with agent Brian Olden of Cohalan Downing, who says it is elegant, in one of Cork's most desirable suburban enclaves, and was extensively upgraded almost 20 years ago, to a very high standard throughout, from the roof, down to the floors and out to deliberately planted low-maintenance gardens, full of colourful trees and shrubs and birdlife.
Mr Olden can expect downsizer/rightsizer interest from the get-go, but it may also suit a single person, a couple or relocators to Cork: less likely is a younger family.
A lot rides on the current layout now with the very best of the three bedrooms downstairs, with walk-in dressing area, plus separate en suite bathroom with shower, and quality throughout, including granite tops to the bathrooms' vanity units.
En suite ground floor bedroom with robes/dressing area off
All internal joinery is quality hardwood, with stained glass panels inside a number of doors, both internally, in the main front door and side panels, with more coloured glass sections in the bright and warm south-aspected sunroom, utterly private.
A carpeted stairs, with hardwood rails, leads to two plushly carpeted attic-style dormer bedrooms with eaves storage plus bathroom with shower/bath and heated towel rail, the latter a feature in the en suite's bathroom also, both also fully tiled in neutral shades.
Dormer vous?
The hardwood joinery, stained glass, matched with gleaming mahogany Georgian and Victorian furniture, stunning fireplace, black kitchen Aga, displayed books and bookcases, art, sculpture and fine prints and 19th century silhouettes givesNo 29 the air of an older era home, but the comfort factor of modern and efficient central heating, high insulation standards, double glazing, new floors indicates otherwise. As does a B3 energy rating.
Aga can? Kitchen with Aga, painted units, hardwood tops and overhead rooflights
No 29 has a bright kitchen, with painted units topped with oiled hardwood tops, Aga, and marble-tiled floor, with two overhead rooflights, with access to a patio, hall, and to a dining nook linked to the main reception room, with its end wall surrounding the fireplace and hearth in a crimson red hue.
Elegance...
Overall, there's just about 1,750 sq ft here, all spotless and well detailed, so it's not overly large and if bought by a single buyer or a couple, they could quite happily only live downstairs, apartment style, and keep the first floor for guests/family member visits.
Richmond, which connects to the Clanrickarde estate by the Boreenmanna Road, has long been associated with Cork builder Barry Burke, whose family sold 4.82 acres alongside back in peak times of 2007 to O'Flynn Construction, for a €15.8m — some €3.25m/ acre for the site now fully developed as Belfield Abbey: it's a price per acre not seen since 'the boom'....
Richmond Estate
Other and older homes in adjacent Richmond show a variety of life stage owner-occupiers, from older long-time residents to more recent arrivals with some considerable extensions on both bungalows and semis. One, No 30, sold nearly 20 years ago on a far larger quarter acre site (for a reported €730,000, 50% over its guide: how very 2025), was demolished and replaced with a very large two-storey detached home.
Back in January 2007, we noted here that No 29 Richmond had sold for c€575,000 figure as 'a three-bed home in need of upgrading, it had been price-guided at €485,000-plus in late 2005, when it hit the market. It now is being significantly upgraded.'
And so it came to pass.
It's reckoned that on top of the c €585k purchase price back almost 20 years ago, a further €400,000/500,000 was then invested in it — again, shades of 2025 costs — so it stood the Burkes €1m, or perhaps just over it, to get it to a perfect fit for their advancing years.
Parkhurst, Victoria Road, in 2007. Pic: Denis Scannell
Their subsequent strong €2.5m sale of their long-time previous Victorian home Parkhurst in 2007 must have taken the sting out of those costs for the Burkes. And,as for the buyers who paid them so handsomely? Well they are getting much of their outlay back out of it this year as they are selling a 0.85 acre plot with full planning for nine new builds behind the original (and also upgraded) Victoria Road detached Parkhurst for over its €1.55m AMV.
VERDICT: For mostly coincidental reasons, No 29 Richmond itself aligns with a number of signature and landmark mid- 2000s Cork City property market moves: what will its sale now tell us in years to come, about the 2025 market?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A guide to surviving student accommodation
A guide to surviving student accommodation

Irish Examiner

time4 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

A guide to surviving student accommodation

My daughter has finally secured dry, warm, clean accommodation for September as she starts an MA in UCC. Following viewing, she actually skipped back down the street. We were discussing other places her college friends had not just lived in for one year, but clung to desperately for their entire degree. 'Well, mum — they are all mouldy'. My usually confident girl had viewed one apartment that was so dark, rank and depressing, she called me sobbing and asked haltingly — 'I'm torn, should I just take it?'. Students are among the most maligned group of short-term tenants, and they know it. I soon realised that the days of my bedside survival — the chilblains, bruised blue walls and two doses of walking pneumonia were far from over. It turns out that sealed in behind double glazing and without Victorian draughts, keeping the air relatively fresh, for some students under the care of a careless landlord, things were worse — far worse. The mapping of mould is something many students are forced to weigh as they tramp the city and pursue empty promises online. Students don't have the same security of tenure rights as other renters, and are usually bound by a fixed-term letting agreement. These should not exceed 41 weeks, and students cannot be forced into renting over a summer. Inexperienced youngsters in grubby slums are so genuinely grateful to have anywhere to stay within an asses' roar of college, the ongoing anxiety surrounding keeping their home is distressing. Within the round of campus accommodation or pricey student complexes (student-specific accommodation), there's more freedom to complain, because frankly, it's a maintenance team, not a familiar disgruntled puss, or a ringing out mobile number. Basic protections I'm going to go over surviving a less-than-ideal off-campus student rental over two features. To start, let's talk about the non-negotiable things that put students at risk. First up is renting from an unregistered landlord. Every person or entity renting out accommodation in Ireland (bar rent-a-room or 'digs') must, by law, be registered annually with the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB). Flouting this can draw an initial penalty of €4,000. As a tenant, you must have a proper letting agreement, signed by both parties, for the duration of the rental. If you side-step these basic protections, with little to no legal recourse, you're trusting a great deal to the character of a property owner. Even with RTB registration, the recovery of deposits and the addressing of material issues in the house or flat can be frustrating. The RTB advise: 'The Local Authority where your tenancy is located can conduct inspections and is responsible for making sure your accommodation meets the minimum standards. If a landlord does not provide the basic requirements, they may be prosecuted. ' House condition Moving on, let's talk about damp, mould and other issues surrounding sensory comfort. In many outwardly scruffy homes, if the house is reasonably 'dry' with a properly serviced central-heating system, you'll have a good measure of control over the micro-climate of each room. However, there are chronic matters that you cannot fix and that fall within the responsibilities of an RTB-registered landlord. These are damp problems caused by moisture penetrating the structure (not created by the inhabitants), inadequate ventilation and insufficient heating. No heavy curtain, scrub down, electric blanket, or cracked window will resolve that signature tackiness in the air. Mould is, in simple terms, a biological entity that 'eats' moisture and dirt and it often parties with fungus and other bacterial mysteries. You can think of it as a plant. It needs a damp, humid environment to thrive. It can be caused by even small amounts of migrating or trickling moisture getting into the building (say through a crack in the render that bubbles up through the paintwork in your rooms). Slack habits around a rental can introduce or intensify a mould issue, but the landlord has a responsibility to provide an intrinsically dry house with adequate heating. Picture: iStock Small amounts of mould can also be nurtured and even introduced by bad lifestyle habits, which keep the air heavy with water droplets that will settle on cool walls. It can float in the window or be carried in on your shoes, and it's highly active in the heating surges typical to student lets. In the first instance, there are structural issues, probably a small break in the envelope of the building, a pipe leak or rising damp. This is the landlord's sole area. The property will need repair, the walls scraped down, background ventilation must be addressed, and the rooms redecorated. Painting active mould with damp-stoppers or emulsion is utterly useless, and in the chaos of a multi-tenant house, it can grow back out of sight. If a mattress, carpeting or soft furnishings shows signs of rampant mould — they should be replaced. The spores are living inside the foam, pile and ticking. In the second instance, if there are small areas of dark stippling confined to, say, a corner or two, we can do some murderous wiping. Don't do anything that splinters the stipulations of your lease. Cleaning off spots of mould from walls can be carried out with a commercial spray or with a mixture of bicarbonate and water. With super-flat old matt, this could leave cloudy stains. Talk to the landlord or agent first. Students are often blamed for the mould in their accommodation, and lax, ropy housekeeping can make a bad situation worse. Mould is the close companion of condensation — excess moisture beading up on the windowsill and/or fogging glass. It's important to understand how homes 'breathe' and when to alert their landlord to miserable problems that could also be damaging lungs, plaster, wood and fabrics. Now — the art of ventilation. Every habitable room depends on air exchanges that freshen the air regularly during the day and night. Generally, the air should be turned over at least once per hour (up to 4 times in a working bathroom or kitchen). Background ventilation is delivered a number of ways, including passive wall vents, small trickle vents in the window frames and by mechanical means (electrical fans, typically seen in bathrooms and kitchens). It's imperative not to interfere with background and mechanical ventilation by closing wall vents, for example. Airing bedrooms by opening windows is not a cute 20th-century eccentricity, and where security allows you should regularly air your room using 'purge ventilation' even during the winter for 5-10 minutes a day. Don't dry your clothes in your bedroom on radiators or clothes racks (the influencer hacks drive me up the walls). Without open windows in a sunny room, this practice introduces a level of moisture to the air that the background ventilation cannot handle. The results could green up the contents of your wardrobe (which should also be ventilated and aired regularly – don't crowd cupboards). If you don't have a working mechanical extractor in your windowless shower room or kitchen, mould is inevitable. Contact your landlord — this is firmly their responsibility. A reputable person will want to know, and there should be no threat to a rental deposit. The key thing is for both sides is to prevent these issues taking off in the first place. If there is an issue that's not reported and worsens, the landlord is likely to complain that the damage falls back on the tenants to some extent. Outward signs of chronic faults must be brought to the person letting the property or their management agent in writing. Black mould can cause not only respiratory distress but Aspergillus Niger can do actual neurological damage. It's a dire air pollutant. In a short let of 40 weeks and looking towards the following September, it's intimidating to contact the RTB. Still, trapped in a contract with months to go and no action, it may be the only way forward. If you do decide to take on accommodation with small amounts of visible mould, make a photographic record and ask if repairs, cleaning and decoration is scheduled. If the mould returns or you notice persistent musty smells when the heating goes on in October or discoloured paintwork (presuming you're working diligently with available background and mechanical ventilation) — get in touch with the landlord. They have a legal responsibility to fix the problem within a reasonable time. All students can apply for Dispute Resolution with the RTB even if their landlord has not registered their tenancy. For more advice go to In Part 2 of surviving SSA accommodation, we'll cover housekeeping savvy: Heating, more air quality, storage and the ultimate powers of a dry, warm bed. Read More Save or Splurge? Two outdoor rugs for patio dining and relaxation

Alison O'Reilly: It took a global spotlight for many to accept hundreds of babies are buried in a septic tank in Tuam
Alison O'Reilly: It took a global spotlight for many to accept hundreds of babies are buried in a septic tank in Tuam

Irish Examiner

time4 days ago

  • Irish Examiner

Alison O'Reilly: It took a global spotlight for many to accept hundreds of babies are buried in a septic tank in Tuam

As I sat in gridlock traffic in my hometown of Drogheda recently, I saw hundreds of well-dressed families of all ages, carrying beautiful bouquets and plants pots, as they all walked in the same direction. I eventually made it past three Garda checkpoints directing traffic away from the congested areas until I realised where everyone was going — it was the annual blessings of the graves. The scene could be mistaken for an All-Ireland final, or a concert, except people were in their Sunday best. It marked a stark contrast to the treatment of the hundreds of innocent little children buried in and around a septic tank system in a former mother and baby home in Tuam, Co Galway, run by the Bon Secours order of nuns. While not all the well-turned-out people at the blessings of the graves will be committed and practicing Catholics, the popularity of the yearly event shows the truth of how Irish people have a great tradition of mourning the dead. When I wrote a story that was published on the front of a national newspaper 11 years ago, I thought there would be a visceral outcry. But really it was greeted with a shrug of apathy, and there was no response at all from the government. That was until one week after publication when the Mail Online picked it up, leading to global explosure, and within the hour it quite rightly turned into one of the biggest stories to come out of Ireland in the past decade. The story forced the government to respond. It opened the floodgates for survivors of these awful institutions to speak out and so began our long fight to have the children's remains removed from around the septic tank system they were dumped in, after they died while in the care of the Bon Secours nuns. I first heard of the mass grave in Tuam when I was contacted by Anna Corrigan in Dublin in early 2014. She had read an article I had written the previous week on the unveiling of a headstone for the 222 children who died in the Bethany Homes in Dublin. Anna Corrigan with journalist Alison O'Reilly, who originally broke the story. Picture: Chani Anderson The moving event, organised by Professor Niall Meehan and the late Bethany home campaigner Derek Lister, took place in St Jerome's cemetery. My article was published the following Sunday. Anna contacted me the next day. I was sitting with my two children in my living room when I saw her email. 'I want to talk to you about my two brothers who are buried in a mass grave in Tuam,' she said. 'There are 800 babies there'. I read and re-read the email, and I'll admit, I found it all too hard to believe. My sister had lived in Tuam for 13 years. I knew the town well. Neither of us had ever heard of a plot containing hundreds of tiny remains from children who died while in the mother and baby home. The email, while well written and containing her home address, just didn't seen credible. But I was immediately interested and, I remember thinking 'I'm calling to her house first thing tomorrow'. Unlike some great historical discoveries, which come about because of huge amounts of money invested in the work of teams of researchers and historians, this discovery was driven solely by one homemaker working as a historian in her spare time from her home in Co Galway. Between keeping her home and looking after her family, Catherine Corless has managed to bring dignity to a group of forgotten children of Tuam. While in Dublin, at her kitchen table, Anna was learning about her mother's two secret sons. That Monday evening in 2014, at my home in Dublin, Anna reached out with the heartbreaking truth of her life about her mother Bridget Dolan, who never told her about her brothers. Her email said: 'I would like to let you know that there is a similar issue ongoing with a graveyard connected to the mother and baby home at Tuam, Co Galway. 'There is a small plot containing almost 800 children which has been left unmarked and neglected by the Bon Secours nuns who ran the mother and baby home. The plot where the children were buried was previously a sewerage tank.' Between them, the women had a mountain of work that was carefully compiled, noted, in plastic folders with headings, highlighted, and in boxes marking out what each one contained. When I went to Anna's house a few days later she gave me contact details for Catherine, whom I rang immediately. I was instantly impressed with her rational, calm evidence and diligence. Her work was such a vital matter of public interest. Like all journalists who are presented with a powerful story like this, you are trained to instantly ask yourself "where at the holes in this story?" and "how do we stand it up?" Historian Catherine Corless, whose years of meticulous research uncovered the burial of up to 800 children on the grounds of the former Tuam Mother and Baby Home. Picture: Chani Anderson While Catherine gave me a detailed overall picture of the home and the children's names, Anna gave me individual examples of how her own brothers, whom she had only learned about in 2013, disappeared from the care of the nuns. I went into the Births, Deaths and Marriages Registry, which is not covered by Data Protection, and checked John and William Dolan's certificates. Just as Anna said, there was a birth cert for both boys, in 1946 and 1950, but only one death cert — for John in 1947. She had made a Freedom of Information request to Tusla, and it provided her with details of how William was marked dead in the nuns' ledgers, but had no official death cert. Was he the only child whose records stated this? I spent day and night for the next few weeks, checking everything Catherine and Anna had said. With the help of Anna, Catherine, and Professor Thomas Garavan (whose mother and her six siblings had been in the home), we published the '800 babies in a mass grave' story on May 25, 2014. But to our bitter disappointment, this huge revelation, that 11 years later would lead to Ireland's first ever mass grave exhumation, only received a small follow up on RTÉ's Nuacht. I was baffled. Apart from the media, what about our 160-plus TDs? There was no outrage, no reaction, and no one spoke up. However, hundreds of people did take to Twitter (now X) and Facebook and began a discussion under the hashtags #800babies and #tuambabies. In the week that followed, apart from a detailed section on RTÉ's Liveline with Philip Boucher Hayes and Newstalk with Jonathan Healy, there was no reaction here at all. Did people just simply not want to know? Catherine, who at the time had little experience with the media, was a natural when she spoke out, a person you felt you could trust. All I, Catherine, Anna, and Thomas wanted was justice for the children who died and for the children to be given a dignified burial. But the dam didn't burst until the following week on June 2, 2014. Little did we know what was about to happen. The MailOnline, the global news website, contacted me and asked me for the story I had written on the 'mass grave of children in the west of Ireland'. The story was up online by 11am. Catherine rang me within the hour to say that she was being interviewed by dozens of national stations. 'Alison,' she gasped down the phone. ' The Washington Post has just been on. They're following up your story and wanted to talk to me.' And it didn't end there. A frenzy exploded on social media, the #tuambabies hashtag began to trend, and every global media organisation ran the story, including Sky News, CNN, NPR, Al Jazeera, and CBS. The government was then forced to respond. Then Taoiseach Enda Kenny, who was in the US at the time, was being doorstepped by the American media about the Tuam Babies. He responded by saying the Government was going to discuss it and that an inquiry was under consideration. But the story of the Tuam Babies sat quietly here for the first week until the international media took hold of it. I often wondered why that happened. Could people simply not believe that hundreds of babies had been dumped into a sewage tank, or that the thoughts of it were just too big? I still struggle to understand the precise reason for such a state of denial — but denial it undoubtedly was. Nonetheless, for the next six weeks, the floodgates opened, and every national and international newspaper and airwaves were full of gut-wrenching stories from the survivors of these hell holes that were dotted all over the country and not just in Tuam. Their silence was broken, and they were given a voice. The dead were also no longer going to stay quiet. Family members, campaigners, survivors, and good decent people began to speak out at their utter horror of what the State and church did to all of these innocent women and children. The intergenerational trauma is not referenced enough and for those who believe you can "just get over it and move on", there is no such thing. Trauma does not discriminate. Then came the inevitable backlash, the kind of thing that happens when people in power are challenged. One American reporter told me that he "couldn't see how this was true". Then queries were raised about the septic tank and how that volume of children could actually fit into it. The story was even branded by some as a 'hoax', despite the fact that none of the critics could explain where the missing children had been buried. Nobody could provide a rational explanation for where these 796 children had gone. Instead, some tried to pick holes in it. People said it wasn't a septic tank; it was another type of tank. Someone rang me and said: "I hope, for your sake, the children are in the grave, or your career is over." But all I ever wanted to know (and still do) is, if the children are not on the site subject to excavation next week, then where are they? For 11 years I have written about about the Tuam babies and supported Catherine in her quest for truth as well as those with families — Anna, Thomas, Annette McKay, Peter Mulryan, and the only surviving mother of the Tuam home, Chrissie Tully — in the hope we could get the grave open. A commission of investigation into mother and baby homes was established by then-minister James Reilly in early 2015. Anna Corrigan, walking away from the Tuam site, where her two infant brothers are believed to be buried, shortly before it was closed off for excavation. Picture: Chani Anderson It examined 14 mother and baby homes around the country, plus a further four so-called county homes, and the final report was due in February 2018 but did not arrive until January 2021. In the end, it was a huge disappointment but an interesting historical record. It did not, nor was its job, to hold anyone to account. In the end, the minister for children explained that 'all of society was to blame'. They were some of the first words from a government that did not take full responsibility for its predecessors, the regulators of these institutions. A State apology was given. I'm sure some survivors appreciated it, but a large part of society was disgusted by it. The Bon Secours order and Galway County Council also apologised to survivors and families. When the confirmation of the Tuam grave finally came from Katherine Zappone in 2017, we were vindicated. But the exhumation still did not happen. Instead, we had to fight on to see this happen. Two years ago, Cork man Daniel MacSweeney was appointed to oversee the intervention of the Tuam site — I was still sceptical, even though he was in situ, building his team and being open with the media. For years I said 'I'll believe it when I see it', and last Monday, I did see it. As the country's first ever mass exhumation prepares to take place on July 14, 2025, the Tuam babies' story has shown how ordinary people can do extraordinary things. Read More Watch: Anna Corrigan and Catherine Corless speak at Tuam site

The breathtaking five-bed mansion on the Irish market for €1.6m – and it comes with pool, gym & guest house
The breathtaking five-bed mansion on the Irish market for €1.6m – and it comes with pool, gym & guest house

The Irish Sun

time4 days ago

  • The Irish Sun

The breathtaking five-bed mansion on the Irish market for €1.6m – and it comes with pool, gym & guest house

A BREATHTAKING five-bedroom mansion has just hit the market for €1.6million – and it comes with an indoor heated swimming pool, a gym and a guest house. This luxurious family pad is located in Drumollard, just outside the town of Virginia in Advertisement 8 The home is located outside of Virginia in Co Cavan Credit: 8 And it is now on the Irish market for €1.6million Credit: 8 The pad was built in the 1890s Credit: 8 It features modern and period fixtures throughout Credit: 8 There's a conservatory along with views overlooking a lake Credit: Set on 6.5 acres of landscaped grounds, the property is surrounded by trees, colourful plants and even has stunning views over a lake. The detached five-bed, four-bath home extends to a whopping 837 square metres. The listing reads: 'Delightful restored and extended period house together with guest cottage, indoor heated swimming pool, 6.5 acres of colourful grounds and lake frontage." Originally built in 1890, the home underwent a full Advertisement READ MORE IN MONEY Known as one of the most stunning homes in Cavan, the property has a spacious indoor swimming pool, a hard court tennis court and an entertainment room. The estate also features a beautifully restored two-bedroom coach house that's now a self-contained guest cottage with its own kitchen and shower room. The main house has oil-fired central heating, double glazing throughout and concrete floors on both levels. What's more, the pad also includes a three-bay carport with a staircase leading to a bright 57-square-metre Advertisement MOST READ IN MONEY The home's driveway is lined with trees and follows the route of two old mill races originally built for Victorian corn mills that leads to a spacious garden and private courtyard. This breathtaking property is in an excellent location, just minutes away to Virginia and only 90 minutes from Inside three bed family home on Irish market for €170k on 'generous site,' in 'desirable location' There are also several primary and secondary schools in the area, making it a great fit for Upon entering the ground floor of the home, guests are welcomed by a pillared porch and a grand entrance hall with oak flooring and a feature marble fireplace. Advertisement Moving further into the house, there is a stunning drawing room and formal dining room, all connected by wide doorways and traditional fixtures. The property also features a spacious open-plan kitchen, living and breakfast area which connects to a sunny south-facing conservatory room. STUNNING KITCHEN This light-filled kitchen is fitted with bespoke cabinetry, solid worktops and elegant finishes, creating the perfect space for family dining and entertaining. A major bonus to buying the home, the conservatory opens the room with natural light and offers stunning views over the surrounding Advertisement FIRST FLOOR OFFERINGS Moving upstairs, there are five spacious bedrooms, including a master suite with large windows, built-in wardrobes and a luxurious ensuite. Two additional bedrooms are connected by a Jack & Jill bathroom, and there's also a fully tiled family bathroom with elegant sanitary ware and fittings. Located in the restored coach house,the guest pad includes a living and dining space, kitchen, shower room and two upstairs bedrooms. The indoor Advertisement The property is listed by Colliers Estate Agents on 8 The property is a five bedroom pad Credit: 8 It comes with an indoor heated swimming pool Credit: 8 The pad also features a guest house Credit: Advertisement

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store