Key Features

  • GUIDE PRICE £375,000 TO £395,000
  • THREE BEDROOM END OF TERRACE HOUSE
  • OPEN PLAN LIVING/DINING SPACE
  • GARAGE AND PARKING AVAILABLE
  • WALKING DISTANCE TO AMENITIES
  • CRANBROOK SCHOOL CATCHMENT
  • NO ONWARD CHAIN
  • SOUTH FACING COURTYARD GARDEN
  • EPC RATING
  • COUNCIL TAX BAND
GUIDE PRICE £375,000 TO £395,000 - A spacious three bedroom end-of-terrace home set in the popular village of Sissinghurst. Offered to the market with no onward chain.

 

GUIDE PRICE £375,000 TO £395,000

A deceptively spacious, modern end-of-terrace home, built in the early 2000s and ideally positioned on the high street with immediate access to shops, cafés and everyday amenities. Set within the sought-after Cranbrook School catchment area and offered chain free.

Arranged across three floors, the property offers light-filled and well-proportioned accommodation throughout. The open-plan sitting and dining room creates a welcoming heart to the home, with a feature fireplace and solid oak flooring adding warmth and character. French doors open directly to the south-facing courtyard garden. To the front of the property is a kitchen with ample cupboard space and fitted in appliances.

Upstairs, there are three double bedrooms, each with built-in storage. The main bedroom enjoys an en-suite shower room and views across the distant countryside, while the top-floor bedroom benefits from eaves storage and a similar outlook. A family bathroom serves the remaining bedrooms.

Outside, the property has charming kerb appeal with its mix of brick and tile-hung elevations, a neat pathway bordered by planting, and black railings framing the entrance. A shared driveway leads to a single garage en bloc, with the garage for this property positioned on the left when facing the row.

 

If You Lived Here:
 
Sissinghurst is a small village in the county of Kent, situated with Cranbrook to the south, Goudhurst to the west, Tenterden to the east and Staplehurst to the north. Originally called Mylkehouse, Sissinghurst changed its name in the 1850s. The village shares its history with that of the nearby Wealden town of Cranbrook, having strong evidence of cloth and iron ore manufacturing activities. Sissinghurst is most famous for its Castle and the magnificent gardens created in the 1930s by Vita Sackville-West, poet and gardening writer, and her husband Harold Nicolson, author and diplomat. The Street runs through the centre of the village and is where the village pub, The Milkhouse, can be found as well as the acclaimed Rankins restaurant, a tandoori restaurant, a general store and the village hall. Sissinghurst's parish church is the Anglican Trinity Church, built in 1838. The Sissinghurst Church of England Primary School is dedicated to providing an education of the highest quality.
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