This fine well-proportioned three bedroom home was built by Hopkins Homes to a high standard. Nicely positioned, the house sits on a slightly elevated plot giving it a lovely green and leafy outlook.
The accommodation flows well with a good-sized sitting room. There's a lovely period feel with a central fireplace, oak flooring and flooded with natural light. The well-fitted kitchen/breakfast room to the rear is a wonderful place to enjoy cooking and entertaining with the space for a table or even a sofa. A lovely feature of this room is the bay window which incorporates a door leading to the south-facing garden. In addition there is a cloakroom.
The first floor serves three bedrooms, the principal benefiting from an en-suite. In addition there is a separate modern family bathroom.
To the front, steps lead up to the front door passing a low maintenance gravelled garden. To the rear, the south-facing garden includes a terrace, lawn, storage shed and gated access to the allocated private parking to the rear.
TROWSE Just south of Norwich, the pretty village of Trowse is steeped in history. One of a small family of model villages, it was created by the Colman family during the 1800s, for workers at the world famous Colman's mustard factory.
Today, it's a small village with a thriving community which benefits from a sports hall, astroturf football pitch, dry ski slope, woodland walks, riverside picnic areas, and a common right in the centre. There are two pubs, the White Horse Inn and the Crown Point Tavern, and a vegetarian café, as well as a primary school which is rated 'outstanding' by Ofsted. Adjacent Whitlingham Country Park has two broads, one a conservation lake, the other for water based leisure activities, and is a lovely setting for walking, cycling or relaxing, whilst having easy access into the city.
The perfectly preserved medieval streets of Norwich are home to a thriving community of small businesses, a vibrant food scene and an established arts culture. Named as one of the best places to live in 2021, Norwich lies approximately 20 miles from the coast at the confluence of the River Yare and the River Wensum, the latter still bending its way through the heart of the city.
To the west of the city the University of East Anglia is a remarkable example of brutalist architecture, and the campus is also home to the Sainsbury centre, a permanent collection of modern and ethnographic art, gifted by the Sainsbury family.
When the bright lights call, trains to Liverpool Street take just 90 minutes, and the city's airport flies to a number of UK destinations, as well as direct to Amsterdam.
This is a city that reveals itself the longer you stay - a city to fall in love with - a city to be a part of.
SERVICES CONNECTED Mains electricity, water and drainage. Gas fired central heating.
COUNCIL TAX Band C.
ENERGY EFFICIENCY RATING C. Ref:- 0340-2307-9360-2994-2871
To retrieve the Energy Performance Certificate for this property please visit and enter in the reference number above. Alternatively, the full certificate can be obtained through Sowerbys.
TENURE Freehold.
LOCATION What3words: ///trees.bells.shed
PROPERTY REFERENCE 46415
WEBSITE TAGS village-spirit
family-life