This four-bedroom house and three and a half bathrooms, built in the 1960s and recognized by the Royal Institute of British Architects for Intelligent Design, is located in Westbury-on-Trym, a suburb in Bristol, England. The house has been completely renewed, including a contemporary exterior of Staffordshire blue bricks and tiles.

The suburb is named after the Trym River and is close to Acres de Espacio Verde, including Durdham Down and Clifton Downs. High Street has restaurants, pubs and small stores, and the neighborhood has services that include supermarkets, banks, schools and medical clinics. A little more was based on the walls of the sea, a section of the Avon Gorge River overlooking the well -known Clifton Collapse bridge, Leigh Woods and the Severn estuary.

The property is about 10 miles northeast of Bristol airport, an international airport that serves as a gateway for the southwest of England and southern Wales. London is about three hours east.

Size: 2,092 square feet

Square foot price: $ 765

Inside: The four -story house has an entrance of the ground floor that opens to a lobby with an adjacent service room. Beyond there is a small workshop at the foot of a birch staircase of ashes and ashes with a brass handle that left the four stories.

The stairs ascend to a corridor that accesses the open kitchen and the dining room, as well as a living room, study and bathroom. The kitchen has a vaulted roof, dark gray cabinets and an island with granite countertops. Sliding glass doors open to a garden courtyard. The living room has glass doors that open to a hidden terrace.

The third floor has three bedrooms, two or that they share a bathroom. The main bedroom and suite has wall and marble floor tiles, a vaulted roof and an image window. The stairs amount to a landing with a skylight and an internal window to the main bedroom. On the fourth floor there is another bedroom and suite on the roof of the house.

Outdoor space: The house has a front terrace area and a rear garden with a patio and a grass with borders of perennial leaf plants and deciduous. The steps lead to a children’s game house, a greenhouse and a seat area. The entrance path has space for two cars.

Costs: The timbre tax on the purchases of the house varies from 5 to 12 percent, depending on the buyer and the planned use. A non -resident buyer who uses the house as the main residence would pay £ 87,750 ($ 117,000) in this house. The annual tax taxes are approximately £ 3,732 ($ 5,000).

Contact: Alec Jupp | Elephant loves Bristol | +44-117-370-0557


This four -bedroom converted stone barn and four and a half damage is only outside the town of Wrington, about 13 miles to the southwest or the center of the city of Bristol.

The property is next to the landscapes of cultivation and pastoral lands with a view to the Mendip hills. While the region is known for its undulating field and its picturesque villages, the National Landscape Mendip Hills has deep throats and steep slopes that cradle hundreds of historical sites. Some of North Somerset’s most spectacular natural wonders are close, including Blagdon and Chew Valley Lake, Crook Peak and Cheddar Gorge.

Wrington, with approximately 2,700 residents, brown sacrifices, pubs, shops, a pharmacy and a primary school, while Bristol, a city with almost 500,000 residents and an important university, sacrifices a complete range of services and services. The property is about five miles to the southwest or Bristol airport.

Size: 2,379 square feet

Square foot price: $ 643

Inside: An entrance lobby leads to open kitchen and dining room, all with stone floors with heating below the floor. The kitchen and dining room have heavy wooden roof beams and a trunk stove. The kitchen has painted wooden cabinets of green sage, an island, a wine cooler and an electric pot.

An adjacent living room has oak floors, another childbirth stove in a stone fireplace, roofs with French beams and doors that open to the closed garden. The first floor also has a study and two rooms at the level divided in the living room, one with a bathroom and a suite bath.

The second floor has a landing costume and two rooms, including primary school, with its own dressing room and a bathroom and a suite bath. The other bedroom has two suite bathrooms, one with a shower and the second with a rolled bathtub.

Outdoor space: The house is in 1.16 acres with several units, including four garages/workshops, an open shelter, sheds and storage buildings. A two -story structure with bathroom has a planning permission for a two -bedroom residential conversion. A walled patio area has a pergola and a cantilever that looks at ornamental shrubs and a pound with a water feature. Closed property also includes a paddock contained inside a dense hedgerow and an outdoor parking area.

Costs: A non -resident buyer who uses the house as the main residence would pay £ 81,750 ($ 110,000) in this house. The annual tax taxes are approximately 3,810 ($ 5,100).

Contact: Robin Engley | Knight Frank | +44-20-3869-4758


This ancient church became an annex of the church tower of four and a half bedrooms, which lives with an annex of tower of the church in a room is located in Redland, a suburb at about two miles north of Bristol.

Redland is a popular rich and leafy suburb between families and students. Most houses, including many large mansions, are from the Georgian and Victorian times. The neighborhood is at a short distance from Durdham and Clifton Downs, and has its own green spaces, including Cotham Gardens, Redland Green and St. Andrews Park.

There are many restaurants, pubs and coffee shops in Redland. The Redland Green Club offers tennis and other racket sports, while the University of Bristol is just south of the neighborhood. The property is approximately 10 miles northeast or at Bristol airport.

Size: 2,974 square feet

Square foot price: $ 504

Inside: Much of the original church character has been restored and retained. The front doors open to a dark stone lobby, marble floors and window windows. A snail ladder behind A ascends through the Autonomous Church Tower Apartment. Beyond the entrance, a second space has a limestone mosaic floor, a huge pilaster, a dark wooden ladder and kitchen doors and dining room. The kitchen has wooden cabinets, granite countertops, two pilasters and an island with bar stools. A window window and access to the terrace.

Stairs go up to a large living room with a wooden floor and a bath stone arc with adorned carvings. A series of windows have stained glass, and a gallery overlooking the kitchen has skylights. The third floor has the main bedroom, which shares the impressive window stained tracery window with the suite bath. The fourth floor has two bedrooms with bedrooms that share a bath with double glazing windows that show the upper part of the tracery window. The fourth bedroom is on the fifth floor, inside the church crest line.

The original church tower has been remodeled in an autonomous apartment, with a kitchen, a living room, a bathroom and a sleeping area.

Outdoor space: The property has a large terrace of landscaping with an outdoor kitchen, a pergola, pendant lights and a storage shed. An electric door opens to a parking area with an electric vehicle charger.

Costs: A non -resident buyer who uses the house as the main residence would pay £ 75,750 ($ 101,000) in this house. The annual tax taxes are approximately £ 3,732 ($ 5,000).

Contact: Alec Jupp | Elephant loves Bristol | +44-117-370-0557

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