Leek Road, Longsdon, ST9 9QF | OIRO £300,000 Call Us Today on 01782 626522

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Leek Road, Longsdon, ST9 9QF | OIRO £300,000 Call Us Today on 01782 626522 Leek Road, Longsdon, ST9 9QF | OIRO £300,000 Call us today on 01782 626522 THINKING OF SELLING? If you are thinking of selling your home or just curious to discover the value of your property, Hunters would be pleased to provide free, no obligation sales and marketing advice. Even if your home is outside the area covered by our local offices we can arrange a Market Appraisal through our national network of Hunters estate agents. BUILDING PLOT IN HIGHLY DESIRABLE LOCATION Hunters Estate Agents are pleased to offer this opportunity to build your dream house within one the most sought-after locations in the area. The plot sits on Leek Road within Longsdon and is set back from the road behind mature bushes. Planning permission has been granted to build a six-bedroom detached property on a site with outstanding open views to rear. The architect plans have been carefully crafted to provide the opportunity to build a bespoke executive property. This is an opportunity not to be missed. The plot measurements are 85m x 15.5m and the total plot size is in the region of 1300 square meters. The foundation slab is ready installed and to arrange a viewing / inspection please contact Hunters Endon on 01782 626 522. For information on granted scheme and planning please visit: http://publicaccess.staffsmoorlands.gov.uk/portal/servlets/AttachmentShowServlet?ImageNa me=191596 The planning reference with Staffordshire Moorlands is SMD/2017/0674. These particulars are intended to give a fair and reliable description of the property but no responsibility for any inaccuracy or error can be accepted and do not constitute an offer or contract. We have not tested any services or appliances (including central heating if fitted) referred to in these particulars and the purchasers are advised to satisfy themselves as to the working order and condition. If a property is unoccupied at any time there may be reconnection charges for any switched off/disconnected or drained services or appliances - All measurements are approximate. Hunters 144 Leek Road, Endon, Staffordshire Moorlands, ST9 9EW | 01782 626522 |[email protected] | www.hunters.com VAT Reg. No 887 7714 55 | Registered No: 05863474 England & Wales | Registered Office: Unit 2 Waterworld, Festival Way, Festival Park, Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, ST1 5PU | A Hunters Franchise owned and operated under licence by Cherry Tree Property Consultants .
Recommended publications
  • Trader Register Report
    Trader Region: Added by Staffordshire & Stoke Partnership Company Name: Wilcox Plumbing & Heating Ltd Street Address: Unit 19 West Cannock Way, Cannock Chase Enterprise Centre City / Town: Hednesford Postcode: WS125QU Company Website: http://www.wilcoxplumbing.com Company Number: 6376714 Distance from you: 0.00Miles Contact First Name: Darren Contact Last Name: Wilcox Contact Telephone: 01543 458074 Contact Mobile: 07970 076582 Contact Email: [email protected] Contact Fax: Trader Region: Added by Staffordshire & Stoke Partnership Company Name: cheshire oak construction Street Address: 1 whetsone road, gillow heath City / Town: stoke on trent Postcode: st8 6qf Company Website: Company Number: 8456116 Distance from you: 0.00Miles Contact First Name: andy Contact Last Name: maddox Contact Telephone: 01782 514911 Contact Mobile: 07854951056 Contact Email: [email protected] Contact Fax: 01782 514911 Trader Region: Added by Staffordshire & Stoke Partnership Company Name: Creative Domestic Installations Street Address: 42 Sands Road, Harriseahead City / Town: Stoke-on-Trent Postcode: ST7 4LA Company Website: http://www.cdistaffs.co.uk Company Number: Distance from you: 0.00Miles Contact First Name: Len Contact Last Name: Harrison Contact Telephone: 01782 516110 Contact Mobile: 07711821689 Contact Email: [email protected] Contact Fax: 01782 518237 Trader Region: Added by Staffordshire & Stoke Partnership Company Name: Homecare Builders Ltd Street Address: 1 Southbank Street, City / Town: Leek Postcode: ST13 5LS Company
    [Show full text]
  • Transforming North Staffordshire Overview
    Transforming North Staffordshire Overview Prepared for the North Staffordshire Regeneration Partnership March 2008 Contents Foreword by Will Hutton, Chief Executive, The Work Foundation 3 Executive summary 4 1. Introduction 10 1.1 This report 10 1.2 Overview of North Staffordshire – diverse but inter-linked 12 1.3 Why is change so urgent? 17 1.4 Leading change 21 2. Where is North Staffordshire now? 24 2.1 The Ideopolis framework 24 2.2 North Staffordshire’s economy 25 2.3 North Staffordshire’s place and infrastructure 29 2.4 North Staffordshire’s people 35 2.5 North Staffordshire’s leadership 40 2.6 North Staffordshire’s image 45 2.7 Conclusions 48 3. Vision for the future of North Staffordshire and priorities for action 50 3.1 Creating a shared vision 50 3.2 Vision for the future of North Staffordshire 53 3.3 Translating the vision into practice 55 3.4 Ten key priorities in the short and medium term 57 A. Short-term priorities: deliver in next 12 months 59 B. Short and medium-term priorities: some tangible progress in next 12 months 67 C. Medium-term priorities 90 4. Potential scenarios for the future of North Staffordshire 101 4.1 Scenario 1: ‘Policy Off’ 101 4.2 Scenario 2: ‘All Policy’ 102 4.3 Scenario 3: ‘Priority Policy’ 104 4.4 Summary 105 5. Conclusions 106 2 Transforming North Staffordshire – Overview Foreword by Will Hutton, Chief Executive, The Work Foundation North Staffordshire is at a crossroads. Despite the significant economic, social and environmental challenges it faces, it has an opportunity in 2008 to start building on its assets and turning its economy around to become a prosperous, creative and enterprising place to live, work and study.
    [Show full text]
  • 18 Bus Time Schedule & Line Route
    18 bus time schedule & line map 18 Hanley View In Website Mode The 18 bus line (Hanley) has 2 routes. For regular weekdays, their operation hours are: (1) Hanley: 6:14 AM - 7:14 PM (2) Leek Town Centre: 6:30 AM - 6:30 PM Use the Moovit App to ƒnd the closest 18 bus station near you and ƒnd out when is the next 18 bus arriving. Direction: Hanley 18 bus Time Schedule 43 stops Hanley Route Timetable: VIEW LINE SCHEDULE Sunday 10:14 AM - 6:14 PM Monday 6:14 AM - 7:14 PM Bus Station, Leek Town Centre Cornwell Terrace, Leek Tuesday 6:14 AM - 7:14 PM King Street, Leek Town Centre Wednesday 6:14 AM - 7:14 PM Sneyd Street, Leek Town Centre Thursday 6:14 AM - 7:14 PM Broad Street, Leek Friday 6:14 AM - 7:14 PM Daintry Street, Barnƒelds Saturday 7:32 AM - 7:14 PM Campbell Avenue, Barnƒelds Wallbridge Drive, Barnƒelds 18 bus Info Council Depot, Ladderedge Direction: Hanley Ladderedge, Leek Civil Parish Stops: 43 Trip Duration: 41 min Beech Close, Ladderedge Line Summary: Bus Station, Leek Town Centre, King Street, Leek Town Centre, Sneyd Street, Leek Town Ladderedge Centre, Daintry Street, Barnƒelds, Campbell Avenue, Barnƒelds, Wallbridge Drive, Barnƒelds, Council The Heights, Ladderedge Depot, Ladderedge, Beech Close, Ladderedge, Ladderedge, The Heights, Ladderedge, School Lane, Longsdon, The New Inn, Longsdon, Leek Old Road, School Lane, Longsdon Dunwood, Dunwood Lane, Dunwood, The Village, Endon, Park Lane, Endon, Toby Carvery, Endon, The New Inn, Longsdon Methodist Church, Endon, Endon High School, Endon, Bassnets Wood Road, Stocton Brook, Trintity
    [Show full text]
  • APPENDIX 3 – Blythe Bridge & Forsbrook and Brown Edge & Endon 1. Blythe Bridge & Forsbrook
    Appendix 3: of Staffordshire Moorlands HEA APPENDIX 3 – Blythe Bridge & Forsbrook and Brown Edge & Endon 1. Blythe Bridge & Forsbrook 1.1 BFHECZ 1 – South of Stonehouses 1.1.1 Statement of heritage significance The zone covers 20ha and lies at around 170m AOD. The historic landscape character has been identified as planned enclosure which was probably created in the 18 th or 19 th century (cf. map 1). It is typified by the straight field boundaries and lanes laid out by surveyors. The surrounding landscape is also predominantly rectilinear in form, but does not have the overall regularity of this field system. This may consequently indicate not only enclosure at different periods but also differences in historic land ownership (cf. BFHECZ 2). The majority of the field boundaries have been removed although the overall regularity of the pattern survives. The zone lies within 200m of the line of a Roman road which connected Littlechester, Derbyshire and Chesterton (north of Newcastle under Lyme)1. There is consequently the potential for archaeological remains to be associated with Roman activity. However, besides a few prehistoric and Roman artefacts which have been found, little research has so far been carried on these periods within the wider area. 1.1.2 Heritage values: Evidential value: There is the potential for below ground remains to Low survive related to late prehistoric or Roman activity, which would provide new insights into the history not only of the Forsbrook/Drayton-in-the-Moors parishes, but of Staffordshire Moorlands more generally. Historical value: The overall character of the historic field system is Low still legible in the regularity of what remains.
    [Show full text]
  • Endon Conservation Area Character Appraisal
    Contents 1.0 Location . .2 2.0 Origins, development, population and settlement form . .3 3.0 Employment, land use, ownership and building types . .4 4.0 Archaeology . .5 5.0 Endon Bank and adjacent areas: key buildings (listed and unlisted) . .6 6.0 The Village: key buildings (listed and unlisted) . .11 7.0 Green space, trees and boundaries . .14 8.0 Local details . .15 9.0 The setting of the Conservation Area . .26 10.0 Negative factors . .27 11.0 The existence of neutral areas. .27 APPENDICES Appendix 1 - Listed buildings . .28 MAPS Map 1 Endon Conservation Area Map 2 Key Historic Features Map 3 Villagescape analysis SOURCES Printed sources Brunskill, R. W. (1971) Illustrated Handbook of Vernacular Architecture. Brunskill, R. W. (1981) Traditional Buildings of Britain. Cleverdon, M. F. (2002) Landscape with Buildings. Unpublished PhD Thesis, Sheffield. Ekwall, E. (1960) Concise Oxford Dictionary of Place- Names. Harris, R. (1978) Discovering Timber-Framed Buildings. Pelham, 1950, 1951 Staffordshire Historical Collections, New Series 231-242. Pevsner, N. (1974) Buildings of England: Staffordshire. Pitt W. (1817) A Topographical History of Staffordshire. Speake, R. (ed.) (1974) The Old Road to Endon. Staffordshire Historical Collections (1925), Hearth Tax for 1666. The Victoria History of the County of Staffordshire vols. I and VII. Original sources (County Record Office, Stafford) Map and schedule of the manor of Horton (1816), D(W)1909/E/9/1 and D(W) 1535/1. Adopted 23rd February 2008 following a period of public consultation from 1st September to 31st December 2007. Endon Conservation Area Introduction Endon Conservation Area was designated in 1972, and the boundary amended in 1993.
    [Show full text]
  • Staffordshire Moorlands in the County of Staffordshire
    Local Government Boundary Commission For England Report No. 114 LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOUNDARY C OMl'vlI SSI UN FOR ENGLAND REPORT NO. LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOUNDARY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND CHAIRMAN Sir Edmund Compton, GCB,KB£. DEPUTY CHAIRMAN Mr J M Rankin,QC. MEMBERS The Countess Of Albemarle, DBE. Mr T C Benfield. Professor Michael Chisholm* Sir Andrew WheaUey,CBE. Mr P B Young, CBE. To the Rt H0n Roy Jenkins, MP Secretary of State for the Home Department PROPOSALS FOR REVISED ELECTORAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE DISTRICT OF STAFFORDSHIRE MOORLANDS IN THE COUNTY OF STAFFORDSHIRE 1. We, the Local Government Boundary Commission for England, having carried out our initial.review of the electoral arrangements for the District of Staffordshire Moorlands in accordance with the requirements .of section 6? of, and Schedule 9 to, the Local Government Act 1972, present our proposals for the future electoral arrangements for that district. 2. In accordance with the procedure laid down in section 6o(l) and (2) of the 1972 Act, notice was given on 3 June 197^ that we were to undertake this review. This was incorporated in a consultation letter addressed to the Staffordshire Moorlands District Council, copies of which were circulated to the Staffordshire County Council, Parish Councils and Parish Meetings in the district, the Member of Parliament for the constituency concerned and the headquarters of the main political parties. Copies were also sent to the editors of local newspapers circulating in the area and of the local government press. Notices inserted in the local press announced the start of the review and invited comments from members of the public and from any interested bodies.
    [Show full text]
  • Basnetts Wood, Endon, Staffordshire, ST9 9DQ
    Basnetts Wood, Endon, Staffordshire, ST9 9DQ Basnetts Wood, Endon, Staffordshire, ST9 9DQ Per Calendar Month: £850.00 Hunters are delighted to bring to the lettings market this newly renovated semi-detached property with 3 bedrooms in the highly sought after area of Endon with fantastic views of the Staffordshire Moorlands and is within the catchment area for the brilliant Endon schools. The property is available UNFURNISHED and for LONG TERM let, and would be perfect for a family. It must be viewed to appreciate its fabulous internal condition after being fully refurbished throughout by its current owners. Internally the property comprises entrance hall with access to downstairs W/C, lounge with bay window and dining room, with an opening to the brand new gorgeous shaker-style kitchen, access to separate utility space and a patio door to rear garden. To the first floor there are two double bedrooms and a single bedroom, all served by the fully modernised family bathroom with three piece suite. Externally, to the front of the property is a front garden mainly laid with paving with hedge borders and a driveway providing off-road parking for three vehicles. To the rear of the property is a low maintenance garden mainly laid with flagstones with planted borders. The property benefits from double glazing throughout and gas central heating. It has been decorated throughout, re-wired and features a gorgeous brand new kitchen and contemporary bathroom suite too. This lovely family home is sure to be popular so call Hunters today to arrange your accompanied viewing before it flies off the market!! ENERGY PERFORMANCE CERTIFICATE The energy efficiency rating is a measure of the overall efficiency of a home.
    [Show full text]
  • What Price West Midlands Green Belts?
    What Price West Midlands Green Belts? June 2007 Acknowledgements This report has been prepared by Peter Langley and Janine Bryant, with help from Gerald Kells, Malcolm and Patricia Kimber, Mark Sullivan and Phil Goode. We are grateful for advice from Graham Harrison. The section on the History of Green Belts in the West Midlands draws on Michael Law’s article in ‘Region and Renaissance’ (see references). The Green Arc Partnership have provided examples of positive improvements to the green belt. We are very grateful to Phil Jennings (www.pixelwizzard.com) for the design work. Photographs are by Peter Langley except where otherwise indicated. We are particularly grateful for the financial contribution from the Pailton and Monks Kirby area that made a major contribution to the preparation and publication of this report. Stoke-on-Trent Staffordshire Burton Stafford upon Trent Shrewsbury Telford Cannock Shropshire Wolverhampton Walsall Nuneaton Birmingham Solihull Coventry Kidderminster Rugby Bromsgrove Kenilworth Redditch Leamington Spa Droitwich Warwick Leominster Worcester Warwickshire Herefordshire Stratford-upon-Avon Worcestershire Hereford What Price West Midlands Green Belts? Introduction For the last fifty years, green belts have acted as one of the We need to ensure that our green belts are fit for the next best known and most popular planning tools for protecting fifty years of strategic planning. And that means also giving our countryside. They still command widespread public greater attention to the quality of green belt land itself. support. Although we can never know for certain what would Green belts contain some of the most valued and accessible have happened in the West Midlands without them it is likely countryside in the West Midlands, areas such as the Clent that the geography of the region would be very different – Hills and paths such as the Beacon Way, but other parts are and not for the better.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Recommendationsанаwest Midlands Contents 1. Initial/Final
    Final recommendations ­ West Midlands Contents 1. Initial/final proposals overview p1 6. Sub­region 1: Coventry and Warwickshire p13, recommendations p15 2. Number of representations received p4 7. Sub­region 2: Solihull p16, recommendations p17 3. Campaigns p5 8. Sub­region 3: Herefordshire, Shropshire (including Telford and Wrekin), and Worcestershire: p17, recommendations p22; and West Midlands (less Coventry and Solihull) p23, recommendations p29 4. Major issues p6 9. Sub­region 4: Staffordshire and Stoke­on­Trent p30, recommendations p33 5. Final proposals recommendations p8 Appendix A Initial/revised proposals overview 1. The West Midlands region was allocated 53 constituencies under the initial and revised proposals, a reduction of six from the existing allocation. In formulating the initial and revised proposals the Commission decided to construct constituencies using the following sub­regions: Table 1A ­ Constituency allocation Sub­region Existing allocation Allocation under initial Allocation under revised proposals proposals Staffordshire (and 12 11 11 Stoke­on­Trent) Herefordshire, Shropshire 47 42 n/a (including Telford and Wrekin), Warwickshire, West Midlands, and Worcestershire Herefordshire, Shropshire n/a n/a 32 (including Telford and Wrekin), West Midlands (excluding Coventry and 1 Solihull), and Worcestershire Coventry and Warwickshire n/a n/a 8 Solihull n/a n/a 2 2. Under the initial proposals seven of the existing 59 constituencies were completely unchanged. The revised proposals retained six of the existing constituencies unchanged. Under the initial proposals there were four constituencies that crossed county boundaries. These were: one cross­county constituency between Worcestershire and Warwickshire (Evesham and South Warwickshire), one between Herefordshire and Shropshire (Ludlow and Leominster), one between Herefordshire and Worcestershire (Malvern and Ledbury), and one between West Midlands and Warwickshire (Shirley and Solihull South).
    [Show full text]
  • Candidates West Midlands
    Page | 1 LIBERAL/LIBERAL DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES in PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS in the WEST MIDLAND REGION 1945-2015 ALL CONSTITUENCIES WITHIN THE COUNTIES OF HEREFORDSHIRE SHROPSHIRE STAFFORDSHIRE WARWICKSHIRE WORCESTERSHIRE INCLUDING SDP CANDIDATES in the GENERAL ELECTIONS of 1983 and 1987 COMPILED BY LIONEL KING 1 Page | 2 PREFACE As a party member since 1959, based in the West Midlands and a parliamentary candidate and member of the WMLF/WMRP Executive for much of that time, I have been in the privileged position of having met on several occasions, known well and/or worked closely with a significant number of the individuals whose names appear in the Index which follows. Whenever my memory has failed me I have drawn on the recollections of others or sought information from extant records. Seven decades have passed since the General Election of 1945 and there are few people now living with personal recollections of candidates who fought so long ago. I have drawn heavily upon recollections of conversations with older Liberal personalities in the West Midland Region who I knew in my early days with the party. I was conscious when I began work, twenty years ago, that much of this information would be lost forever were it not committed promptly to print. The Liberal challenge was weak in the West Midland Region over the period 1945 to 1959 in common with most regions of Britain. The number of constituencies fought fluctuated wildly; 1945, 21; 1950, 31; 1951, 3; 1955 4. The number of parliamentary constituencies in the region averaged just short of 60, a very large proportion urban in character.
    [Show full text]
  • Stage One Report
    Stage One Report Development Capacity Study Update Staffordshire Moorlands District Council 23 March 2011 Stage One Report Update Stage One Report Development Capacity Study Update Staffordshire Moorlands District Council This document has been issued and amended as follows: Version Date Description Created by Verified by Approved by 1a 19/11/10 Draft Chris Harding 2a 23/03/11 Final with Client comments Chris Harding Stage One Report Update Contents 1 Introduction 1 1.1 About the Commission 1 1.2 Purpose 1 1.3 Aims 2 1.4 Structure of the Report 3 1.5 Notes on the Nature of the District 3 2 Stage One Methodology 5 2.1 Introduction 5 2.2 Gathering data on Social Infrastructure 6 2.3 Gathering data on Physical Infrastructure 12 2.4 Gathering Data on Accessibility 14 2.5 Assessment of Settlements 25 2.6 Assessment of Core Strategy Options 26 3 Stage One Results 27 3.1 Introduction 27 3.2 Results of Social Infrastructure Assessment 27 3.3 Results of Physical Infrastructure Assessment 30 3.4 Results of Accessibility Assessment 32 3.5 Overall Settlement Results 45 Appendix – to be inserted Error! No table of contents entries found. Stage One Report Update 1 Introduction 1.1 About the Commission This document provides an update to the Development Capacity Study (DCS) that Staffordshire Moorlands District Council commissioned Halcrow Group Limited to undertake in 2008. The study provided part of the evidence base for the Core Strategy element of the Districtʹs Local Development Framework (LDF). 1.2 Purpose The purpose of this report is to update the DCS.
    [Show full text]
  • Cheddleton and Endon
    h c n ra k b Lee al an C on ld Ca C a New residential ld o development within n C wooded setting of St Heathland mainly a n Edward’s Hospital covered by trees a l a n Country park d S t a f f o r d s h ir e W ay Original village core Views of industrial with stone cottages estate in foreground Remnants CN05 CN03 of parkland X landscape CN02 CN04 CN01 Steep sided valleys to River Churnet floodplain Open views across valley Remnants Well defined of parkland parkland landscape landscape New woodland plantation in former parkland Churnet Caldon Valley St Original woodland Canal a belts removed for works eam Ra Regular field nd Staffo patterns ilway Large woodland rdshire blocks Way Significant public footpaths Staffordshire Way Staffordshire Moorlands District Council Cycleway Railway Remnant historic landscape Landscape & Settlement Character Assessment Important landscape setting to settlement Strong vegetation Rocky outcrops structure following Cheddleton the original field Setting boundaries Ridgeline Strong edge to settlement ST10553-10b 1:10 000 at A2 August 2008 Canal MAB BJ CAH PlantingPlanting to to strengthen strengthen edge edge of of settlementsettlement or or for for mitigation mitigation Significant views IE02 Visual open space - suitable X IE00 Visual open space - not suitable 16,000 1 8,0 00 1 8,0 14,000 00 0 0 0 , 2 2 16,000 2 2,0 00 1 8, 00 0 1 4 , 0 0 0 1 4,0 00 1 6 , 0 0 0 16 00 ,0 0,0 00 2 16 ,0 00 16,000 0 1 0 8 ,0 , 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 , 0 2 2 0 , 0 0 0 1 6 , 0 0 0 1 6,0 0 1 0 4 ,0 0 0 00 ,0 18 14,000 0 ,00 2 14 2 , 0 0
    [Show full text]