46 High Street, Snodland, Kent, ME6 5DA TO

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

46 High Street, Snodland, Kent, ME6 5DA TO 26 Hollingworth Court Turkey Mill, Ashford Road Maidstone, Kent, ME14 5PP Tel: 01622 234886 Email: [email protected] 46 High Street, Snodland, Kent, ME6 5DA Prominent High Street Retail Unit Available 352 sq m (3,789 sq ft) TO LET Location The premises are situated within an attractive setting in High Street, Snodland, Kent. The premises are situated close to the town centre amenities and within a short walk to the railway station. Snodland is situated just off the A228 between Jct 4 of the M20 and Jct 2 of the M2 to the north. There are local shops for everyday needs and a nearby supermarket together with a station with services to Maidstone, Medway and the capital, which now benefits from a high speed link. We further understand that there is a commuter bus service. The village is surrounded by the picturesque countryside of the North Downs Description The premises comprise a brick built end of terrace ground floor retail.The retail unit is predominantly rectangular in shape and benefits from a large sales area to the front measuring 30.26m2 in depth and store to the rear. Externally the property benefits from downward spotlighting and a glazed wooden framed shop front with a centrally positioned pedestrian access door. To the rear there are welfare facilities including a kitchenette and WCs. 46 High Street, Snodland, Kent ME6 5DA Accommodation Legal Costs The property comprises the following, with Each party is to be responsible for their approximate dimensions (areas are gross own legal costs. internal ):- EPC Retail /Sales Area 3,789 sq ft 352 sq m To be confirmed WC - - Location Plan Key Features Town centre location Rectangular in shape Open plan layout Staff/kitchenette area Terms The property is available to let on full repairing and insuring terms at an initial rent of £38,500 per annum exclusive of all other outgoings. License No: 100053659 Copyright reserved, provided by Alcium Software Limited. Planning Viewing The prospective tenant should make their By appointment with: own enquiries with the local authority to Mr James Squire MNAEA (Comm) establish whether or not their proposed use [email protected] is acceptable. Rates According to the Valuation Office Agency website the property's description is ''Shop and Premises'' and the Rateable Value is £30,500. For information regarding business rates please visit Gov.uk. 893932 03-Jan-2019 .
Recommended publications
  • Kent Archæological Society Library
    http://kentarchaeology.org.uk/research/archaeologia-cantiana/ Kent Archaeological Society is a registered charity number 223382 © 2017 Kent Archaeological Society KENT ARCILEOLOGICAL SOCIETY LIBRARY SIXTH INSTALMENT HUSSEY MS. NOTES THE MS. notes made by Arthur Hussey were given to the Society after his death in 1941. An index exists in the library, almost certainly made by the late B. W. Swithinbank. This is printed as it stands. The number given is that of the bundle or box. D.B.K. F = Family. Acol, see Woodchurch-in-Thanet. Benenden, 12; see also Petham. Ady F, see Eddye. Bethersden, 2; see also Charing Deanery. Alcock F, 11. Betteshanger, 1; see also Kent: Non- Aldington near Lympne, 1. jurors. Aldington near Thurnham, 10. Biddend.en, 10; see also Charing Allcham, 1. Deanery. Appledore, 6; see also Kent: Hermitages. Bigge F, 17. Apulderfield in Cudham, 8. Bigod F, 11. Apulderfield F, 4; see also Whitfield and Bilsington, 7; see also Belgar. Cudham. Birchington, 7; see also Kent: Chantries Ash-next-Fawkham, see Kent: Holy and Woodchurch-in-Thanet. Wells. Bishopsbourne, 2. Ash-next-Sandwich, 7. Blackmanstone, 9. Ashford, 9. Bobbing, 11. at Lese F, 12. Bockingfold, see Brenchley. Aucher F, 4; see also Mottinden. Boleyn F, see Hever. Austen F (Austyn, Astyn), 13; see also Bonnington, 3; see also Goodneston- St. Peter's in Tha,net. next-Wingham and Kent: Chantries. Axon F, 13. Bonner F (Bonnar), 10. Aylesford, 11. Boorman F, 13. Borden, 11. BacIlesmere F, 7; see also Chartham. Boreman F, see Boorman. Baclmangore, see Apulderfield F. Boughton Aluph, see Soalcham. Ballard F, see Chartham.
    [Show full text]
  • In Celebration of Charles Dickens
    Charles Dickens spent the last years of his life, from 1853 to 1870 living at Higham, Rochester. He died while writing The Mystery of Edwin Drood in his Swiss Chalet (pictured, from the collections of the Medway Archives and Local Studies Centre.), in the grounds of his house, Gad’s Hill Place. DICKES AT HIGHAM, 1870 Thames Marshes with Issue Number 26: May 2012 Meandering twisting ditches £2.00 ; free to members Giving way to Copperfields and hills, By Rudge and Barn, In Celebration of Charles Dickens No Bleak Houses, No Cities here – Just Little Droody Dorritts With Martins and swallows Nesting in Chuzzley Nicks Until, at last, a-top the Gadding Hill Picking Carols to celebrate St. Nicholas And Expecting more imagination, Dickens Sits in his Swiss Chalet. Odette Buchanan Some Dickens characters. From the collections of the Medway Archives and Local Studies Centre. If undelivered, please return to: Medway Archives office, th Civic Centre, Strood, Rochester, Kent, To commemorate the 200 birthday of local author Charles Dickens ME2 4AU. (1812–1870), The Clock Tower looks at some lesser known aspects of his association with the Medway Towns. Photograph from the Percy Fitzgerald Collection at the Medway Archives and Local Studies Centre. Colour picture postcard entitled Charles Dickens at Home, Gad’s Hill, Kent comprising view northern elevation of Gadshill Place, Gravesend Road, Higham, looking from north-east corner of garden, showing in foreground part of lawn, drive, shrubs and gaunt male figure looking at artist and in background house, porch, shrubs and trees. On rear, message from Alice [-] to a Miss Gurney, Rede Court, Strood, wishing her many happy returns.
    [Show full text]
  • 0 Medieval Flokestone Robertson
    http://kentarchaeology.org.uk/research/archaeologia-cantiana/ Kent Archaeological Society is a registered charity number 223382 © 2017 Kent Archaeological Society ( civ ) MEDIAEVAL FOLKESTONE. FOLKESTONE gives its name to one of the Hundreds of Kent, and was the site of a nunnery (said to have been the first in England), founded in the seventh century by Eadbald, King of Kent, the father of St. Eanswith, its first Abbess. These facts prove that the town was in earlier times a place of some importance, but very little is known respecting its history, prior to the Middle Ages. It is evident that the name, spelt Polcstane in the earlier records, was given by the Saxons,* and that it was derived from the natural peculiarities of the place, its stone quarries having always played a conspicuous part in its history. They are mentioned in two extents (or valuations) of the manor of " Folcstane" which were made in the reign, of Henry III. In the first of these, dated 1263, we read that "there are there certain quarries worth per annum-)- 20s." The second gives us further information; it is dated 1271, and says "the quarry J in which mill-stones and handmill- stones are dug " is worth 20s. per annum. Such peaceful and useful implements as mill-stones were, however, by no means the only produce of these quarries. When Edward III., and his son the Black Prince, were prosecuting their conquests in France, some of the implements of war were obtained from Folkestone. On Jan. the 9th, 1356,§ the King ordered the Warden of the Cinque Ports to send over to Calais|| those stones for warlike engines which had been prepared at Folkestone.
    [Show full text]
  • Landscape Assessment of Kent 2004
    CHILHAM: STOUR VALLEY Location map: CHILHAMCHARACTER AREA DESCRIPTION North of Bilting, the Stour Valley becomes increasingly enclosed. The rolling sides of the valley support large arable fields in the east, while sweeps of parkland belonging to Godmersham Park and Chilham Castle cover most of the western slopes. On either side of the valley, dense woodland dominate the skyline and a number of substantial shaws and plantations on the lower slopes reflect the importance of game cover in this area. On the valley bottom, the river is picked out in places by waterside alders and occasional willows. The railway line is obscured for much of its length by trees. STOUR VALLEY Chilham lies within the larger character area of the Stour Valley within the Kent Downs AONB. The Great Stour is the most easterly of the three rivers cutting through the Downs. Like the Darent and the Medway, it too provided an early access route into the heart of Kent and formed an ancient focus for settlement. Today the Stour Valley is highly valued for the quality of its landscape, especially by the considerable numbers of walkers who follow the Stour Valley Walk or the North Downs Way National Trail. Despite its proximity to both Canterbury and Ashford, the Stour Valley retains a strong rural identity. Enclosed by steep scarps on both sides, with dense woodlands on the upper slopes, the valley is dominated by intensively farmed arable fields interspersed by broad sweeps of mature parkland. Unusually, there are no electricity pylons cluttering the views across the valley. North of Bilting, the river flows through a narrow, pastoral floodplain, dotted with trees such as willow and alder and drained by small ditches.
    [Show full text]
  • HOLBOROUGH a Hill and a Hollow
    HOLBOROUGH A Hill and a Hollow Holborough is part of the parish of Snodland. In a charter purporting to date from 838 AD it is called Holanbeorge. The old English beorge denotes a hill or mound, especially a burial mound, while Hol correspondingly refers to a hollow. The hill, alas, is no more, having been quarried for its chalk in the fifty years or so from the 1920s to the 1970s. Rather more than 200 feet high and separate from the main range of the North Downs it was attractive to early inhabitants as a special place. At its summit they created a prehistoric ring ditch with a diameter of about 100 feet.1 It is thought that this ditch was perhaps part of the construction of a round barrow, which formerly incorporated a mound or bank. No trace of a burial was found at the centre of the circle, which may originally have been laid directly on to the chalk at ground level and have been dispersed later as the ground was ploughed and re-ploughed. Some bones found in the ditch may be human, suggesting that there was a secondary burial. The uppermost layers of the ditch contained various types of pottery fragments ranging from the Late Bronze Age (around 1000 BC) to Roman times.2 Confirmation that there were people living at Holborough so early came during an archaeological survey by the Canterbury Archaeological Trust in 2004-5, funded by Berkeley Homes prior to housing development, in a cornfield near the main road.3 A major round-house building was identified, and post holes elsewhere showed other circular, square and retangular structures.
    [Show full text]
  • Ageing Well: Older People in Tonbridge & Malling Contentscontents
    Ageing Well: Older people in Tonbridge & Malling ContentsContents Overview Demographics Demographics Wellbeing & disease prevalence Wellbeing & disease prevalence Mortality Mortality Healthcare usage Healthcare usage User guide Ageing Well: Older people in Tonbridge & Malling Ageing Well: Older people in Tonbridge and MallingHeath and Social Care Maps POPULATION GROWTH LIFE EXPECTANCY HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS In the 10 years between 2016 and 2026 at age 65 Age 65+ Infographic 65-84 year olds 22.5 years 19.5 + 17.8% years 48% Aged 85+ Elective of admissions Emergency are emergencies Ward-level life expectancy (men) In 2018/19: +31.6% Highest 22.8 Hildenborough Source: ONS population projections 672 admissions MULTIMORBIDITY for falls age 65+, developmental statistics 19.5 Tonbridge & Malling have 2 or more long 18.9 Kent term conditions admissions recorded by their GP for fracture 49% Burham, Eccles & Lowest 14.3 of femur Wouldham 127 Source: KID, 2017 Source: PCMD, 2013-2017 Source: HES Images from Noun project Health and Social Care Maps: 0 Demographics Population numbers: Age 65+ Population projections: Age 65+ Population numbers: Age 85+ Population Numbers: Summary table Income Deprivation Affecting Older People Index (IDAOPI) Ageing Well: Older people in Tonbridge & Malling Persons aged 65 years and over: by electoral ward Office for National Statistics mid-year estimates, 2018 4,000 3,500 number 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 Source: ONS, prepared by KPHO (LLY), Dec-19 Ageing Well: Older people in Tonbridge & Malling Persons aged
    [Show full text]
  • Christmas Eve Monday 24Th December 2018
    Christmas Eve Monday 24th December 2018 A Saturday level of service will operate with additional peak trains Enhanced Services (Note all additional train times subject to validation and change) Highspeed services Down Services Additional (06.19 / 15.16 / 16.16) St Pancras International to Maidstone West calling at Stratford International, Ebbsfleet International, Gravesend, Strood, Snodland (not 0619) and Maidstone West. Formed 6 cars. Additional (15.07 / 16.07) St Pancras International to Ramsgate calling at Stratford International, Ashford International, Folkestone West, Dover Priory, Walmer, Deal, Sandwich and Ramsgate. Up Services Additional (06.53 / 07.53) Maidstone West to St Pancras International calling at Snodland, Strood, Gravesend, Ebbsfleet International, Stratford International and St Pancras International. Additional (06.52) Sandwich to St Pancras International calling at Deal, Walmer, Dover Priory, Folkestone West, Ashford International, Stratford International and St Pancras International. Christmas Eve Monday 24th December continued on next page. Christmas Eve Monday 24th December 2018 Continued. Table 1 London and Tonbridge to Ashford International, Canterbury West, Folkestone, Dover, Ramsgate and Margate Down Services Additional (14.24) Cannon Street to Dover Priory, calling at London Bridge, Orpington, Sevenoaks, then all stations. Formed 8 cars. Additionals (15.24 / 16.24) Cannon Street to Ramsgate / Ramsgate, calling at London Bridge, Orpington, Sevenoaks then all stations to Ashford where train divides. Front 4 all
    [Show full text]
  • M20 Footbridge 'To Be Replaced in 2018'
    downsmail.co.uk MallingMalling EditionEdition Maidstone & Malling’s No. 1 newspaper FREE December 2016 No. 236 Carols and lights News CHILDREN from West Malling CE Primary School Hit and run ban joined the fun at the town’s Christmas lights festival. A DRIVER who left the scene of a The school’s 30-strong choir delighted the crowd in hit and run in Snodland has been the High Street with the carol, Angels From the banned from the road and Realms of Glory, and the Military Wives’ song, given a hefty fine. 3 Stronger Together. The line-up also included street cleaner Clive Mit- son who switched on the lights and was inter- Sheep attack anger viewed on Chris Evans’ show on BBC Radio 2. 3 VOLUNTEER shepherds called for after a dog mauled a sheep. 5 Crossing delay fury M20 footbridge ‘to MP TRACEY Crouch is furious that a rail problem will last until the New Year. 10 be replaced in 2018’ Daily drug-testing FORMER MP Ann Widdecombe has TALKS have begun to reinstate the M20 footbridge demolished in an called for daily drug- testing in prisons. 15 accident this summer, but work will not start for at least two years. The crossing point at Addington, Lest we forget which linked the village divided CROWDS turned out at war when the motorway opened in 1971, memorials to remember the town’s was brought down by a crane being fallen heroes. transported on the back of a lorry. 20 Two other lorries and a 73-year-old motorcyclist were caught up in the Crash victim tributes drama near junction 4 on August 27.
    [Show full text]
  • Snodland Clinic, Rocfort Road, Snodland, Kent, ME6
    Snodland Clinic, Rocfort Road, Snodland, Kent, ME6 5NQ Suitable for a variety of uses, investment or redevelopment subject to planning Snodland Clinic, Rocfort Connections Legal and Technical Information Offers are to be submitted in writing to Iwan The property is located within walking All the available legal and technical Jones via a Bid Proforma – a copy of which Road, Snodland, Kent, distance of Snodland Train Station. information relating to the site can be can be requested by email [email protected] London St Pancras International can be obtained by contacting the selling agent, JIG ME6 5NQ reached within 43 minutes. Snodland Planning & Development Ltd. Viewing benefits from excellent road connectivity Scheduled viewings will take place on An opportunity to purchase a site with both the M2 and M20 accessible Method of Sale Thursday 12 December. Please contact the that holds excellent potential for a within minutes. The property is a few The Freehold interest in the site is being agent direct to arrange a time. variety of future uses. The site hundred metres from the A228. offered by way of informal tender. Offers are would suit D1 operators, invited on an unconditional and subject to Contact residential developers and maybe Planning planning basis and may be subject to overage Iwan Jones The property provides much flexibility in 07818 420857 A1/A3 uses subject to obtaining and clawback provisions. All offers should be terms of its planning potential. The received by noon on Friday 17 January 2020. [email protected] all the necessary consents. lawful Use Class of the property is D1 (Non-Residential Institutions).
    [Show full text]
  • New Properties Will Be Added Daily. Please Check Individual Adverts for Closing Dates
    New properties will be added daily. Please check individual adverts for closing dates Studio flat ref no: 452 Location:Frome Court, Longmead Independent living for the over 55's, Lift, Shared garden, Way, Tonbridge central heating, flush floor shower. Local shops and bus Landlord:Clarion Housing service to Tonbridge Town for Tonbridge Train station & Social Rent:£392.82 pm Shops. Large Park close by. Rental payment due at sign Service Charge:£177.28 pm up. (£30.98 pm of which is not eligible for benefit) Bidding closes:29 Sep 2021 Studio flat ref no: 542 Location:Rectory Close, Snodland Independent living for the over 55's. 1st floor studio Landlord:Clarion Housing flat with flush floor shower. Lift available. Close to local Social Rent:£385.32 pm shops and bus service to other amenities. Short walk Service Charge:£222.83 pm to Snodland train station. Council Tax Band A. No pets (£30.98 pm of which is not eligible for allowed. Rental payment due at sign up. benefit) Bidding closes:29 Sep 2021 Studio flat ref no: 645 Location:Frome Court, Tonbridge Independent living for the over 55's. Studio flat, 1st floor, Landlord:Clarion Housing lift available. Flush floor shower. No pets allowed. Local Social Rent:£392.82 pm Shops, Church and Large Park all close by.Council Tax Service Charge:£208.26 pm Band A. Bus service to other amenities. Rental payment (£30.98 pm of which is not eligible for due at sign up. benefit) Bidding closes:30 Sep 2021 Studio flat ref no: 648 Location:Frome Court, Tonbridge Independent living for the over 55's.
    [Show full text]
  • SNODLAND C.1740-1854
    PAPER No. 003 THE PAPERMAKERS OF SNODLAND c.1740-1854 Updated 2016 Dr. ANDREW ASHBEE This paper has been downloaded from www.kentarchaeology.ac. The author has placed the paper on the site for download for personal or academic use. Any other use must be cleared with the author of the paper who retains the copyright. Please email [email protected] for details regarding copyright clearance. The Kent Archaeological Society (Registered Charity 223382) welcomes the submission of papers. The necessary form can be downloaded from the website at www.kentarchaeology.ac 1 THE PAPERMAKERS OF SNODLAND c.1740-1854 ANDREW ASHBEE Preamble There are already two excellent studies of Snodland Paper Mill1, so it may seem presumptuous to add a third. Between them Alfred Shorter2, Michael Fuller and Kenneth Funnell have thoroughly researched the surviving records and there is probably little more to find in official documentary sources. It is very regrettable that the extensive Snodland Mill records, which had survived the devastating fire of 12 August 1906, were all pulped in the mid-twentieth century before they could be examined by historians. So this paper turns rather to genealogical sources concerning the early owners and papermakers, which reveal a fascinating web of connections between people and places. The arrival of the Hook family in 1854-5 makes a suitable end; they took the Snodland mill into expansive and profitable development. Papermakers seem to have moved regularly from mill to mill and Snodland mill (like many others) was often but a stepping-stone for both owners and employees. Movement between local mills is of course to be expected - and there were many in the Maidstone area, but so far as Snodland is concerned there are also strong links with the principal papermaking area in England: the Wye valley in Buckinghamshire, where more than thirty mills were active in the early nineteenth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Kentish Dialect
    A Dictionary of the KENTISH DIALECT © 2008 KENT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY 'A Dictionary of the Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms: in use in the county of Kent' by W.D.Parish and W.F.Shaw (Lewes: Farncombe,1888) 'The Dialect of Kent: being the fruits of many rambles' by F. W. T. Sanders (Private limited edition, 1950). Every attempt was made to contact the author to request permission to incorporate his work without success. His copyright is hereby acknowledged. 'A Dictionary of Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms' : in use in the county of Kent by W.D.Parish and W.F.Shaw (Lewes: Farncombe,1888) Annotated copy by L. R. Allen Grove and others (1977) 'The Dialect of Kent in the 14th Century by Richard Morris' (Reprinted from Archaeologia Cantiana Vol VI, 1863) With thanks to the Centre for Kentish Studies, County Hall, Maidstone, Kent Database by Camilla Harley Layout and design © 2008 Kent Archaeological Society '0D RABBIT IT od rab-it it interj. A profane expression, meaning, "May God subvert it." From French 'rabattre'. A Dictionary of the Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms (1888)Page 11 AAZES n.pl. Hawthorn berries - S B Fletcher, 1940-50's; Boys from Snodland, L.R A.G. 1949. (see also Haazes, Harves, Haulms and Figs) Notes on 'A Dictionary of Kentish Dialect & Provincialisms' (c1977)Page 1 ABED ubed adv. In bed. "You have not been abed, then?" Othello Act 1 Sc 3 A Dictionary of the Kentish Dialect and Provincialisms (1888)Page 1 ABIDE ubie-d vb. To bear; to endure; to tolerate; to put-up-with.
    [Show full text]