PENQUITE HOUSE Pendoggett, St Kew

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

PENQUITE HOUSE Pendoggett, St Kew PENQUITE HOUSE Pendoggett, St Kew PENQUITE St Teath Road, Pendoggett, St Kew PL30 3HN Occupying a tranquil setting, Penquite is a charming, farmhouse-style detached 5- bedroom property offering versatile accommodation, with an additional detached 2-bedroom Annexe. Set within easy access to the North Cornwall coast, the property offers pretty gardens, a heated swimming pool and parking for several cars/boats. EPC Band E. • 7 bedrooms with 4 bathrooms and a W.C. • Currently a successful holiday let but would make a wonderful main residence • South facing with generous and bright open plan living spaces • Private parking for at least 4 cars with a garage/boat store • Penquite House can be sub-divided into a 3 -bedroom house and 2-bedroom Cottage • Additional 2-bedroom Annexe. EPC Band C • In all about 4107 sq. ft. (381.6 sq. m.) Port Isaac 2.7 miles, St Kew 1.6miles, Rock 7.7 miles, Polzeath 5.8miles, Wadebridge – 6.3miles, Bodmin Parkway 16.3 miles, Newquay Airport 18.5 miles. All distances approximate. Viewings by appointment only Guide Price £1.35m FREEHOLD PENQUITE HOUSE Penquite House is a charming detached five-bedroom home located in a countryside setting in St Kew, within easy access of North Cornwall’s beaches, surf spots and villages. The property boasts generous living areas, with a light filled contemporary apex kitchen/dining room, sunny terraces ideal for relaxing and entertaining, a heated swimming pool and an established garden. The layout of the property means it can be subdivided into two, creating a versatile 3-bedroom house with 2- bedroom cottage inter-connected to the main house. THE ACCOMMODATION GROUND FLOOR: Light filled open plan kitchen/dining room with bi-fold doors to the garden | Living room with wood burner | W.C. | Utility room | Interconnecting door to adjacent cottage with a further open plan living, kitchen, dining room. FIRST FLOOR: Five bedrooms | Three bathrooms (one en-suite) OUTSIDE Terrace, heated swimming pool, mature garden, outdoor shower, garage/boat store, parking for up to four cars. SERVICES Mains water & electricity, private drainage. THE LOCATION Penquite is nestled in a peaceful countryside location, just a short drive from North Cornwall’s best beaches, surf spots and coastal villages. The surfing hot spot of Polzeath is just a 10-minute drive away, where you can rent surfboards, enjoy trendy restaurants, art galleries and stunning coastal paths. Nearby Rock is also just a short drive away and offers the perfect location for water sports on the Camel Estuary, as well as the ferry over to Padstow Harbour and some lovely independent shops, galleries and restaurants. In addition, the picturesque fishing village of Port Isaac, home to popular ITV television series Doc Martin and offering an excellent choice of Michelin star restaurant, including Restaurant Nathan Outlaw, can be reached in a few minutes by car. PENQUITE COTTAGE Connected to the main house, Penquite Cottage provides flexible ancillary accommodation arranged over two floors. This two-bedroom cottage is currently a successful holiday let boasting exposed stone walls, wood floors and cosy interiors, including an open fireplace and private front garden. THE ACCOMODATION GROUND FLOOR: Open plan kitchen, dining, living room with beautiful open fireplace and inter-connecting door to the main house FIRST FLOOR: Master bedroom with exposed stone wall | Second bedroom | Family bathroom PENQUITE ANNEXE This beautifully converted single storey building provides useful additional accommodation with two en-suite bedrooms and a bespoke handmade Broad & Turner kitchenette (toaster, kettle, fridge and sink). Arranged on one level the property faces onto the swimming pool with a small terrace facing the garden. EPC Band C. PENQUITE HOUSE & PENQUITE ANNEXE PENQUITE COTTAGE VIEWING: Please telephone us on 01208 863206 to make an appointment. We are open from 9.00am to 5.00pm Monday to Friday and from 9.00am to 12 noon on Saturdays. Viewing by appointment only. In accordance with the 1991 Property Misdescriptions Act, these details have been prepared in good faith and as a general guide, not a statement of fact. The particulars are issued on the following terms: (1) We have not carried out a survey or had sight of title documents and the services, appliances and specific fittings have not been tested. (2) Soft furnishings have not been checked in relation to the 1997 fire regulations. (3) Measurements are approximate. (4) The details do not form a contract or part of a contract. (5) No responsibility is taken for any travelling expenses incurred should the property prove to be inaccurately described or withdrawn. A buyer is advised to obtain verification on all matters from their solicitor. IMPORTANT NOTICE John Bray & Partners LLP have prepared these details as a brief description of the property as they know it. These Pavilion Building, Rock, Cornwall PL27 6JU particulars do not form part of any offer or contract and must not be relied upon as statements or representations of fact. Any areas, 01208 862601 measurements or distances are approximate. The text, photographs and plans are for guidance only and are not necessarily comprehensive. It can not be assumed that the property has all necessary planning, building regulation, other consents or clear title and John Bray & Partners [email protected] LLP will not have tested any services, equipment or facilities. No responsibility is taken for any travelling expenses incurred should the property prove to be inaccurately described or withdrawn. A buyer is advised to obtain verification on all matters from their solicitor. www.johnbraysales.co.uk .
Recommended publications
  • Penmarie Penmarie Pendoggett, St Kew, Bodmin, PL30 3HH Port Isaac 2.5 Miles St Kew 2.5 Miles Wadebridge 6.3 Miles
    Penmarie Penmarie Pendoggett, St Kew, Bodmin, PL30 3HH Port Isaac 2.5 miles St Kew 2.5 miles Wadebridge 6.3 miles • Three Bedrooms • Two Reception Rooms • Games Room/Fourth Bedroom • Kitchen/Diner • Three Bathrooms • Studio Annexe • Garages and Spa • Large Garden Guide price £850,000 SITUATION The property is conveniently located in the accessible village of Pendoggett, designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, with its popular 16th century public house, The Cornish Arms. The picturesque fishing villages of Port Isaac and Port Gaverne are 2.5 miles away. The estuary town of Wadebridge is 6.5 miles from the property and sits astride the River Camel. The town offers a variety of shops together with primary, secondary and sixth form education, cinema, numerous restaurants and sports and social clubs. Mainline rail services are available at Bodmin Parkway connecting to London Paddington via Plymouth whilst Newquay airport provides a number scheduled flights to both Beautifully appointed house and annexe with flexible domestic .and international destinations. Access to the A30 can be gained 10 miles from the property and links the cathedral cites of Truro and Exeter. At accommodation, large garden and sea views. Exeter there is access to the mainline rail services to London Paddington and the Midlands, M5 motorway network and well respected Exeter International Airport. DESCRIPTION The original property was constructed in the 1930s of block cavity and render under a tiled roof with later additions during the 1980's. In 2016 this property undertook a complete renovation including being re-wired, re-plumbed and re- plastered.
    [Show full text]
  • The Dagg People in St. Kew Jim Dagg, February 2015
    The Dagg People in St. Kew Jim Dagg, February 2015 St Kew parish, one of over 220 in the Duchy of Cornwall, is north of the town of Wadebridge, north of the Camel Valley and inland from Port Isaac in North Cornwall. About 1100 people are permanent residents of the 6500-acre parish and live in hamlets and farms connected by hedge-lined lanes. The lanes are narrow and twisting. Drive with care. Forty miles an hour can lead to some scary encounters with wildlife, other drivers or walkers. Both cyclists and eight and half foot-wide tractors are on a stop-for-nothing mission. The ancient hamlets are called Chapel Amble, Trewethern, Trewethen, St Kew Highway, St Kew, Trelill, Trequite, Tregellist, and Pendoggett. The origins of St Kew parish, lurk in the mists of time. Ancient beginnings have emerged in the work of many historians, archaeologists and people researching family records that are constantly being discovered. Although I am not one of those lucky types, I have developed a spectator interest during many visits to Cornwall, starting back in the early 1970s. Today, the parish is all quiet farmland. There once was a railway, but the station at St Kew Highway closed in the 1960s. Now a main road runs north to south, the A39, optimistically named the Atlantic Highway, and the B3314 road clips the north-west corner through Pendoggett, but all roads by-pass the church town of St Kew. 1 The heart of St Kew parish is St Kew hamlet and the parish church, St James the Great.
    [Show full text]
  • Po8 February 2021
    February 2021, Issue 266 News, views and issues from: Chapel Amble, Pieces of Pendoggett, St Kew, St Kew Highway, Trelill, Tregellist, Trequite, Eight Trewethern Email: [email protected] A starling deciding what to have for lunch! Photograph kindly supplied by David Balmford Your free guide to news and events within and around St Kew Parish A view of the allotments at St Kew Highway Welcome to Pieces of Eight We are a free independent community magazine, published ten times a year (not January and August) covering local news, views and events in the St Kew parish area. Volunteers produce, edit and distribute the magazine to every household in the area, and to all the local churches, shops and pubs. We do hope you enjoy reading it. We would love to hear from our readers - articles, letters, suggestions and other contributions are always welcome. Please see our contact details below. There is also an on-line edition hosted by the Parish Council which can be found at www.stkewparish.org.uk (We are very grateful to the Parish Council for allowing us to use their website). EDITORIAL our local businesses and charities like the Food- bank. Goodbye 2020. You will not be fondly remembered by anyone, anywhere. A big ‘thank you’ is due to all our distributors. Their safety and well-being is very important to us and we To be honest 2021 isn’t looking much better at the felt it only right to let them decide if they still wanted moment with an indefinite lockdown, high hospitali- to continue to deliver the magazine during the cur- sation and death rates, and a struggling economy.
    [Show full text]
  • Po8 September 17 for Parish Website
    September 2017 Issue 233 News, views and issues Pieces of from: Chapel Amble, Pendoggett, St Kew, St Kew Highway, Trelill, ight Tregellist, Trequite, E Trewethern Email:[email protected] A leap of faith…… Photograph by Ed Pickard Your free guide to news and events within and around St Kew Parish 1 Welcome to Pieces of Eight We are a free independent community magazine, published ten times a year (not January or August) covering local news, views and events in the St Kew parish area. Volunteers produce, print and distribute the magazine to every household in the area, and to all the local churches, shops and pubs. We do hope you enjoy reading it. We would love to hear from our readers - articles, letters, suggestions and other contributions are always welcome. Please see our contact details below. We can post issues to households outside the parish at a cost of £10.00 per annum. There is also an on-line edition hosted by the Parish Council which can be found at www.stkewparish.org.uk/PO8.html. (We are very grateful to the Parish Council for allowing us to use their site). Editorial Contacting the Editorial Team We can be contacted by email at Welcome back! We hope everyone has had a [email protected]. good summer break. We look forward to some Please use this ad- dress for ALL lovely September days now! correspondence, the in-box is checked regularly. According to National Geographic mass Advertisers should contact Steve, our Adver- production of plastics began just six decades tising Manager via this email address, putting ago, but has now created 8.3 billion metric tons ‘Advertisement’ in the subject line.
    [Show full text]
  • Future Electoral Arrangements for Cornwall Council
    Final recommendations Future electoral arrangements for Cornwall Council December 2009 Translations and other formats For information on obtaining this publication in another language or in a large-print or Braille version, please contact the Boundary Committee: Tel: 020 7271 0500 Email: [email protected] © The Boundary Committee 2009 The mapping in this report is reproduced from OS mapping by the Electoral Commission with the permission of the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office, © Crown Copyright. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown Copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. Licence Number: GD 03114G Contents Summary 1 Introduction 3 2 Analysis and final recommendations 7 Submissions received 7 Electorate figures 8 Council size 9 Electoral fairness 10 Draft recommendations 10 General analysis 11 Electoral arrangements 12 Penzance, St Ives & Hayle, Helston & The Lizard, 13 Falmouth & Penryn and Camborne & Redruth China Clay, St Agnes & Perranporth, St Austell, 21 St Blazey, Fowey & Lostwithiel and Truro Newquay, Bodmin, Wadebridge & Padstow, Camelford 28 and Bude Launceston, Liskeard, Looe & Torpoint, Callington 34 and Saltash Conclusions 39 Parish electoral arrangements 39 3 What happens next? 55 4 Mapping 57 Appendices A Glossary and abbreviations 59 B Code of practice on written consultation 63 C Table C1: Final recommendations for Cornwall Council 65 D Additional legislation we have considered 76 Summary The Boundary Committee for England is an independent statutory body which conducts electoral reviews of local authority areas. The broad purpose of an electoral review is to decide on the appropriate electoral arrangements – the number of councillors and the names, number and boundaries of wards or divisions – for a specific local authority.
    [Show full text]
  • St Endellion Church "St Endellion! St Endellion! the Name Is Like a Ring of Bells
    St Endellion Church "St Endellion! St Endellion! The name is like a ring of bells. I travelled late one summer evening to Cornwall in a motor car. T he road was growing familiar, Delabole, with its slate quarry past, then Pendoggett. Gateways in the high fern-stuffed hedges showed sudden glimpses of the sea. Port Isaac Bay with its sweep of shadowy cliffs stretched all along to Tintagel. The wrinkled Atlantic Ocean had the evening light upon it. The stone and granite manor house of Tresungers with its tower and battlements was tucked away out of the wind on the slope of a valley and there, on the top of the hill was the old church of Saint Endellion. ” John Betjeman St Endellion Church is one of England’s holy places, Following a vision of her death, Endelienta is said an ancient collegiate church with four prebends, a to have asked that upon her death, her body mile from the sea and surrounded by fields. John should be placed on a sledge or cart drawn by Betjeman observed that the church goes on praying bullocks, and that she should be buried at the even when there is no one in it, and it has a sense of place where they stopped. She is thought to have spiritual community which affects so many who died on April 29th some time in the sixth century, come here. and possibly at the hands of Saxon pirates. She was buried at the top of a hill, and a church built St Endellion (Cornish: Sen Endelyn) is a civil parish over her grave.
    [Show full text]
  • North Cornwall Statement 31 October 1996
    CORNWALL COUNTY COUNCIL PUBLIC RIGHTS OF WAY NATIONAL PARKS AND ACCESS TO THE COUNTRYSIDE ACT 1949 COUNTRYSIDE ACT 1968 WILDLIFE AND COUNTRYSIDE ACT 1981 REVISED STATEMENT NORTH CORNWALL DISTRICT Parish Meeting of ADVENT Relevant date for the purpose of the revised Definitive Statement 31st October 1996 _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ NO. LOCATION AVERAGE MIN WIDTH WIDTH _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1 FP from Trethin to Parish Boundary - 2 FP from Trethin via St Adwen's Church to Tresinney 10'0"- 12" 3 FP from St Adwen's Church via Trewint and Tor to Parish Boundary - 4 FP from St Adwen's Church via Highsteps to Parish Boundary - 5 FP from Road S. of Quitecombe to FP 4 - 6 FP from Pencarrow via Treclago to Parish Boundary - 7 FP from Highertown to Road SW of Watergate - 8 FP from Watergate via Moorgate and Aldermoor Farm to Parish Boundary - 9 FP from Road W of Moorgate to FP8 - 10 FP from Kenningstockmill to Parish Boundary - 11 FP from Road S of Tresinney to Road E of Trecarne - 12 FP from Road E of Kenningstockmill to Road W of Trewint - 13 FP from Kenningstockmill to Trecarne - 1 CORNWALL COUNTY COUNCIL PUBLIC RIGHTS OF WAY NATIONAL PARKS AND ACCESS TO THE COUNTRYSIDE ACT 1949 COUNTRYSIDE ACT 1968 WILDLIFE AND COUNTRYSIDE ACT 1981 REVISED STATEMENT NORTH CORNWALL DISTRICT Parish of ALTARNUN Relevant date for the purpose of the revised Definitive Statement
    [Show full text]
  • Trio 1983-07
    cluttered as it is these EDITORIAL days. Then, as now, Saturday Each year the season seems was devoted to change over. to start later and finish One reason for the dimin­ earlier. So much for the ishing season is bound to be theory that the M 5 motorway socio-economic: another is - would lengthen the tourist probably the result of season in Cornwall by short­ change. There are fashions ening the time it takes to in places as much as in get here! The season was everything else. It is longer in the days when pointless to say that the A camLnity newsletter for the Cornwall was more inacces­ people who come here are not residents of PORT ISAAC, TKELKHIS, sible. A mature Port Isaac what they were: the travel­ and FORT GAVEFNE, published by lady said recently that ler has changed as much as the Village Hall Carmittee and when she was a teenager she the mode of travelling. produced by voluntary effort. started work in a local In yesteryear the tourists Revenue fran advertising is used hotel in March and continued came by train and spent more to offset the duplicating costs. through until mid-October. time in the village. Would Distributed FREE by kind courtesy of cur local newsagents. 'In those days there was today's visitors spend more something on offer to occupy time here if there was more the visitors every night of for them to do? Port Isaac ISSUE NO. 15 JULY 1983 the week, starting with the is a lovely village in a Sunday service on the Platt' very beautiful setting.
    [Show full text]
  • Misty Corner Misty Corner Rockhead Street, Delabole, PL33 9BU Camelford 2.7 Miles Wadebridge 9.6 Miles North Cornish Coast 2.4
    Misty Corner Misty Corner Rockhead Street, Delabole, PL33 9BU Camelford 2.7 miles Wadebridge 9.6 miles North Cornish Coast 2.4 • Four Bedrooms • Two Receptions • Three Bathrooms • Fourth Bedroom/Study • Swimming Pool • Low Maintenance Garden • Four Garages • Workshop and Store Guide price £625,000 SITUATION This substantial converted barn is located at the very edge of the thriving self-contained village of Delabole. The village itself boasts a well- respected primary school, local shop, doctors, garage, DIY builder's merchants and public house. Just over two miles from the property is Trebarwith Strand beach, at low tide the sandy beach stretches for over a mile and is a popular family and surfing destination. Just to the south of the village is access to one of North Cornwall's best kept secret beaches. The descent to Tregardock Beach is not for the faint hearted but the Impressive barn conversion finished to an exacting standard with reward is well worth it. The small town of Camelford is 2.7 miles from the property with primary and secondary education, shops, Post Office, stunning rural views doctors, veterinary surgery and public houses. To the south lies the picturesque fishing ports of Port Isaac and Port Gaverne made popular by the TV series Doc Martin. Also home to the A cappella singers The Fishermans Friends and Michelin starred Restaurant Nathan Outlaw. Further south is the estuary town of Wadebridge, which sits astride the River Camel, with its famous Camel Trail linking Bodmin and Padstow. There is access to the A30 trunk road at the former market town of Launceston.
    [Show full text]
  • The Local Government Boundary Commission For
    SHEET 1, MAP 1 THE LOCAL GOVERNMENT BOUNDARY COMMISSION FOR ENGLAND MORWENSTOW CP ELECTORAL REVIEW OF CORNWALL BUDE NORTH, KILKHAMPTON Draft recommendations for division boundaries in the county of Cornwall June 2018 & MORWENSTOW Sheet 1 of 1 KILKHAMPTON CP Boundary alignment and names shown on the mapping background may not be up to date. They may differ from the latest boundary information D applied as part of this review. F LAUNCELLS BUDE-STRATTON CP CP BUDE STRATTON This map is based upon Ordnance Survey material with the permission of Ordnance Survey E on behalf of the Keeper of Public Records © Crown copyright and database right. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown copyright and database right. MA The Local Government Boundary Commission for England GD100049926 2018. RHA MCH URC H CP POUNDSTOCK CP KEY TO PARISH WARDS WHITSTONE POUNDSTOCK CP BODMIN CP PENZANCE CP P WEEK ST NORTH C MARY CP ST W TAMERTON CP O GENNYS CP T S A CAMEL & COOKSLAND AW EAST B O C B ST LEONARD'S AX HEAMOOR A BODMIN J C ST PETROC'S AY NEWLYN AZ PROMENADE WARBSTOW BUDE-STRATTON CP A CP (DET) BOYTON CP PERRANZABULOE CP ST JULIOT CP OTTERHAM F CP NORTH D FLEXBURY O WARBSTOW CP R T PETHERWIN CP BA GOONHAVERN R R E LYNSTONE A E B B M T C BB PERRANPORTH R U A F STRATTON BODMIN CP LESNEWTH P E R I V N A Y CP E LAUNCESTON BODMIN ST L A WERRINGTON C G N NORTH & NORTH MARY'S & ST A D CP C LEONARD'S TRENEGLOS PETHERWIN CAMBORNE CP REDRUTH CP BODMIN ST P M I CP TRESMEER PETROC'S N CAMELFORD & S CP TINTAGEL CP T BOSCASTLE E G ROSKEAR BC CENTRAL R EGLOSKERRY ST STEPHENS
    [Show full text]
  • CORNWALL 218 Atmospheric of All, During the Roaring Surf Andbitter Windsofcornwall’Sferalatmospheric Ofall,Duringtheroaringsurf Winter
    © Lonely Planet Publications 218 lonelyplanet.com THE NORTH COAST 219 Orientation & Information detail on ways to get to and from the county Cornwall stretches from the River Tamar and p295 for countywide travel. C o r n w a l l and the granite hump of Dartmoor in the Cornwall 24 (www.cornwall24.co.uk) Lively (and usually east all the way to mainland England’s most heated) Cornwall discussion forum. westerly point at Land’s End. The principal Cornwall Beach Guide (www.cornwallbeachguide administrative town, Truro, sits bang in the .co.uk) Online guide to the county’s finest sand. middle of the county; to the north are the Cornwall Online (www.cornwall-online.co.uk) A lofty cliffs and surfing beaches of the north community-based site with guides to accommodation, And gorse turns tawny orange, seen beside coast, while the south coast is a gentler walks, attractions, villages and activities. Pale drifts of primroses cascading wide landscape of fields, river estuaries and quiet To where the slate falls sheer into the tide. beaches. The main A30 road cuts through the middle of the county, running roughly THE NORTH COAST Sir John Betjeman, Cornish Cliffs parallel with the main-line railway between London Paddington and Penzance; a second If it’s the classic Cornish combination of Jutting out into the churning sea and cut off from south Devon by the broad River Tamar, major road (the A38) runs east from Ply- lofty cliffs, sweeping bays and white-horse Cornwall (or Kernow, as its usually known around these shores) has always seen itself as a mouth across the Tamar Bridge and along surf you’re after, then make a beeline for the nation apart from the rest of England – another country, not just another English county.
    [Show full text]
  • Conservation Area Character Statement
    Conservation Area Character Statement NORTH CORNWALL DISTRICT COUNCIL (front cover) INTRODUCTION St. Kelv village is set ill the siilnll steep sided valley of the Riuer Ainble. St. Jnli~es'Pnnsh Conservation Areas are designated by local planning authorities under the Clz~r~cl~is situated on tlte south-facing hillslde Planning Acts. Section 69 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation ant idst n group of mature trees. Areas) Act 1990 defines a Conservation Area as a12 area of special architectzt~alor historic interest, tlze character or appearance of which it is desirable to preserve ol- enhance. North Cornwall District Council, as the local planning authority, has a duty to designate appropriate parts of its area as Conservation Areas. At present there are some 8,500 Conservation Areas in England of which 29 are in the district of North Cornwall. During the preparation of the North Cornwall District Local Plan the centre of St. Kew was identified as a potential Conservation Area. Following public consultation it was designated as a Conservation Area by North Cornwall District Council on 3 February 1997. The Village of St. Kew The small village of St. Kew is situated in the steep sided valley of the River Amble about 6 km (3%miles) north-east of Wadebridge. Several minor routes converge here around an ancient fording point. St. Kew is named after the Celtic saint of that name who founded a chapel on the site of the present St. James' Church. However, the name St Kew was not generally used until the 15th century. Before that an alternative name was 'Lanow', which refers to the monastery founded by St.
    [Show full text]