For Sale4 Bedroom Flat in Shardeloes, Missenden Road, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, HP7 0RL£1,500,000

Shardeloes, Missenden Road, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, HP7 0RL

4 Bedroom Flat for sale
£1,500,000
Property Type
Flat
Bedrooms
× 4
Bathrooms
× 2
Receptions
× 2
Tenure
Share of freehold
Price
£1,500,000

Key Features

  • Accommodation over two floors
  • Four bedrooms & two bathrooms
  • Private garden and access to communal
  • Private parking and two garages
  • No onward chain
  • Measuring 2,568 sq ft

Resources

Description

Offering immense charm and elegance, a most impressive ground floor apartment measuring 2,847 sqft, located off the grand entrance hall or via its own private entrance to the rear. Shardeloes is a magnificent Grade I listed building of special architectural and historic interest set in around 50 acres of parkland grounds overlooking a lake and Misbourne valley on the edge of Amersham Old Town. The present mansion was once the ancestral home of the Tyrwhitt Drake family. The Lord of the Manor William Drake had the house built between 1758 and 1766, mainly designed by Stiff Leadbetter from Eton who was among a group of architects responding to changing fashion within Country Houses. Wanting the latest décor Drake engaged the rising architect Robert Adam to complete much of the decoration and plasterwork. Further interior work was carried out by James Wyatt from 1773. The house was finally built of stuccoed brick, one and a half stories high, with a top balustrade and a grand pedimented portico of stone, with Corinthian columns and pilasters. The Tyrwhitt Drake family fortunes declined in the 19th and 20th centuries and the house was auctioned off in the 1930s. It was requisitioned as a maternity home at the outbreak of World War II. Uninhabited and neglected by 1953 the newly formed Amersham Society fought for preservation and prevented its demolition. Subsequently the house and its adjoining stable block were beautifully and sympathetically restored and converted into apartments and houses, at first rented and then sold in the 1970s, with all owners sharing the freehold for 999 years. "Garden Flat" is a most impressive ground floor apartment located off the grand entrance hall or via its own private entrance to the rear and is believed to be an original billiard room in part. Offering immense charm and elegance, the apartment has many fine features including handsome period fireplaces and ornate plaster work throughout. The apartment is well planned with the accommodation placed over two floors. The property can be accessed via the garden hallway with stairs to the first floor and access to the grand and imposing formal drawing room which is a joy. Triple full height sash windows with original shutters flood the room with natural light, bringing focus to the grand fireplace. Located behind the drawing room via the inner hallway is the bespoke kitchen comprising an extensive range of wall and base units, freestanding range cooker and space for appliances. The inner hallway gives access to a cloakroom, storage cupboard and the main front door of the property which leads to the grand entrance hallway. It continues into the generous dining room also with triple full height sash windows and shutters. A huge feature of this property is the summer house, which is known as the orangery (Grade II* listed) within the private gardens and attached to the main building, which the current owners have used as a further dining room, however lends itself to many different uses such as a luxury home office. The first floor is accessed via a turning staircase, where there is a landing area and hallway with two double storage cupboards, to the far end there is the principal bedroom with en suite and large walk-in storage. There are three further bedrooms, all served by the well appointed family bathroom. Within the cellar, there is an allocated wine storage area. Private Garden and Driveway Parking Garden Flat benefits its own private garden, accessed via a sweeping driveway on the left hand side as you arrive through the main gates at the top of the main driveway. There are iron gates opening to an area laid to shingle with ample parking. An area laid to lawn and patio to the front of the orangery and giving access to the garden hallway. There is also a garden shed, thoughtfully tucked away. Gardens & Grounds Shardeloes stands prominently within its 50 acres of parkland grounds and gardens and is approached via a long sweeping driveway through wrought iron gates and lodge past Amersham cricket club. The grounds offer lovely walks through the Chiltern country side, woodland and copse as well as far reaching views across the lake and Misbourne valley. There are garages for the residents located in blocks to the rear of the main house. Garden Flat owns two garages. Please note the service charge covers; building insurance, exterior decoration, exterior repairs and maintenance, internal upkeep of communal areas, cleaning of communal areas, electricity in communal areas, communal gardens (which are part of approx 50 acres - the fields are looked after by a neighbouring farmer), caretaker, rubbish clearance, water and sewerage. View payable Stamp Duty for this property

Shardeloes, Missenden Road, Amersham, Buckinghamshire, HP7 0RL on Map