Fernwood House | Goring Heath | Reading | Fine & Country Reading | Adrian Beatty

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  • Опубликовано: 31 авг 2022
  • Built in 2020, Fernwood House is a contemporary four bedroom Barn style home sitting in approximately 4.5 acres in a peaceful and quiet location with equestrian facilities, annex accommodation and current planning permission for a swimming pool and pool house. The property has been finished to an incredibly high standard with a thoughtfully planned flexible design both internally and externally.
    This high specification property benefits from underfloor heating throughout the ground and first floors, wired alarm system, remote enabled video gate entry and CCTV systems, and Cat 6 data hub and cabling to all television locations. The home is heated with a ground source heat pump system.
    For more information or to arrange an exclusive viewing, please contact Adrian Beatty on the details below:
    📱 07899 875 966
    📧adrianbeatty@fineandcountry.com
    #fineandcountry #fineandcountryreading #adrianbeatty #property #sell #selling #home #luxury #luxuryproperty #luxurylifestyle #estate #estateagent #realestate #realestateagent #luxury #luxuryhomes #lifestyle #lifestyleblogger #marketing #advertising #property #propertymarket #goringheath #equestrianproperty #equestrian #equestrianlifestyle
    EPC Band B
    Council Tax Band G
    Offers Over £2,000,000

Комментарии • 11

  • @billy1673
    @billy1673 6 месяцев назад

    Once that pool goes in, that will be THE destination house!
    Would love to see a follow up video once that pool goes in!

  • @arikreed7931
    @arikreed7931 4 месяца назад

    AMAZING🎉

  • @arikreed7931
    @arikreed7931 4 месяца назад

    LOVE❤❤❤

  • @superstory4u144
    @superstory4u144 Год назад +1

    Wow this is really cool

  • @assetstopurchase8432
    @assetstopurchase8432 Год назад +1

    The Novello House in Binfield is the most realistic choice for me if Coombe Park and Vanbrugh Castle can't be purchased.

  • @assetstopurchase8432
    @assetstopurchase8432 Год назад +2

    I want the Novello House because of its large acreage and proximity to London, so I would buy it despite its quite shabby interior. It seems the most realistic to me.
    I don't pay much attention to the interiors because they can always be redone, but you can't move a house around or enlarge the acreage around(if it has other homes next to it).
    My first priority would still be to get all 3 acres of the Vanbrugh Caste in Greenwich, from all the multiple property owners, for around $10+ million.
    A large acreage in the city will provide me with both the benefits of the country(neighbors that I can't hear, and grounds, lawns and gardens) and the city (clubs, cafes, museums, theaters, hospitals, schools, colleges and intellectual companionship).
    My dream property is the Coombe Park in Oxfordshire for its 125 acres of grounds, miles of frontage on the Thames, proximity to Oxford, Berkshire and London, and tens of thousands of square feet of multiple, large, wide-open interior spaces for living, social, activity and recreational venues.
    If I settle for a distant property in the country, then I would also want to complement it with the dilapidated $10M house in Little Venice that has large front and back lawns(which open up into the Little Venice Garden and the tennis courts), 6 bedrooms, and over 5,300 square feet of interiors. I'll buy it for its walking-proximity to central London and the Paddington Station.
    If I could afford a large house in the city, then I'd never move out to the country. I would only move to the country, but still remain on the outskirts or the periphery of a major city and have quick access to a small town for essential products and services.
    I wouldn't want to be more than 1.5 miles from a metro, train, or bus station, more than a few miles from a town, and more than 15 miles from a major university city, like London, Cambridge, etc.
    If possible, I'd always want views of and access to an ocean(near Cardiff or another university city), a river(near London or Cambridge), a lake, or a pedestrian precinct.
    Properties are expensive in the cities because the demand for real estate exceeds the supply since cities are where all the venues of education, employment, intellectual stimulation, social companionship and recreational activity are and that is where the government also provides the best infrastructure and services---schools, universities, businesses, government organizations, museums, theaters, hotels, cafes, restaurants, bars, etc. in an environment with top-notch security, emergency, financial and other services. Cities are generally where you also run into the most educated, refined, and sophisticated people.
    Properties in the countryside are cheap because properties are evaluated based on the returns they generate--agricultural land generates very small returns, whereas forests, grasslands, and other areas barely generate any returns. People don't spend money, unless they can generate competitive returns.
    Acreage in the country is very cheap, so would want lots of it(tens of thousands of acres in the country) if it can turn a profit and pay for its upkeep. Even if it can't pay for its upkeep, I would would still want 3 to 6 acres in the city or close to it.

  • @harmony3395
    @harmony3395 Год назад

    Beautifully done. Looks very striking from the outside. Is it a “new build”?

  • @stuartperry
    @stuartperry 8 месяцев назад

    ...and he didn't take his shoes off... Pffft

  • @expressoevangelism80
    @expressoevangelism80 Год назад

    4 acres of tedium. Why on Earth haven’t they developed the land? What’s the point of it, if you don’t use it?

  • @caronmistry6171
    @caronmistry6171 Год назад

    Very sterile

  • @dryhumorfoe8275
    @dryhumorfoe8275 4 месяца назад

    Couldn't watch. Low resolution vidoe spoiled it