doors for sale pembrokeshire

doors for sale pembrokeshire

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Doors For Sale Pembrokeshire

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Distances are straight line measurements from centre of postcode Use the school checker To view this property or request more details, contact: How much will it cost me to call the number displayed on the site? Standard geographic charges from landlines and mobiles apply and calls may be included in your telecom provider's call package. Map & Street View Take me back to the start Standard geographic charges from landlines and mobiles apply and calls may be included in your telecom provider's call package.city style shopping in the heart of pembrokeshire When Pembrokeshire grocer Vincent Davies first opened his doors to the public in 1906, little did he know that four generations later it would have transformed into one of West Wales’ best known department stores. Now situated just outside Haverfordwest with ample free parking, Vincent Davies offers everything you would expect from a department store – from furniture to kitchenware, gifts to clothes and much more.




HOW TO FIND US Vincent Davies, Fishguard Road, Haverfordwest, SA62 4BTGet Directions A DEPARTMENT FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS200 year old farm house with room for up to 10 people right next door to UKs first eco-village. Attic occupied by family with four kids[. Two triple and a double[ensuite] and a single on first floor available to you. Clean, comfortable family house . Log fire in each reception room . Horses and cats always eager for a chatAccommodates: 10 2.5 1 5 Flexible 11AM Cat(s)Property type: House Private room £30 / night after the first guest 5%Monthly Discount: 12%Cancellation: FlexibleEastern end of the Preseli hills. Extremely rural - beaches, bays and mountains within half an hours car ride. Thick stone walls and large rooms for a spacious farm house feel. Log fires warm you twice . Spring water in the taps for that spa feeling as you wash and drink.One large double ensuite with bath and shower;two double plus single rooms with use of second shower room;one single;




seven people would fit comfortably.Two hundred acres of field and woods include the farm and next door eco-settlement. Walking can take you across the hills to Newport with the best boutique restaurants and pubs and health food shopping and craft shops. Cardigan has great fish and chips and cinema. Narberth has quality music, food and clothes. Supermarkets are a safe 40 minutes away . Train station 15 minutes by car. Bus links 15 mins walk.Family are in and out of the house and can direct you to local shopping spots- one within walking distance next door in Lammas eco - settlement where you can peruse the latest in straw-bale eco architecture and buy eggs and garden produce produced right on site. There is a family of six inhabiting the attic [ it's big ] in preparation for building their own eco dwelling under the One Planet Development scheme. Meal times and cooking times need to be negotiated !This is a place where the strong local heritage meets the face of the future. The debate is intenseWe can help with transport.




It is our pleasure !Shoes off at door keeps things clean- you'll need slippers Friendly communal attitude includes respecting others needs for sleep at night and clean shared space. We like to share food and meals and help with shopping and are also aware of the hermit in those who enjoy a quiet rural setting.Stone Hall is a Grade II-listed mansion thought to date back in parts to the 17th Century and 19th Century and it could be yours for a six-figure sum. Formerly converted to a hotel and restaurant in 1984, this closed in 2010 and the property is currently a very pretty home in the heart of the Pembrokeshire countryside. Dan Rees from estate agent Savills, which is selling the home, says: "Stone Hall is certainly one of the prettiest houses I have seen. Plus it has amazing gardens and grounds including a very large walled garden." He sounds smitten, and you will be too. According to website British Listed Buildings, the property achieved its Grade II listing in 1963 "as a gentry house with surviving features from the 17th and early 19th centuries."




And the home is certainly jam packed full of period features and characterful charm that makes it a unique find within the heart of West Wales. Original stripped floorboards and stone flagstones, that must have experienced thousands of foot falls during its 300 year history, can be found throughout the home. Large Georgian style windows with original wood panels let the light flood in and provide mesmersing views into the garden; the very pretty garden. A tour of the fireplaces provides a tour of history, ranging from an inglenook in the dining room, to stone in the hallway to a marble and wood carved fire in the main living room. And the distinct historical eras are illustrated by the ceilings too - wood beams in one room, detailed ceiling friezes and cornicing providing exquisite Georgian period detail in another. Wooden wall paneling, original thick and heavy internal doors and some quirky arched and round windows add even more charm to this family home. The kitchen diner is a light and bright room with two sets of double doors out to the garden.




But the addition of a log burner and bright blue Aga means this room is one of the warmest in this beautiful home. But, this home just keeps on giving as there's another kitchen diner in the oldest part of the property. A summer and a winter kitchen maybe? Outside the garden is delightful, with an idyllic walled garden bursting with mature plants. The 7.8 acres includes a sweet bluebell wood and a separate cottage which might be an opportunity to set up a holiday let business, subject to planning consent. Who wouldn't want to stay at Stone Hall? In addition, hiding within the grounds is an additional workshop, barn, potting shed and garage. According to the book ‘Historic Pembrokeshire Homes and their families' by Francis Jones: "Stone Hall provides an example of a traditional residence of the older Welsh gentry, believed to be built for accommodating the household of a country gentleman mainly occupied with estate and farming concerns and local administration." The book records that even in 1858 the property was described as a place of great antiquity and that hasn't changed to this day.

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