House For Sale In Loddon Norfolk

Roche is involved in the industrial and warehousing market across Norfolk, Suffolk, Lincolnshire and Cambridgeshire handling a range of new developments as well as established business parks, industrial estates and trade parks. The firm advises developers and investors on potential new schemes and refurbishment projects, as well as handing lettings, sales, lease disposals, acquisition searches and negotiations. Roche's agency surveyors have extensive market knowledge of premises in the area, occupiers, owners and requirements. Their wide experience and knowledge are the foundation for advising occupiers in formulating and implementing property strategies, including relocations. The firm advises a number of the region's leading companies in the sector, recent examples including ATB Laurence Scott, Lotus and Hamlin Electronics. The firm has been involved in several of the region's largest developments including Broadland Business Park in Norwich, Willows Business Park, Campbells Meadow and St Hilary's Trade Park in King's Lynn, Beccles Business Park and Clipbush Business Park in Fakenham, as well as leading industrial estates in Norwich.
Roche were winners of the Estates Gazette Norfolk Deals Competition in 2015, having concluded more transactions in the county than any other firm. Details of currently available properties can be obtained from the Property Search.Don't miss yourchance to win oneof these uniqueexperiences:†† • Personal shopping experience plus £200 spending money • Fine dining experience • Drive a supercar • And much more ††Terms and conditions apply It's easier to ask what isn'tProperties currently available to rent in this week’s Home Options Please see below for properties advertised this week under the Home Options Scheme. More information about the Home Options Scheme and how to register for a home can be found here. If you are interested in renting any of these, or any other properties advertised on Home Options, please call Saffron Housing on 01508 532031 for details. Bramble Close - Tivetshall St Mary – 1 bedroom semi detached houseBramble Close
Tivetshall St Mary – 1 bedroom semi detached house. Property has a section 106 which gives priority to local residents Flaxlands Road, Carleton Rode – 3 bedroom semi detached houseFlaxlands Road, Carleton RodeGerman Shepherd Puppies For Sale San Antonio Texas 3 bedroom semi detached house – 2 doubles and 1 single bedroom.Hepa Air Purifiers Australia Oil fired central heating.Puppies For Sale In Floyd Va Westcroft, Hethersett – 2 bedroom detached bungalow. 2 bedroom detached bungalow. Property has a wetroom and priority will be given to applicants in need of this facility. Redenhall Road, Harleston – 2 bedroom mid terraced house. 2 bedroom mid terraced house.
1 double and 1 single bedroom. Section 106 gives priority to residents of South Norfolk. Loddon, a small village situated at the southern edge of The Broads, with a good selection of local shops and pubs, is an ideal location for a holiday. The Suffolk Heritage Coast is easily accessible as are the diverse market towns of Beccles and Bungay. Norwich the cultural centre of the county is just ten miles away. The River Chet runs through the village and daily boat hire is available. The River Chet Walk is a very pleasant walk from Loddon, running through the village, to the end of the river at Hardley Cross. Loddon - Norfolk Broads Converted to a high standard, well equipped and very comfortable in a peaceful location close to Norwich and the great sandy beaches of the east coast. This delightful property offers bags of character and very comfortable well equipped accommodation in the village that is the gateway to The Broads.Should you wish to walk this tour a printable copy is available here –
The centre of Loddon is a Conservation Area, with buildings from several centuries, some grand and others built for people who worked in the vicinity. Many have changed their use over the years. On this tour some of the various houses, business premises and religious buildings are pointed out. More information about them, and about Loddon’s history can be found in books and leaflets in the Old Town Hall Information Centre. What better place to start than at the heart of Loddon, where Holy Trinity Church dominates the scene as it has done for the past 500 years.With carved stone, flint flush-work and a fine tower, it stands majestically in a huge chuchyard. Leaving the churchyard and turning south past Barclay’s Bank, can be found the old 17th century ‘Institute’This was probably also a house originally, but has been used as a Working Men’s Institute, a Roman Catholic Chapel, a Labour Exchange, and restaurant. It is now a shop and beauty salon. Past the fire-station and the row of 18th century doorways we come to The Angel, said to be the oldest of the Loddon inns and frequented by the workmen who were building the Church.At the back of the yard a small smoke-house was used to preserve meat and fish.
Notice the next house with steps to the front door, the archway, and fanlights over the doors of the terrace beyond. On Farthing Green, Aelfric Modercope, Saxon Lord of the Manor, stands on his pedestal, surveying the length of the High Street, with his hand on the ancient poorbox, which can be seen in in Holy Trinity Church. Bearing left into Beccles Road, we pass Farthing Green House.Built in the 18th century, with additions in the 19th, it was previously called Bank House and home to the local agent for Gurney’s Bank before the present Bank was built.Until 1974, when South Norfolk Council was established, it was the offices of Loddon Rural District Council. On the other side of the road, Loddon House dates from about 1716. In its early days it was used as a ‘lunatic asylum’. The group of dwellings after No 5 Beccles Road were converted from the old maltings and oast house, and the thatched cottage further along was once a baker’s shop. The bridge crosses Loddon Run, on its way to join the River Chet.The tall first house in Norton Road was the old Police House, complete with lock-up cell for offenders.
The small pair of garages opposite at one time stored the horse-drawn fire-engine. Norton Road and then Mill Road lead to Pye’s Mill Road and the picnic area by the River Chet. Across Beccles Road is the Loddon Industrial Estate, a group of businesses in well-designed buildings just off the A146, providing employment for many local people. Retracing your steps along Beccles Road and back over the bridge is a small development of houses and two converted from the old Fox and Hounds pub on the corner of Low Bungay Road. Between the Low and High Bungay roads is a group of Council owned bungalows for elderly people, built in 1963 by architects Tayler and Green.In the 1990s they were among the first post-war community buildings to be listed, Grade 2. To the west of High Bungay Road are many of Loddon’s post-war houses, both private and social; also the three schools for children from Loddon and the surrounding area. Behind Aelfric Modercope, Loddon’s town sign,  is another large red brick Victorian house, and a corner shop and converted church-room in ‘Victorian-Adam’ style.
Nearby, Saxon House in Kitten’s Lane is a group of flats for elderly people, built in 2000 on the site of Brownes Garage Facing Farthing Green, a terrace of four small town houses, partially converted from the frontage of the former Brownes Garage, completes the setting for the village sign. On the way back to Church Plain a mixture of dwellings and businesses present their various facades.The Primitive Methodist Chapel, which sits next to the Post Office, was built in 1900. It later became an Infants School but is now a community building called The Hollies and is run under the protection of the Loddon Buildings Preservation Trust. The Swan, with evidence of its Tudor history at the rear, presents an imposing 18th century façade with Victorian modifications.Once a coaching inn, it has been a centre of social activity for centuries, hosting in its time a magistrates court, auctions and public meetings. The Old Town Hall, was built 1870 when The Swan was found to be too small for many public events.
It was used for civic ceremony, public entertainment, and the Magistrate’s Court.The back of the building is now used by an indoor bowls club, and part of the front by a hairdresser.It also houses the Information and Tourist Centre. Bugden House, next door, on the corner of George Lane, is another very old house. Note the blocked windows on the upper floor. In George Lane, St John’s Church was built by Weslyan Methodists in 1893.The adjacent buildings are the Lecture Hall (rebuilt in 1923, after a fire in 1918 during its use as a wartime hospital), and the Old Chapel, dating from 1835.Further down George Lane and also to the north are most of the other post-war housing developments, some as recent as the mid 1990s. Continuing north along Bridge Street is the red-brick gabled farmhouse of Street Farm, probably built in the early 18th century, is set back from the road, now used in part by a delicatessen and cafe.Its rear garden became part of Garden Court, with houses built in the early 1980s.
Gilbert’s Barn, part of the original farm, which lies in Garden Court, is dated 1833 in the gable and now comprising four dwellings, has thatch on one side of its roof and pantiles on the other. Astride the bridge over the Chet stands Loddon Mill, no longer working but a well-preserved example of a fine old wooden water mill.It was converted to steam power about 1888, after Wood, Sadd, Moore & Co, seed and wool merchants and millers, established their business. The road ahead leads to the adjacent village of Chedgrave, probably an earlier settlement than Loddon, with domestic architecture from several periods and a church with its original ornate Norman doorway. Returning south and across the road from Loddon Mill, at the riverside, Loddon Staithe and its adjoining boatyards present a constantly changing scene of activity in all seasons.Here are boats and birds, anglers and sometimes artists. The narrow roadside of Bridge Street back to the town centre is lined with terraces of small Victorian houses.
Prospect Place and Canonbury Place were built in 1870 and 1887 to provide accommodation for the people who worked nearby. The road passes the King’s Head which vies with The Angel as being the oldest pub in Loddon, before passing a building that was in its time a Midland Bank and then a Police Station.Passing the printing works and the Co-op you find yourself returned to Church Plain. On the north side of Church Plain the imposing flint building, dating from the late 1850s, was originally the local school with the headmaster’s house at the end.It now contains the Library.Next door, Mornington House has a crow-stepped gable and a Tudor-style chimney, and next to that the bow-window belongs to part of Church Plain Surgery. The Tour finishes back at the Church. For more information about the places mentioned, and about Loddon past and present, a wealth of material is available  in the Priest’s Room Heritage Centre in Holy Trinity Church. Acknowledgment – Audrey Young