Not Available Anymore  

3 Bedroom Detached To Rent

Bromley, BR1 5AL

BR1 5AL, Kynaston Road, Downham, Bromley, BR1, Bromley

Rent: £1350 pcm

 

Listed 15 days ago and may not be available Listed on 2/22/2015

 19 East Street, Bromley, Kent, BR1 1QE
*When you call don't forget to mention Houser.co.uk

Bromley, BR1 5AL

Property Summary:

Detached
3 Bed(s)
-- Bath(s)
interested in this property.
 

Property description

THREE BEDROOM HOUSE, AVAILABLE MID MARCH, MOMENTS FROM GROVE PARK TRAIN STATION. THE PROPERTY IS BEING REDECORATED THROUGHOUT TO INCLUDE NEW FLOOR COVERINGS

Within walking distance to Grove Park Station is this large three bedroom semi detached house, the property consists of entrance hall with under stairs storage, spacious lounge with feature fire place and wood effect flooring, seperate dining room with sliding pation doors leading out to rear garden. Kitech which all white goods and plenty of storage. Upstairs you have three good size rooms with built in wardrobes to master, family bathroom with a three piece bathroom suite. Available to view now!

Other benefites include: Private rear garden, Driveway, close to station, double galzing and gas central heating.

Bromley
General Information:

Bromley is a large suburban district of south east London,[1] England, and the administrative headquarters of the London Borough of Bromley. It was historically a market town, and prior to 1965 was in the county of Kent and formed the administrative centre of the Municipal Borough of Bromley. Its location on a coaching route and the opening of a railway station in 1858 were key to its development and the economic history of Bromley is underpinned by a shift from an agrarian village to commercial and retail hub. As part of the suburban growth of London in the 20th century, Bromley significantly increased in population and has formed part of Greater London since 1965.


History.

Bromley is first recorded in a charter of 862 as Bromleag and means 'woodland clearing where broom grows'. It shares this Old English etymology with Great Bromley in Essex, but not with the Bromley in Tower Hamlets.
The history of Bromley is closely connected with the See of Rochester. In AD 862 Ethelbert, the King of Kent, granted land to form the Manor of Bromley. It was held by the Bishops of Rochester until 1845, when Coles Child, a wealthy local merchant and philanthropist, purchased Bromley Palace (now the hub of the Bromley Civic Centre) and became lord of the manor. The town was an important coaching stop on the way to Hastings from London, and the now defunct Royal Bell Hotel (just off Market Square) is referred to in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. It was a quiet rural village until the arrival of the railway in 1858 in Shortlands, which led to rapid growth, and outlying suburban districts such as Bickley (which later overflowed into Bromley Common) were developed to accommodate those wishing to live so conveniently close to London.
Bromley, also known as Bromley St Peter and St Paul, formed an ancient parish in the Bromley and Beckenham hundred and the Sutton-at-Hone lathe of Kent. In 1840 it became part of the expanded Metropolitan Police District. The parish adopted the Local Government Act 1858 and a local board was formed in 1867. The board was reconstituted as Bromley Urban District Council in 1894 and the parish became Bromley Urban District. It formed part of the London Traffic Area from 1924 and the London Passenger Transport Area from 1933. In 1934, as part of a county review order, the borough was expanded by taking in 1,894 acres (7.66 km2) from the disbanded Bromley Rural District; an area including parts of the parishes of Farnborough, Hayes, Keston and West Wickham. Bromley became part of the newly-created Greater London in 1965, in the new London Borough of Bromley.
Governance
Bromley forms part of the Bromley and Chislehurst Parliament constituency and the London European Parliament constituency. The current MP is Bob Neill. James Cleverly is the London Assembly member for the Bexley and Bromley constituency, in which the town is located.
Bromley's most prominent MP was the former Conservative Prime Minister Harold Macmillan.
Geography
Bromley is located 9.3 miles (15 km) south east of Charing Cross and is one of the major metropolitan centres identified in the London Plan.
The historic heart of the town is Market Square, which sits at the junction of the High Street and Church Road.
Economy
Bromley is one of the major metropolitan centres identified in the London Plan.
The town has a large shopping and retail area, including a pedestrianised High Street and The Glades shopping centre.
The shopping area includes many upmarket retailers such as Gap, Oasis, Russell & Bromley and Waterstone's, whilst the large concentration of restaurants includes a branch of the small chain of trendy, Belgian-themed Belgo restaurants.
Transport
Bromley is served by two railway stations. Bromley South, the larger and more frequently served of the two, which is on the Chatham mainline. Long distance trains from Victoria to Medway, Thanet and south east Kent have their first stop at Bromley, providing a fast and frequent non-stop service to central London. Bromley South is also a stop on the southeast London suburban rail network, with local services for Orpington and Sevenoaks from Victoria and the central London Thameslink stations calling at the station. Bromley North station is served by a shuttle service to Grove Park, where there are onward connections to London Bridge, Charing Cross & Cannon Street in central London; as well as services to Kent.
Bromley is one of a few London boroughs not served by the London Underground, and, with the exception of its night buses, has no direct bus links to Central London. It does, however, have regular bus services operating from the town centre also serving urban hotspots in and around the borough including Orpington, Lewisham, Penge, Bexleyheath and Croydon. There are also buses in the town centre serving outer areas such as Downe, Biggin Hill, Westerham, Chartwell, Knockholt, Sevenoaks and Tunbridge Wells. From 2012 services to central London from all stations within the borough of Bromley will become more regular and there are even plans to include Bromley in the new 'South London Line', an equivalent to the London Overground's 'East London Line'. However this has neither been officially confirmed or denied.
Culture
Image of   kitchen
Image of kitchen  
Image of   living room
Image of living room  
Image of   living room
Image of living room  

Property Features :

  • Refubished House
  • 3 Bedrooms
  • Pretty rear garden
  • Unfurnished
  • Heating: Gas Central Heating
 
 
 
Northwood (Bromley) Limited
40 East Street, Bromley, BR1 1QU

Free House valuation