The Grand Tour
A yellow-painted front door with brass door furniture opens to the living room. Patinated oak floorboards run underfoot, and walls and woodwork are finished in soft white and pale, dusky pink. At one side of the room, in a fireplace flanked by Delft tiles, is a wood burner atop a terracotta-tiled hearth. There is a sash window at the front and a casement window at the rear that frame views of the quaint street and the courtyard garden respectively.
From the living room, a winding oak staircase descends to the lower-ground floor. There is a dining room here, along with a bright kitchen with courtyard access. The dining room has a cork floor and a double casement window that overlooks a leafy Fatsia japonica. Built-in storage on one side of the room provides space for keeping glassware and crockery.
The kitchen has reclaimed 1960s cabinetry from
Mileage combined with drawers and cupboard doors made cut from reclaimed pine cheeseboards, supplied by
Retrouvius. The cabinets are topped with a bespoke stainless-steel counter, a two-ring gas hob from Smeg and a sink; there is also an integrated oven and a concealed fridge. Casement windows and a glazed door open to the courtyard garden, allowing the sweet scent of roses to waft into the house.
There are two double bedrooms on the upper floors of the house. The double-aspect primary bedroom is on the first floor and has pine floorboards and fresh white walls paired with dusky pink woodwork. Next door is a shower room, with a rust linoleum floor from
Forbo and patterned tiles in sunny shades of yellow from
Milagros.
The bedroom on the second floor is tucked in the eaves, with exposed brick walls, original timber panelling and a casement window fitted in a dormer. Views extend over the rooftops of the conservation area.
The Great Outdoors
Accessed through the kitchen, the courtyard garden is a private spot. It is enclosed by brick walls covered in climbing roses that bloom in white and pink, while beds are planted with heucheras and ferns. There is space for a table and a few chairs, and in one corner there is a lean-to shed, useful for storing tools or wood for the fire.
Out and About
Deal is a perennially popular coastal town known as one of the most attractive in Kent, and regularly voted as one of the best places to live in the south-east. Its stretch of coastline is similarly sublime, appearing right at the end of the street. Deal Pier, built entirely of concrete and steel, is close and is a wonderful stroll regardless of the weather, with a glass-clad café at its end offering uninterrupted views out over the channel. 10 minutes’ walk in the other direction, a peaceful nature reserve runs between the beach and the golf course.
Deal’s culinary scene is thriving. One of its most popular spots is the
Rose Hotel, known for its excellent bar and restaurant, along with its newly opened sister restaurant
The Blue Pelican, which serves Japanese-inspired food. The
Frog and Scot is also a popular haunt and has a lovely wine bar, Le Pinardier. Merchant of Relish, The Black Pig and Jenkins and Sons are the go-to for groceries, meat and fish respectively, but for local produce, there is also a fantastic Saturday farmers’ market. As far as homeware shops are concerned,
Dunlin and Diver,
Old Coves and Mileage are among some of the town’s finest.
Trains run from Deal station to London St Pancras in under 90 minutes. Services also connect to Kent’s other popular seaside towns, including Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate. The A2 is also easily reached for car travel into the capital, with ferries at Dover only 15 minutes away, and the Eurotunnel at Folkestone just 25 minutes away.
Council Tax Band: C