The Grand Tour
A sky-blue front door opens into a welcoming hallway, its original floorboards lending warmth and grounding. To the left is a double reception room, typical of the period, with wide double doors allowing the spaces to flow together when desired.
At the front, the sitting room is calm and elegant, with softly painted panelled walls and a generous sash window that draws natural light. To the rear, deep blue joinery and matching walls create a more intimate, cocooning study.
The original staircase leads down to the lower ground floor, now home to a superb kitchen and dining space. At the front, refined dove-grey cabinetry is topped with smooth quartz surfaces, while appliances include a range cooker with gas hobs, dishwasher and integrated fridge/freezer. A door leads from here to the front lightwell. Herringbone-laid flooring runs through to the dining area, a serene and well-proportioned space with built-in storage painted in a deep blue tone, and an atrium-like glazed extension that opens directly onto the greenery of the garden and can be left open during the warmer months.
On the first floor, a generous room is currently arranged as an elegant drawing room. It features an original fireplace flanked by bespoke storage, and two sash windows fitted with white-painted shutters. Opposite, striking wallpaper adds texture and depth. Cornicing runs throughout, subtly emphasising the already generous ceiling height.
To the rear of this floor is a further bedroom, with a corner cast-iron fireplace and another richly considered wallpaper. The principal bedroom is arranged on the top floor, with soaring ceilings, sash windows, built-in wardrobes and panelled walls. Coloiurful wallpaper frames another cast-iron fireplace, while a door leads to an immaculate en suite bathroom with a walk-in shower and geometric wall tiles. A further shower room is located on the lower ground floor, complete with a walk-in shower.
The Great Outdoors
To the rear, a charming garden unfolds, its southerly orientation ensuring excellent natural light throughout the day. Arranged over two levels - with an entrance on the first and lower ground floors - it offers ample space for outdoor dining and entertaining, with well-planted borders softening the edges. Mature and seasonal planting includes a variety or ferns, fragrant honeysuckle and wisteria, creating a private and quietly verdant setting.
The Area
Whitechapel is home to a thriving range of traditional pubs, cafés and restaurants. Neighbourhood favourites include Tayyabs (which sits at the end of Parfett Street) and east London institution Rinkoff’s Bakery. The independent Genesis Cinema is a 16-minute walk away, and the ever-impressive Whitechapel Gallery is also close by.
To the west are Brick Lane and Spitalfields, where there are plenty of options for dining, including Ottolenghi, St John and Bubala. Redchurch Street is also within walking distance and has excellent restaurants and shops including APC, Earl of East and Brat.
The regeneration of Goodman's Fields and Aldgate East has brought many new restaurants, bars and cafes to the area including a Curzon cinema and lies only a ten minute walk from the house.
For green spaces, the historic Ford and Sidney Square gardens are within a few minutes’ walk of the house. Also close by are many of East London’s finest parks: Weaver’s Fields, Bethnal Green Gardens, Mile End Park, Victoria Park, and the historic churchyard of St Dunstan's, to name a few. The charming Stepney Green City Farm is also nearby.
Whitechapel station is an eight-minute walk away and serves the District, Hammersmith & City and Elizabeth lines, as well as the Overground (Mildmay line). The West End can be reached in around 12 minutes, and Heathrow in approximately 39 minutes. It also lies within easy walking distance of the city and Liverpool Street station.
Council Tax Band: E