Watch Property43 Glenearn Court, Pittenzie Street PH7 3LE
1 Bed Second Floor Flat - Offers Over £75,000
Lindsays are pleased to present this one bedroom Retirement Apartment located in the sought after Glenearn Court development in Crieff. The apartment is situated on the second floor and overlooks the front of the building. This popular retirement complex, built in 2003 by McCarthy & Stone, offers one and two bedroom apartments to purchasers aged 60 years and over and has resident management staff, careline alarm service, lift, lounge, laundry, guest room, private parking and attractive garden grounds.
Number 43 has well-proportioned accommodation and comprises a hall with large walk-in storage cupboard, spacious lounge with feature fireplace and space to dine, fitted kitchen, double bedroom with built in wardrobe and a bathroom comprising WC, wash hand basin and bath with shower over. The property is warmed by electric heating and is double glazed.
The extensively landscaped communal grounds are principally to the rear with a pleasant seating area, mature planting and residents/visitors parking. The service charge for 2024/2025 is £1941.83 per annum. The charge includes the house manager service, the buildings insurance, and maintenance and utility charges for communal areas and gardens.
- EPC Rating: B
- Council Tax Band: C
- Tenure: Freehold
- PSPC Ref: 962247
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Crieff, Comrie, Lochearnhead and Muthill
THE attractive hillside town of Crieff, which can trace its roots back to medieval times, has expanded down the years, rising from the Earn valley floor to the promontory of The Knock at 900 feet.
Many of the imposing sandstone family homes on the upper reaches of the town date back to an era when it was a popular Victorian holiday town, with 21st Century holidaymakers still lured by the attractions of The Hydro which overlooks the town.
En route to Comrie seven miles away, and beyond it St Fillans, Lochearnhead and Killin, The Glenturret Distillery can lay claim to being among the oldest distilleries in Scotland. The presence of a listed Earthquake House, monitoring seismic activity since 1869, has never put off homebuyers being lured to Comrie, with the scenic surroundings and pace of life appealing to the retirement market, in particular.
Before reaching Killin and its famous Falls of Dochart, the waterside communities of St Fillans and Lochearnhead, the latter now under the authority of the council in Stirling, are popular with watersports enthusiasts, while property buyers are also lured by the unspoiled countryside. Strathearn is blessed with a number of welcoming towns and villages, and a rural lifestyle which appeals to homebuyers.
Almondbank, on the periphery of Perth, has expanded on both sides of the River Almond. The pretty village of Pitcairngreen is built around a tree-lined grassy area influenced by design features popular in the Oxford area in the 18th Century.
Like many Perthshire villages, the population of Methven, on the road between Perth and Crieff, has welcomed new housing in recent years, helping support local services. The long-established independent school Glenalmond College is nearby.
Picturesque Muthill, near Drummond Castle and its renowned Italian Garden, is reminiscent of Comrie and Highlandmans Green recalls its role as a stopping-off point for cattle drovers heading for market with their beasts.