Watch Property1 Clais-an-Deor Place, Logierait PH9 0LB
3 Bed Detached Bungalow - Offers Over £325,000
1 Clais an Deor Place is an attractive three bedroom detached house located in the outskirts of the village of Logierait.
The house is in a slightly elevated position and has an open outlook to the south over fields to the hills beyond. It benefits from mains gas underfloor heating with a woodburning stove in the living room.
Enter from the side into a vestibule which leads to a spacious central hallway which provides access to all areas of the house and has two large store cupboards.
The large living room has a bay window to the front and the views with an additional window to the rear of the room making it bright and airy. The woodburning stove is set in a slate fireplace with a timber mantelpiece above. The kitchen/dining room is to the opposite side of the house and also enjoys views to the front. The kitchen has a good range of wooden wall and floor units with marble effect worktop and splashbacks with a “Stoves” range cooker. The dining area has French doors onto a decked balcony to the front of the house.
Bedroom one is large double room which has been made into a suite due to the positioning of a door at the end of the corridor which accesses two built-in wardrobes and a fully tiled, well-proportioned en-suite shower room. This comprises a large walk-in shower, WC and WHB in vanity units and wall cupboards. Bedrooms two and three are also double rooms and there is a fully tiled family bathroom with an accessible bath, separate shower cubicle, WC and WHB. Finally there is a separate utility room which is accessed from the back garden.
Externally, there is a large metal shed to the rear and two canopies over paved areas to the side and rear of the house. A paved area to the side is suitable for parking and there are various gravelled areas. The rear garden is beautifully built up, with stone terracing and rockeries with a path weaving up to an elevated patio at the top. There is an additional patio area to the side.
At the entrance to the house, there is a paved ramp and steps with gravelled surrounds. To the front there is a decked area which overlooks the front garden which is mainly lawn with shrubs and flower borders.
Logierait is a small village at the beginning of the road to Aberfeldy. It is a short drive to Ballinluig where there is a village shop and café and has easy access to the A9. Pitlochry is approx. six miles to the north and provides shops, schools and leisure facilities as well as rail links to the Central Belt and the north. Perth is a little over 20 miles to the south.
Directions
From our office in Pitlochry, head south on the A9 turning off at Ballinluig which is signposted Aberfeldy. Follow the road round to the right crossing over the A9 and take the Aberfeldy turning off the roundabout. Immediately after the 40mph signs, turn right into a small turning with a red letter box on the corner. Follow this road up the short slope, No 1 is on the right hand side.
- EPC Rating: C
- Council Tax Band: F
- Tenure: Freehold
- PSPC Ref: 962249
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Pitlochry, Kenmore
HIGHLAND Perthshire is widely acknowledged to be among the most scenic areas Scotland has to offer, acting as the gateway to the Cairngorm National Park, where development is strictly controlled.
Pitlochry lies in the shadow of 2759 feet Ben Vrackie and has long been a key halt on the north-south route linking the Lowlands with the Highlands, with her railway station dating back to the Victorian era.
Villas and the occasional extravagant tower dot the hillside and while it thrives as a year-round holiday destination encouraged by the Theatre in the Hills, The Etape Caledonia and The Enchanted Forest, a strong sense of community endures.
Like Pitlochry, the nearby town of Aberfeldy boasts a distillery and its own secondary school, along with an impressive recreation centre. Poet Robert Burns Birks o Aberfeldy helped put the town on the tourist map.
Kenmore, a village which can justifiably lay claim to be the prettiest in Perthshire, is tucked between the expanse of Loch Tay and the river which emerges from it en route to the North Sea.
Dunkeld is instantly identifiable thanks to its 1809 Thomas Telford designed, seven arch bridge linking with Birnam on the southern bank of the Tay, a medieval cathedral and the cluster of restored whitewashed cottages around The Cross and ornate Atholl Memorial Fountain.
Properties in both Dunkeld and Birnam, which were by-passed by the A9 in the 1970s, tend to generate immediate interest when they come onto the market.
Many of them date back to 18th Century reconstruction demanded after all but a handful of older homes were destroyed by a battle in 1689.
Set within a National Scenic Area, theres no shortage of trails to explore, with The Hermitage and its magnificent trees and folly just a few miles up-river.
The railway station on the outskirts of Birnam provides an alternative to road links with Perth and the Royal School of Dunkeld can trace its history back 450 years and more.
Both villages have a thriving cultural scene and a visit to the pioneering Community Orchard near the bridge is always fruitful in the autumn months.
Stanley, near the River Tay, is one of the Big Countys planned villages, dating back to the 1780s.
It was developed on the back of the nearby six-storey cotton mills which provided local employment for nearly 200 years before finally shutting down in 1989. These listed buildings have been transformed from industrial heritage into in-demand apartments.
Nearby villages like Luncarty, four miles north of the Fair City, have been mushrooming - with the commute to Perth promising to be made even easier with ongoing A9 improvements.