Barn conversion in Thrupp, Oxfordshire for sale
This converted Oxfordshire barn is light and spacious and located just by the canal just a few miles from Oxford itself

This early 20th century barn was converted into a family house in 1975 and has had just one owner since. With light and spacious accommodation, the large drawing room is of particular note with its good-sized fireplace and the French doors opening onto the south-facing terrace and the heated outdoor swimming pool.
The kitchen is the hub of the house, with its oil-fired Aga while upstairs are the master bedroom suite and four further double bedrooms as well as a family bathroom.
The gardens have a large area laid to lawn, a walled kitchen garden and the south-facing terrace next to the heated pool.
* For more properties like this every week, subscribe and save
Thrupp is a very picturesque hamlet in a south-after part of Oxfordshire on the banks of the Oxford canal. The nearby village of Kidlington provides a wide range of local amenities and very good communications. For the keen walker Thrupp is surrounded by riverside walks and very pretty countryside. Oxford is just six miles away and buses and trains depart frequently for London.
The guide price is £995,000. For further information please contact Knight Frank on 01865 790077 or visit www.knightfrank.co.uk.
Sign up for the Country Life Newsletter
Exquisite houses, the beauty of Nature, and how to get the most from your life, straight to your inbox.
* Country Houses for sale in Oxfordshire
* Follow us on Twitter
-
Uniquely unique? The Yorkshire grain silos transformed into a home that's a symphony in glass, steel and curves
Amid the beautiful countryside of North Yorkshire, on the edge of the Castle Howard Estate, The Silos is a property for which the word 'house' simply doesn't cut it. And that's not the only way in which it's made us throw out the dictionary.
By Toby Keel Published
-
Polluting water executives now face up to two years in prison, but will the new laws make much of a difference?
The Government has announced that water company executives caught covering up illegal sewage spills could now be imprisoned for two years, under new laws — but many still have their doubts.
By Lotte Brundle Published