A grand residence with 90-foot river frontage on the Oxbridge boat race route has gone available on the market for £2.95million.
Suthrey House is within the London suburb of Mortlake, Richmond Upon Thames, and has the most important personal river frontage within the space.
The Grade II Listed property was initially in-built 1619 and was residence to the world well-known Mortlake Tapestry Works, whose masterpieces could be seen in palaces and museums all over the world to this present day.
Up on the market with Riverhomes is all the floor ground and basement, which makes a four-bedroom house.
Mortlake is on the south financial institution of the River Thames on the Oxford and Cambridge boat race route, with Richmond Park and Kew Gardens each close by.
Suthrey House is within the London suburb of Mortlake, Richmond Upon Thames, and has the most important personal river frontage within the space. Pictured: The exterior of the house surrounded by lush gardens
Mortlake is on the south financial institution of the River Thames on the Oxford and Cambridge boat race route (pictured), with Richmond Park and Kew Gardens each close by
Pictured: A view of the river from exterior Suthrey House the place the Oxbridge boat race passes by way of
The Grade II Listed property was initially in-built 1619 and was residence to the world well-known Mortlake Tapestry Works, whose masterpieces could be seen in palaces and museums all over the world to this present day
Up on the market with Riverhomes is all the floor ground and basement, which makes a four-bedroom house. Pictured: A bed room hallway with hardwood flooring
Up on the market with Riverhomes is all the floor ground and basement, which makes a four-bedroom house. Pictured: A backyard and patio space exterior the grand residence which has sufficient house for an ample eating space
Pictured: A courtyard exterior the house with gray slate paving exterior one of many entrances. The floor ground options loads of home windows to let in pure daylight
The tapestry works started in 1619 and Sir Francis Crane, secretary to King Charles I, introduced over 140 Flemish weavers and their households to make the tapestries. Pictured: A kitchen and eating room in the home with hardwood flooring and an open plan setting with archways
The first fee was for a set of 9 tapestries for the Prince of Wales. A transfer in the direction of portray and portraiture within the late seventeenth century meant tapestries fell out of vogue and the works closed in 1703. Pictured: One of the bedrooms in the home full with hardwood flooring and doorways in addition to a disused hearth
Pictured: A tapestry displaying the The Seizure of Cassandra by Ajax from a set of The Horses, circa 1650
The tapestry works started in 1619 and Sir Francis Crane, secretary to King Charles I, introduced over 140 Flemish weavers and their households to make the tapestries.
The first fee was for a set of 9 tapestries for the Prince of Wales. A transfer in the direction of portray and portraiture within the late seventeenth century meant tapestries fell out of vogue and the works closed in 1703.
Suthrey House is the one surviving constructing of the tapestry works.
In 2020, Mortlake tapestries from the Royal Collection had been on show at St James’s Palace, Kensington Palace and the Palace of Holyroodhouse. There are additionally units at Forde Abbey, Chatsworth House and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
Suthrey House had a big Georgian extension added to it in about 1830 and is now cut up into three flats.
This one has 2,722 sq ft of lodging with a powerful wine cellar and storage within the basement and on the bottom ground there’s a kitchen/eating room, a big reception room, 4 bedrooms and three bogs.
In 2020, Mortlake tapestries from the Royal Collection had been on show at St James’s Palace, Kensington Palace and the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Pictured: The kitchen with hardwood flooring and three giant home windows to let in pure daylight
Suthrey House had a big Georgian extension added to it in about 1830 and is now cut up into three flats. Pictured: The front room within the four-bedroom house options extra hardwood flooring and pink partitions
This house has 2,722 sq ft of lodging with a powerful wine cellar and storage within the basement and on the bottom ground there’s a kitchen/eating room, a big reception room, 4 bedrooms and three bogs
Pictured: One of the 4 bedrooms which options uncovered picket beams and previous picket doorways with steel latches in addition to a disused hearth
The beneficiant kitchen/eating room has three ground to ceiling sash home windows, a big household vary cooker and a glass entice door all the way down to the wine cellar
The 600ft of cupboard space within the basement may very well be transformed into extra lodging topic to planning permission. Pictured: A downstairs bathroom
The beneficiant kitchen/eating room has three ground to ceiling sash home windows, a big household vary cooker and a glass entice door all the way down to the wine cellar.
The 600ft of cupboard space within the basement may very well be transformed into extra lodging topic to planning permission.
The home is personal and gated with parking for as much as 5 automobiles and a spacious personal backyard of 87ft by 78ft.
Nick Austin, from Riverhomes, stated: ‘This property has the most important personal backyard in Mortlake. It’s an house, nonetheless it’s simply gorgeous with the Georgian structure.
The home is personal and gated with parking for as much as 5 automobiles and a spacious personal backyard of 87ft by 78ft. Pictured: One of the bedrooms which options giant sash home windows that allow in a lot of daylight
Nick Austin, from Riverhomes, stated: ‘This property has the most important personal backyard in Mortlake. It’s an house, nonetheless it’s simply gorgeous with the Georgian structure’
He added: ‘In practically 20 years working in property, I’ve by no means seen one thing so tranquil and personal. No matter the place you go, you simply can’t get the house and tranquility, particularly since Covid, there’s a lot demand now.’ Pictured: One of the bogs with marble flooring
He stated: ‘The again of the home is the unique sixteenth century tapestry manufacturing facility and the Georgian extension is on the entrance of the home. You’re holding a chunk of historical past in your palms’
Pictured: The residence’s stunning backyard with a lot of flowers and a paved seating space which may very well be used for outside eating
Mr Austin added: ‘Mortlake was initially bequeathed to the Duke of Marlborough and he was the primary individual to construct a home on the waterfront, the realm has a wealthy and fabulous historical past of its personal’
He stated: ‘Now it’s a vibrant hub of a neighborhood with an enormous array of outlets, cafes, markets and pubs’
Pictured: A hallway that leads right into a eating and kitchen space through an openplan archway that permits mild to journey all through the house
‘In practically 20 years working in property, I’ve by no means seen one thing so tranquil and personal. No matter the place you go, you simply can’t get the house and tranquility, particularly since Covid, there’s a lot demand now.
‘The again of the home is the unique sixteenth century tapestry manufacturing facility and the Georgian extension is on the entrance of the home. You’re holding a chunk of historical past in your palms.
‘Mortlake was initially bequeathed to the Duke of Marlborough and he was the primary individual to construct a home on the waterfront, the realm has a wealthy and fabulous historical past of its personal.
‘Now it’s a vibrant hub of a neighborhood with an enormous array of outlets, cafes, markets and pubs.’