Historic home transformed with repurposed antique materials goes on sale for £950,000

Renovated home transformed with repurposed antique material is up for grabs for £950,000
The conversion of the previous flour mill took 5 years (Image: Jackson Stops/BNPS)

With the assistance of antiques knowledgeable John Nolan, a flour mill has been reworked into a unusual, luxurious residence with repurposed vintage supplies – and it might all be yours for lower than 1,000,000 kilos.

Nolan, who has been on exhibits like Antiques Roadshow and Dickinson’s Actual Deal, has been refurbishing the Grade II Listed Property, generally known as the Coach Home, for 5 years.

What makes the place particular is that each inch of it has been constructed and restored utilizing ‘reclaimed supplies’ from different historic houses, buildings, and even church buildings.

Now up on the market for £950,000, it’d be a implausible purchase for anybody who loves ornate options and homes that inform a narrative.

‘The property is rammed to the rafters with antiques and weird items,’ Karl Ormerod of property brokers Jackson Stops, who're advertising and marketing the property, stated.

He added: ‘Every part in there's reclaimed, a few of it relationship again 500 years, and each element has a narrative to inform.

BNPS.co.uk (01202) 558833. Pic: JacksonStops/BNPS A quirky listed property renovated by an antique expert entirely from reclaimed materials is on the market for ??950,000. The Coach House is the labour of love of John Nolan, a well-known name in the antiques world, who spent five years painstakingly refurbishing the former flour mill. The Grade II Listed property is part of the Halsall Hall estate in Lancashire, which dates back as far as 1065. Mr Nolan, who has appeared on TV shows like Antiques Road Show and Dickinson's Real Deal, spent nearly two decades on the major restoration of the estate - converting the hall into apartments and creating several other unusual homes, including his own.
The property has 2,734 sq ft of lodging. (Image: Jackson Stops/BNPS)

BNPS.co.uk (01202) 558833. Pic: JacksonStops/BNPS A quirky listed property renovated by an antique expert entirely from reclaimed materials is on the market for ??950,000. The Coach House is the labour of love of John Nolan, a well-known name in the antiques world, who spent five years painstakingly refurbishing the former flour mill. The Grade II Listed property is part of the Halsall Hall estate in Lancashire, which dates back as far as 1065. Mr Nolan, who has appeared on TV shows like Antiques Road Show and Dickinson's Real Deal, spent nearly two decades on the major restoration of the estate - converting the hall into apartments and creating several other unusual homes, including his own.
Antiques that wanted some love have been procured by Nolan from historic buildings (Image: Jackson Stops/BNPS)

‘In my 30 years, I've by no means seen a property fairly like this.’

Nestled inside a non-public walled backyard, the Coach Home boasts 2,734 sq ft of lodging, divided up into an entrance corridor, kitchen, formal eating room, 4 reception rooms, a research, 5 bedrooms, and three bogs.

BNPS.co.uk (01202) 558833. Pic: JacksonStops/BNPS A quirky listed property renovated by an antique expert entirely from reclaimed materials is on the market for ??950,000. The Coach House is the labour of love of John Nolan, a well-known name in the antiques world, who spent five years painstakingly refurbishing the former flour mill. The Grade II Listed property is part of the Halsall Hall estate in Lancashire, which dates back as far as 1065. Mr Nolan, who has appeared on TV shows like Antiques Road Show and Dickinson's Real Deal, spent nearly two decades on the major restoration of the estate - converting the hall into apartments and creating several other unusual homes, including his own.
The picket beams date again to the 1400s.
(Image: JacksonStops/BNPS)

BNPS.co.uk (01202) 558833. Pic: JacksonStops/BNPS A quirky listed property renovated by an antique expert entirely from reclaimed materials is on the market for ??950,000. The Coach House is the labour of love of John Nolan, a well-known name in the antiques world, who spent five years painstakingly refurbishing the former flour mill. The Grade II Listed property is part of the Halsall Hall estate in Lancashire, which dates back as far as 1065. Mr Nolan, who has appeared on TV shows like Antiques Road Show and Dickinson's Real Deal, spent nearly two decades on the major restoration of the estate - converting the hall into apartments and creating several other unusual homes, including his own.
If these partitions might discuss, they’d have loads to say (Image: Jackson Stops/BNPS)

You may also look forward to finding distinctive options akin to parquet flooring, sash home windows, and picket beams that date again to the 1400s.

A Victorian submit field and pink cellphone field have been preserved on the rear of the property, however not all the things is old style – there’s additionally a four-car storage.

BNPS.co.uk (01202) 558833. Pic: JacksonStops/BNPS A quirky listed property renovated by an antique expert entirely from reclaimed materials is on the market for ??950,000. The Coach House is the labour of love of John Nolan, a well-known name in the antiques world, who spent five years painstakingly refurbishing the former flour mill. The Grade II Listed property is part of the Halsall Hall estate in Lancashire, which dates back as far as 1065. Mr Nolan, who has appeared on TV shows like Antiques Road Show and Dickinson's Real Deal, spent nearly two decades on the major restoration of the estate - converting the hall into apartments and creating several other unusual homes, including his own.
The luxurious residence may be yours for £950,000. (Image: JacksonStops/BNPS)

BNPS.co.uk (01202) 558833. Pic: JacksonStops/BNPS A quirky listed property renovated by an antique expert entirely from reclaimed materials is on the market for ??950,000. The Coach House is the labour of love of John Nolan, a well-known name in the antiques world, who spent five years painstakingly refurbishing the former flour mill. The Grade II Listed property is part of the Halsall Hall estate in Lancashire, which dates back as far as 1065. Mr Nolan, who has appeared on TV shows like Antiques Road Show and Dickinson's Real Deal, spent nearly two decades on the major restoration of the estate - converting the hall into apartments and creating several other unusual homes, including his own.
Even the kitchen has an vintage twist, with uncovered beams and conventional tiling (Image: Jackson Stops/BNPS)

In the meantime, on the entrance, you’re greeted with a nice lily pond.

What makes the Coach Home much more of a gem is the very fact it resides inside Halsall Corridor Property in Lancashire.

Nolan has been restoring the property, which dates again to 1095, for practically twenty years.

As a part of the conversion, he constructed some flats in the principle corridor of the property in addition to a number of different quirky houses just like the Coach Home.

Ormerod added, ‘The property is quirky, it’s not going to attraction to everybody, however I feel the customer will probably be somebody that likes all of the reclaimed supplies and the historical past and background to it.’

Take a look at the itemizing and enquire to view The Coach Home right here.

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