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£1,500,000

(£470/sq. ft)

4 bed detached house for sale
Burford Road, Fulbrook OX18

    • 4 beds

    • 4 baths

    • 3 receptions

    • 3,193 sq. ft

  • EPC Rating: C

  • Freehold

Stowhill Estates

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About this property

  • Architect-designed Cotswold stone home built in 2012 with elegant contemporary proportions

  • Four bedrooms, including a principal suite with dressing room and ensuite

  • Walking distance to Burford High Street with shops, cafés and pubs

  • Stylish kitchen with quartz worktops and central island, ideal for family life and entertaining

  • Light-filled garden dining room opening onto terrace, pergola seating and BBQ deck

  • Multiple reception rooms including sitting room with wood-burning stove, family room and study

  • Underfloor heating across most of the ground floor for comfort and efficiency

  • Landscaped gardens of approximately 0.25 acres, redesigned by Oxford Garden Design

  • Detached double garage and generous gravel driveway parking

  • Peaceful village setting in Fulbrook, moments from countryside walks and village life

Set back from Burford Road behind a sweep of gravel and structured planting, Longford carries itself with quiet assurance. Built in honeyed Cotswold stone and softened by a recently added oak porch, the house strikes a careful balance between contemporary design and village sensibility.

Fulbrook sits just beyond the rise of Burford, within walking distance of its broad High Street and long-established shops, cafés and pubs. There is something particularly appealing about being close enough to wander in for a morning coffee or an evening supper, yet far enough removed to retreat into calm at the end of the day. Longford embodies that balance. It is a house designed for family life, but with the scale and poise to accommodate larger gatherings without ever feeling overstated.

Completed in 2012 as an architect-designed home, Longford was built as a modern family house with clear lines and generous proportions. For its first owners it served as a holiday retreat, lightly lived in and carefully maintained. When the current owners bought the property in 2021, they recognised both the integrity of its construction and the opportunity to shape it more closely to their own way of living.

Working with the original architect, they extended the principal suite, introducing a dedicated dressing room and reconfiguring the en-suite bathroom to create something more considered and enduring. The front elevation was refined with the addition of a substantial bespoke door and oak-framed porch, gestures that bring warmth and a subtle Cotswold inflection to the façade.

Inside, the kitchen was upgraded and remodelled to better support daily family routines and larger-scale entertaining. Beyond the walls, the gardens were comprehensively redesigned by Oxford Garden Design, transforming what had been open grounds into a series of defined, purposeful spaces. The guiding principle throughout has been coherence: To evolve the house without disturbing its underlying architectural clarity.

The entrance hall sits at the centre of the house, quietly anchoring the ground floor plan. From here, movement feels intuitive. Rooms open in a way that encourages both connection and retreat, allowing the house to flex according to the rhythms of the day.

The kitchen forms the natural heart of the home. Fitted with updated cabinetry by Dream Doors and finished with quartz worktops, it is arranged around a generous island that invites conversation as much as food preparation. Twin dishwashers, a wine fridge, Quooker tap and insinkerator speak not of excess, but of thoughtful practicality. The Rangemaster induction range remains as a steady focal point. Underfoot, water-piped underfloor heating extends across most of the ground floor, providing an even warmth that supports the house’s sense of ease.

Flowing from the kitchen, the dining room is designed as an entertaining space. Glazed on multiple sides and re-roofed in slate to complement the main house, it opens directly onto the garden’s barbecue deck and pergola seating area. In warmer months, doors can be left wide, allowing meals to drift outside and long evenings to settle gradually across the terrace.

On the opposite side of the home, the sitting room offers contrast. Dual-aspect windows draw in shifting natural light throughout the day, while a wood-burning stove provides a focal point in cooler seasons. It functions variously as a formal drawing room, a television space, and a quiet corner for reading. Close by, a more intimate family room offers a softer, cocooned setting for informal evenings or time spent together. A separate study, tucked away from the main living areas, accommodates home working without interruption.

Daily life here seems to move easily between sociability and solitude, the architecture supporting both without compromise.

Upstairs, the sense of proportion established below continues. The principal suite now occupies a defined and private zone, enhanced by the addition of the dressing room and the reimagined en-suite. It reads less as a bedroom alone and more as a self-contained retreat, somewhere to withdraw at the end of the day.

Three further bedrooms are arranged across the first floor, two with their own en-suite facilities and another served by a well-appointed family bathroom. The configuration allows for visiting family, older children seeking independence, or the steady rhythm of guests arriving across the year. From the upper windows, views stretch across neighbouring stone houses and mature trees, reinforcing the impression of being embedded within an established thriving village environment.

There is a calm continuity to the private spaces - light, balanced, and deliberately free of excess.

The gardens extend to approximately a quarter of an acre and have been structured to create variation and progression. Gravel pathways define planted beds and lead the eye towards lawn and terrace. The pergola and barbecue deck form an outdoor room directly connected to the house, while more reflective corners allow for quieter moments.

The property faces south-east, drawing morning light across the front façade and into the principal garden areas. Seasonal change is tangible: Blossom and new planting in spring, longer evenings spent outside through summer, texture and low sun in autumn, and the architectural outline of beds and branches through winter. A detached double garage sits alongside ample driveway parking, easily accommodating multiple vehicles without dominating the frontage.

Fulbrook itself offers a strong sense of community. Circular walks link the village with Swinbrook, Asthall and the wider countryside, while nearby Sherborne Park provides expansive landscapes within easy reach. Burford’s schools, shops and restaurants are within walking distance, allowing daily life to unfold without reliance on the car. There is an understated richness to this setting: Active yet unhurried, sociable yet private.

Longford is a house that has been consciously shaped. Its foundations were sound; its current form reflects attentive stewardship and a clear understanding of how space supports family life. It offers both substance and adaptability, within one of the Cotswolds’ most consistently desirable villages.

For those seeking a home that feels established rather than newly finished - and connected without being exposed - Longford presents an assured and thoughtfully evolved proposition.

EPC Rating: C

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  • Tenure

    Freehold

  • Council tax band

    G

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