The Old Bakery Temple Road, Aslackby, Sleaford, NG34 0HJ is a freehold detached property built between 1900-1929. The property offers approximately 753 square feet of living space. In this location, properties of similar size usually have two bedrooms.

The estimated current market value of the property is £834,859 , which equates to approximately £1,108 per square foot. It was last sold on 22 May 2009 for £449,995. Since then, the value has increased by £384,864, representing a 85.5% increase, or approximately 5.2% per year.

The current estimated value of £834,859 is:

  • 81.4% higher than the average property price on Temple Road
  • 89.2% higher than the average in the NG34 0HJ postcode area
  • and 245.9% higher than the average price for Sleaford as a whole

At the most recent EPC inspection on 25 February 2009, the property was recorded as owner-occupied.

View sold house prices in NG34 0HJ

Building approximate location

About Property

Type
Detached House
Built
1900-1929
Interior Size
753 sq ft
Tenure
Freehold
Price (estimate)
£834,859
Price Per sq ft (estimate)
£1,108
Bedroom Count (estimate)
2 bedrooms

EPC Summary

The Old Bakery Temple Road, Aslackby, Sleaford, South Kesteven, Lincolnshire, NG34 0HJ has an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating of E, based on the latest assessment carried out on 7 Aug 2012.

This property uses an oil-fired boiler with radiators as its main heating source. Hot water is provided from main heating system. The windows are single glazed.

The previous EPC assessment was conducted on 25 Feb 2009. The rating of E is unchanged, though the energy efficiency score decreased by 13%.

Since the previous assessment, several changes were observed:

  • The main heating energy efficiency improving from average to good, while the heating system type remained the same (boiler and radiators, oil).
  • The hot water energy efficiency improving from average to good, while the system remained as from main system.
  • The roof construction or insulation changed from pitched, 200 mm loft insulation to roof room(s), no insulation (assumed), changing energy efficiency from good to very poor.
  • The wall energy efficiency improving from very poor to poor, with the construction or insulation remaining solid brick, as built, no insulation (assumed).
  • The lighting was updated from low energy lighting in 45% of fixed outlets to no low energy lighting, with efficiency changing from good to very poor.
Heating Type
Boiler and radiators, oil
Good
Hot Water
From main system
Good
Roof
Roof room(s), no insulation (assumed)
Very Poor
Walls
Solid brick, as built, no insulation (assumed)
Poor
Windows
Single glazed
Very Poor
Lighting
No low energy lighting
Very Poor

Sale History

Today
£834,859
streetscan.co.uk estimate
+86 %
22 May 2009
£449,995
Leasehold

Area Insights

Nearby Properties

rooms: 7
size: 1851 sq ft
sale price: £170,000
sale date: 22 Sep 2023
rooms: 6
size: 1958 sq ft
sale price: £248,000
sale date: 30 Oct 2015
rooms: 8
size: 1531 sq ft
sale price: £180,000
sale date: 14 Sep 2012
rooms: 7
size: 1782 sq ft
sale price: £244,500
sale date: 17 Dec 2010
rooms: 6
size: 2164 sq ft
sale price: £220,000
sale date: 30 Oct 2002

Data Sources

The property at The Old Bakery Temple Road, Aslackby, Sleaford, South Kesteven, Lincolnshire, NG34 0HJ appears once in the Land Registry records, with the transaction recorded on 22 May 2009. It also has two Energy Performance Certificates (EPC) entries, the earliest dating back to 7 Aug 2012. We use this data, to estimate the property's characteristics and current market value.

This website uses public sector information from:

These datasets are licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
This website is not affiliated with or endorsed by HM Land Registry or DLUHC.


Disclaimer: StreetScan.co.uk makes all reasonable efforts to ensure the information provided on this website is current and accurate; however, no warranties or representations are made as to its completeness or accuracy. StreetScan.co.uk expressly disclaims any and all liability for any loss, damage, or expense arising directly or indirectly from the use of, or reliance upon, such information.