2 Bedroom Flat, Thicket Road, London, SE20
Thicket Road, London, SE20
Expose
90 Elmers End Rd, London
Description
Ground Floor Garden Flat | Two Bedrooms | Long Lease - 145 Years
A characterful ground-floor garden flat with a private entrance, on a popular road just south of Crystal Palace Park. Offered with a long lease of 145 years and measuring 764 sq ft, this home is thoughtful in layout — practical in the ways that matter, with real personality to spare.
The flat has a very considered interior; the space and layout have been used brilliantly. The reception is the focal point, at 15 by 14 feet, it’s a genuinely useful footprint that gives you real options. There's room for a proper dining table and a sofa arrangement without compromise, and the arched doorway through to the hallway adds a period note that suits the building. Period cornicing runs throughout, the floors are stripped pine boards, and the cast iron fireplace is the focal point the room deserves. It's a space that functions as well for a dinner party as it does for a quiet evening in, and it’s semi-open plan to the kitchen, which works well when entertaining.
The kitchen works well, arranged in an L shape configuration. It has wooden worktops, which provide masses of space for meal prep. White cabinetry keeps it looking crisp, and the teal metro tiles give the room a distinct identity without trying too hard. The electric hob, integrated oven, and full-height fridge freezer are all present, and the washing machine sits neatly at the end of the run. The key feature here is the frameless-feeling window that looks directly onto the garden. There's a wooden sill wide enough to use, the outlook is mature and green, and it makes a kitchen this size feel considerably less like a kitchen. A door leads from here straight out to the patio and garden.
That outdoor space is worth dwelling on. The patio is a proper sitting area — there's room for chairs, a table, providing a private space to dine al fresco, sip a gin, or just catch up on a book. Steps lead up to the main run of the garden, which is vast, we estimate it to be over 90ft, which is wild for a flat in this part of London. Aspect-wise it gets great light throughout the day, especially in the afternoon and into the evening from the west, and during the day in the summer it will get the southern sun at the end of the garden.
Moving back inside, the main bedroom is large — 18 by nearly 12 feet — with a bay window looking onto the front. It's a room that comfortably takes a king-size bed, two chests of drawers, and a desk without feeling crowded, there are built in wardrobes already fitted, saving floor space to use as you wish. The ceiling height and cornicing carry through from the reception room. There's space here for a proper wardrobe run if required.
The second bedroom reads on the floorplan as bedroom/study, which is honest: at 9 by 5'5" it's more useful as a single room, nursery, or dedicated home office than as a second double. It does the job it's intended for well, and the separate office space in the hallway at 7'10" by 5'7" that offers additional wfh flexibility.
The bathroom has a full-size bath with shower over, wood-panelled surround, and dark slate-effect tiling that gives the room a considered feel.
Two external storage units — one to the front, one to the rear — deal with the practical overflow that flats of this type often lack. Bikes, buggies, garden equipment — it's covered.
Location-wise, the flat is 120 yards from the park entrance. The nearest section is the boating lake and the famous Dinosaurs — one of those genuinely unusual things that makes Crystal Palace feel unlike anywhere else in London. At the southeast tip of the park, you’ll find Brown & Green Café, which is an absolute gem. Their food and coffee are fantastic, and you’ll especially appreciate it if working from home, as it is so close. There’s also a street food market held in this corner of the park every Sunday, which is well worth a visit, and fear not, if you’ve overindulged, there’s an organised 5k around the park every Saturday morning at 9am.
For transport, the options here are better than most. Crystal Palace Station is around 0.4 miles away, and is a pleasant walk through the park; it gives direct services to London Bridge and Victoria via Forest Hill. Anerley Station is 0.4 mi away, with access to the Windrush line, it’s a fantastically useful hub. Penge East, at 0.7 miles, has trains running directly to Victoria. Having three stations within a small radius of the flat gives you flexibility that most south London postcodes can't match.
Day-to-day essentials are covered by a Tesco Express on Anerley Road. What makes this stretch genuinely worth knowing about is what sits alongside it: Café Chic, a Persian café with a garden that earns its reputation, particularly at brunch — the falafel and halloumi wraps and coffee are as good as locals will tell you they are. Next door is Bob Wines. Further along is Chatsworth Bakehouse, which has the kind of following that means queuing on weekends is part of the deal — the sandwiches, focaccia, and brownies justify it. The Crystal Palace Wine Club is a newer arrival that's already found its footing in the neighbourhood.
Up the hill, the Triangle does everything a local high street should and more: gastropubs, independent coffee shops, an Everyman cinema, vintage shops, art galleries, and the Haynes Lane food market.
Thicket Road itself is one of those South London streets worth knowing about — wide, tree-lined, and architecturally substantial in the way that Victorian roads bordering large parks often are, the buildings have proper scale and presence.
Tenure-wise, the flat has a long lease in the region of 145 years and there are no service charges or ground rents.
EPC Rating: C
Key Features
- Private Entrance
- Long Lease - 145 Years
- Direct Access To A Large Garden
- Beautiful Interior
- Moments To Crystal Palace Park
- Pretty Front Garden
- Multiple Stations Within Easy Reach
- Book Your Viewing Instantly, Online 24/7!
Property Details
- Property type: Flat
- Price Per Sq Foot: £526
- Approx Sq Feet: 807 sqft
- Plot Sq Feet: 1,012 sqft
- Property Age Bracket: Victorian (1830 - 1901)
- Council Tax Band: B
- Tenure: Leasehold
- Lease Expiry: -
- Ground Rent:
- Service Charge: Not Specified
Floorplans
Outside Spaces
Location
Location-wise, the flat is 120 yards from the park entrance. The nearest section is the boating lake and the famous Dinosaurs — one of those genuinely unusual things that makes Crystal Palace feel unlike anywhere else in London. At the southeast tip of the park, you’ll find Brown & Green Café, which is an absolute gem. Their food and coffee are fantastic, and you’ll especially appreciate it if working from home, as it is so close. There’s also a street food market held in this corner of the park every Sunday, which is well worth a visit, and fear not, if you’ve overindulged, there’s an organised 5k around the park every Saturday morning at 9am. For transport, the options here are better than most. Anerley Station is 0.4 mi away, with access to the Windrush line, it’s a fantastically useful hub. Penge West is also 0.4 miles away, giving direct access to the Overground and straightforward connections into the City and Shoreditch. Penge East, at 0.7 miles, has trains running directly to Victoria. Crystal Palace Station — also around 0.4 miles — adds direct services to London Bridge and Victoria via Forest Hill. Having four stations within that radius gives you flexibility that most south London postcodes can't match. Day-to-day essentials are covered by a Tesco Express on Anerley Road. What makes this stretch genuinely worth knowing about is what sits alongside it: Café Chic, a Persian café with a garden that earns its reputation, particularly at brunch — the falafel and halloumi wraps and coffee are as good as locals will tell you they are. Next door is Bob Wines. Further along is Chatsworth Bakehouse, which has the kind of following that means queuing on weekends is part of the deal — the sandwiches, focaccia, and brownies justify it. The Crystal Palace Wine Club is a newer arrival that's already found its footing in the neighbourhood. Up the hill, the Triangle does everything a local high street should and more: gastropubs, independent coffee shops, an Everyman cinema, vintage shops, art galleries, and the Haynes Lane food market. Thicket Road itself is one of those South London streets worth knowing about — wide, tree-lined, and architecturally substantial in the way that Victorian roads bordering large parks often are, the buildings have proper scale and presence. Tenure-wise, the flat has a long lease in the region of 145 years and there are no service charges or ground rents.
Properties you may like
By Expose