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Junipers
Sold Subject To Contract
Bures St Mary, Suffolk£590,000 Freehold
Broad eight-over-eight sash windows take in views over colourful flowers and trees outside

This Grade II-listed house in Suffolk’s Bures St Mary emanates Georgian elegance, with a smart façade of double-hung sash windows and a pilaster-flanked front door. Inside, the three-bedroom home has seen a lively renovation, with great care employed to preserve its wealth of 19th-century features. It is bookended by a front garden filled with English roses and a rear garden that blooms with peonies and irises. In addition to the village’s offering of everyday amenities, its train station is a short walk away and runs services to London Liverpool Street via Marks Tey in an hour and a quarter.

Setting the Scene

Bures is a village that straddles two counties: its Essex half is known as Bures Hamlet, while its Suffolk counterpart is Bures St Mary, where this house sits. The River Stour marks the divide between the two, winding its way through the centre of Bures and towards the ancient, wildlife-rich Arger Fen and Spouse’s Vale Nature Reserve.

Junipers dates to the early 19th century and uses traditional timber frame construction faced with brick and plaster. For more information, please see the History section. 

The Grand Tour 

The house is set back from Bures High Street by a neat wall-top juniper hedge. An established rose garden sits behind, with a paved path leading to a front door flanked by panelled pilasters and topped with a corniced hood. Painted in ‘Oxney Olive’ by Sanderson, it contrasts beautifully against the house’s soft grey-washed façade and opens to a central hallway. 

To the right is the living room, with warm herringbone-patterned carpet running underfoot and walls finished in ‘Skimmed Milk White’ by Farrow & Ball. A broad eight-over-eight sash window takes in views of flowers and an acer outside. On one side is a wood-burning stove atop a slate hearth; built-in alcove shelving sits on either side, ideal for storing books, records and logs for the fire. 

Across the hall is the dining room, where walls are painted in the same shade of soft white and a parquet-style floor runs underfoot. Finished in shades of green, the kitchen sits at the rear of the plan. Here, bespoke hardwood cabinetry is washed in ‘Sap Green’ and fitted with a deep Belfast sink and copper taps. Glass-fronted cabinets are ideal for keeping crockery and glassware, or jars of dried herbs and spices. A large sash window frames views of the beech trees and flowers in the walled garden. At the rear of the plan is a handy WC and a utility room. 

There are three double bedrooms and a shower room upstairs arranged around a central landing. The primary bedroom is painted in ‘Smoked Trout’ by Farrow & Ball and has tall, double-aspect sash windows that usher in plenty of natural light. Cream carpet runs underfoot, offsetting the dark original fireplace surround on one side; there are Georgian surrounds in the other bedrooms too, although both are grounded by original floorboards instead. One of the bedrooms has an en suite with a large bathtub, perfect for a luxuriant soak.

The shower room is finished with neat white tiles and fitted with porcelain from Burlington. On one side is a spacious shower with a rain-style shower head. 

The Great Outdoors 

The rose garden at the front of the house flowers in shades of pink, white and peach each year, complemented by the rich red leaves of an acer. There is also a handy log store found here. 

At the rear of the house is a walled garden, where mature Fagus Sylvatica pleached beech trees provide leafy privacy. A central patio surrounded by beds of peonies, lilies and irises is an excellent spot for a long garden table and al fresco dining in the summer. A summerhouse on the left of the garden is a useful space for relaxing with a good book, or for keeping pots and seeds. 

Out and About 

Bures is well-equipped for daily life; there is a general store, a post office, a GP surgery, a primary school and a nursery, as well as several pubs, a café and a deli. For those interested in outdoor pursuits there is a recreation ground, cricket pitch, tennis courts and boat access to the River Stour. Colchester and Bury St Edmunds are both easily accessible by car for work or more serious shopping.

As the former capital of Roman Britain, Colchester is steeped in history, home to the beautiful ruins of Colchester Castle, the Roman Theatre and St Botolph’s Priory. The town has an excellent range of galleries, cafés and restaurants, including the Firstsite Gallery, The Minories and Hollytrees Museum.

The village sits in the Stour Valley just outside of the Dedham Vale AONB, surrounded by the rolling farmland, meadows and ancient woodlands that define the lowlands of the Suffolk-Essex border. Access to the surrounding countryside is immediate; the Stour Valley Path runs through the middle of the village to Dedham, Flatford and the coast beyond. The Guardian recently described the Harwich peninsula as a “revelation” and “like Lymington or Rye, without the price tags”.

The area is well connected; Bures’s train station is less than a 10-minute walk from the house and runs services to Marks Tey Station in approximately 12 minutes, where trains to London Liverpool Street take just under an hour. The A12 is easily accessed from the area and offers access to the M25, London, the Suffolk coastline and the South East.

Council Tax Band: G

Please note that all areas, measurements and distances given in these particulars are approximate and rounded. The text, photographs and floor plans are for general guidance only. Inigo has not tested any services, appliances or specific fittings — prospective purchasers are advised to inspect the property themselves. All fixtures, fittings and furniture not specifically itemised within these particulars are deemed removable by the vendor.

History

Bisected by the River Stour, the village of Bures is made up of the parish of Bures St Mary on the eastern bank in Suffolk and Bures Hamlet on the western bank in Essex.  

In the Domesday Book of 1086, the village was documented to encompass a church and 18 acres of land and was referred to as ‘Bure’ and ‘Bura’. The origins of the name ‘Bures’ are unclear, but it is thought that it might derive from the Old English ‘Bur’, meaning ‘cottage’ or ‘bower’, or a Celtic word to mean ‘boundary’. It has also been suggested that the village is named to honour a French village of the same name.  

Despite its situation in the rural lowlands, Bures was an industrial village in the Victorian era with its own water mill, maltings, brickworks, abattoir, tannery, gas works and electricity generator. The River Stour provided a route for the transport of heavy goods; brick and malt were carried by barge to Mistley and onwards to London, but the arrival of the railway to the village in 1849 all but stopped the river traffic by the early 20th century. 

Junipers — Bures St Mary, Suffolk
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