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No.88 Granville Park

Granville Park, Aughton, Lancashire

Guide Price

£1,600,000
For Sale
5 Bedrooms
4 Bathrooms
3 Reception Rooms
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"A striking contemporary residence in Granville Park, where light-filled design, flowing spaces and five-bedroom luxury meet a private, south-facing setting."

The Property

Granville Park has prestige; this home has presence. Designed in 2015 as a modern, light‐filled home rather than a conventional detached, its clean architecture, long sightlines and walls of glass create a gallery-like backdrop for art, views and everyday life that feels quietly cinematic. Inside, over 4,400 sq ft unfolds as a single, flowing narrative, a 42ft designer kitchen living space, immersive cinema and sleek fitted bar connecting with a perfectly oriented south facing terrace, so that family mornings, late‐night gatherings and everything in between move effortlessly through light, space and glass.

The approach sets the tone before you have even reached the front door. Electric gates slide back from a clipped green frontage and palm-framed hedging, revealing a broad block-paved driveway that gives the house room to breathe. The architecture reads as confident and contemporary, sharp gables, a deep brick arch and a full-height central window, with clean cream render and dark framing that feels more boutique hotel than suburban detached, hinting at the scale and design precision waiting inside.

The hallway delivers the first real hit of theatre. A wide, central staircase rises in front of you like a piece of crafted furniture, its soft runner drawing the eye upward to a gallery landing and sculptural pendant lighting that glows against the glass balustrades. Textured wall coverings, pale flooring and bold, back‐lit artwork give the space a quietly glamorous, almost gallery-like feel, it is dramatic but controlled and immediately sets the expectation for a home where everyday arrivals and departures feel just that little bit more special.

In the main open‐plan kitchen, living and dining space, daylight is the first thing you notice. It runs the length of the room, tracking across the pale flooring, catching the edges of the island and the long dining table before spilling out through the wall of glazing to the garden beyond. This is the axis of the house, a single sweep of space where sofas, table and kitchen read as one composition, so family life can stretch out – breakfast at the island, children on the sofa, doors open to the lawn, without anyone feeling in the wrong place.

The design is calm and confident: a bank of full-height timber cabinetry conceals the working kitchen; a deep island anchors the room and doubles as bar, prep zone and gathering point; the seating area drifts naturally towards the garden, framed by that elegant ribbon of fire in the media wall. Only when you look closer do you start to notice the level of care – the Birkdale cabinetry, quartz worktops, Novy extraction, Quooker tap. Tom Dixon glass pendants and Bang & Olufsen sound turning background music into an atmosphere rather than a noise. Together they make the room feel effortless, a space that can host twenty for a celebration or just hold the quiet of an ordinary Tuesday night, always with the garden just a slide of glass away.

The cinema room is where the house lets everything slow down. Step inside and the light softens, the walls wrap you in textured WVH acoustic slats and the ceiling glows with a cinematic wash of colour; it feels instantly later in the day, even if it isn’t. The outside world is held at bay by soundproofing and blackout, replaced by the hush of a Denon soundscape and the quiet whirr of a Sony 85-inch screen coming to life, while a row of quilted Valencia recliners waits for you to sink back, feet up, drink on the arm, phone out of reach. It is a space made for premieres, box-set weekends and big-match nights, but also for those small, perfect moments ‐ a children’s film after Sunday lunch, a late‐night documentary with the house already asleep – when you realise how rare it is to have this kind of dedicated escapism at home.

The bar and snug feel like a private club room, distilled down to its most flattering, intimate scale. Designed and installed by Dawnvale, whose work is usually found in high‐end hospitality spaces, it pairs dark bespoke cabinetry with veined stone counters and mirrored backdrops so that bottles, glassware and art become part of the composition. Commercial‐grade detailing is softened by deep booth seating and tailored bar stools, while subtle integrated lighting catches the curve of a champagne bottle here, the cut of a glass there, so that pre‐dinner drinks, post‐cinema nightcaps and impromptu celebrations all unfold in a setting that feels both impeccably designed and effortlessly sociable.

The supporting spaces on the ground floor are quietly hardworking, designed to keep the main rooms calm and clutter‐free. A generous utility room sits just off the kitchen, with full‐height storage, additional workspace and access outside, making it ideal for laundry, muddy boots and the practical side of family life. A separate store room provides space for everything from bulk groceries to sports kit and suitcases, while the downstairs cloakroom/WC is finished to guest‐standard, so even the most functional corners of the house feel considered and refined.

The staircase feels like a piece of sculpture at the centre of the home, all warm timber, soft runner and clear glass balustrades drawing your eye up towards the landing. Overhead, a cluster of statement pendant lights punctuates the double-height space, catching the light and subtly reflecting the artwork that lines the walls. As you rise, natural light filters in from feature windows, turning what could have been a simple circulation route into a gallery for favourite pieces, while the first‐floor landing opens out generously so that bedrooms, bathrooms and living spaces flow from it in a way that feels intuitive and unhurried.

Think of the first floor as the house’s quiet exhale. The broad landing opens out rather than narrows in, with light moving along the walls and doors to four generous bedrooms set at easy intervals, so it feels more like a private gallery of sleeping spaces than a run of doors. Inside, three rooms have bespoke cabinetry that lets the architecture stay calm, wardrobes and storage wrapped neatly into the walls with wiring for sound and vision ready for late‐night films or playlists that only you can hear. The two Jack and Jill en‐suites continue the mood: cool, spa-grade porcelain, rainfall showers and soft lighting that make even weekday mornings feel a little slower, a little more considered, and turn coming upstairs at the end of the day into a small, quiet ritual rather than a routine.

The main bathroom on this is level feels purposefully indulgent. Large-format porcelain tiles, a deep bath and walk-in rainfall shower sit under soft, layered lighting that can shift from bright and practical to low and cocooning, depending on the time of day. Detailing is quietly luxurious rather than showy ‐ sleek fittings, generous mirrors, warm towel rails, creating a room that works as easily for a swift weekday start as it does for a long, end‐of‐day soak with the door closed and the world kept firmly at bay.

The top floor is given over entirely to the principal suite, and it feels every inch like a private apartment in the roof. A full‐height feature window frames long views over Granville Park and pulls daylight deep into the room, catching the edges of tactile fabrics and soft seating so the space works as well for slow mornings with coffee as it does for drawing the blinds and sinking into bed at night. The proportions are generous and flowing rather than simply large: a sleeping area with hotel‐grade comfort leads into a dressing room the size of many living spaces, fitted with bespoke cabinetry that keeps everything ordered and beautifully out of sight, while integrated Bang & Olufsen sound and discreet air‐conditioning make the whole floor feel finely tuned to how you actually live.

The en-suite continues the sense of retreat, lined in cool porcelain with a sculptural bath, walk-in rainfall shower and carefully layered lighting that can shift from bright and energising to low and enveloping at the turn of a dimmer. Mirrors, fixtures and fittings are chosen as much for their form as their function, so that brushing your teeth before bed or stepping out of the shower in the morning carries the same quiet ease you would expect from a good boutique hotel. Up here, with doors closed, everyday life feels edited down to its most comfortable essentials – which, of course, is exactly the point.

Externally

From the road, the house presents as a confident, contemporary silhouette; from the garden, it reads as an easygoing place to live and entertain. The rear elevation opens wide to the south, with long runs of glazing and bifold doors that dissolve the boundary between the 42ft kitchen living space and the terrace, so lunches can drift into late-night drinks without anyone needing to move far. A broad, paved terrace steps out from the house and is partially covered by an electronic canopy with heating, creating a true all-seasons outdoor room, while beyond, low-maintenance lawns and architectural planting give children space to play and adults room to wander with a glass in hand. At the front, electric gates, established hedging and generous parking set the tone for privacy and arrival, so the whole plot feels both reassuringly secure and wonderfully sociable when you choose it to be.

Location

Granville Park, Aughton, Lancashire

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