Property Of Week- 70 Campden Hill Street

posted by Venetia on 2009.10.05, under Notting Hill Properties
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70 Campden Street

Spacious and refurbished flat, situated on the second floor with wooden floors throughout. Accommodation comprises master bedroom with en suite bathroom, 2 further bedrooms, barhroom, 1 reception room and eat in kitchen. Campden Street is conveniently located close to Notting Hill Gate with its many shops, cafes and restaurants. Kensington High Street and Kensington Gardens are nearby. For excellent transport links, Notting Hill Gate Underground Station (District, Circle and Central lines) and Kensington High Street Underground Station (District and Circle lines) are a short walk away. Motorists will benefit from rapid routes to the West and Heathrow Airport via M4.

Friday Puzzle

posted by Venetia on 2009.10.02, under Notting Hill Properties
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crossword puzzle

London- living in the eye of a storm, you either sink or swim

posted by Venetia on 2009.10.01, under Notting Hill Properties
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London

London: Speed; one million miles per hour.  Work; at least forty five hours per week.  Play; minimum. Stress; maximum.  So what makes us Londoners love this city so much?  Why do we put ourselves out there on a “high alert, oh my God I am about to convulse” level for the majority of the week, queuing for the train, queuing for for the bus, queuing for the super market, even if we want to go to the loo, we have to queue up at the cash point to take out a tenner, to buy some gum, to get some change, to then queue for the change machine, get two ten pence pieces and a twenty, to queue through the toilet barrier and eventually get to the blasted place!!!!  Perhaps it’s that machine gun feeling we get when we are commuting home and are packed like sardines on the train whilst our face is glued on a b.o smothered arm pit and our right hand is shoved against someone’s crotch.  London is wonderful! I hear you cry, London is great! It is, I agree! But why? Why do we remain committed to  a city that draws from us such vast senses of hatred and stress, who’s pavements ruin our stilettos, who’s rain frizzes our hair?  The answer my dear readers is given to you forthwith; Londres, Londino, Londinion is also a magnificent city that refuses to conform, Dickensian in one blink and minimalist in another.  Transvestites and lady boys socialising with Sloaneys and  toffs.  That is why we love London.  Anything goes.  You don’t need to worry about what you are wearing or how you speak, where you go or what you do as all and sundry thoroughly accept, love and admire anything that is quirky and embrace imperfection as a sign of  idiosyncratic excellence.  London is like a Benetton advert, all creeds and colours side by side in a unified waltz to the cinema or a jaunt to the theatre.  On one end of the road is “Maroush”  for a shwarma and a kofta, on the other is “Mango Tree” for phad thai and tom yum soup.  A cauldron of infinite choice, by the river or by the green, old school uniforms or East London grunge.  That is why we love this city and why every arm pit sniffing, crotch touching, stuffy tube delay is worth hating, so that you can feel and experience the love of  a city like no other.

Finding The Perfect Pad For Your Child When They Go To University.

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.30, under Notting Hill Properties
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The best of us have been there.  Living in a grotty old flat where the taps don’t work and the carpets are mouldy, whilst we go out partying  and care not one bit for the new place we call home.  But is this right?  Should parents really be allowing their children to be living in filthy flats where the electrics are dangerously exposed and the fire alarms no longer work?  Why should a student, however financially tight, have to spend the first years of their newly independent life living in squalor?  The early varsity years, with no parents  to clean up after them,  cook for them or check that they have enough money to survive, more often than not miles away from any familiar faces is irrefutably daunting and finding your son or daughter a safe place needn’t be far more expensive provided you look around and are guided by an agent who really listens and takes care of your requirements on a more personable level, adhering to your budget as well as suiting the area and checklist of your “not so little one’s” needs.

Here at Notting Hill Properties we place a strong emphasis on listening to our clients and ensuring that once they have settled in to their flat, they are well looked after and feel comfortable with their surroundings.  Unlike other  property companies, we do not usher people in and out of our office at the rate of knots, but rather take time to learn and discover what our client is about.  With a one to one service, equipping you with your own personal agent, Notting Hill Properties is the ideal way of discovering London and looking after your teens on their  first voyage out in to the world of independence.

Property of The Week

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.29, under Property of the Week
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x BBUILDING - front

Large double studio, ground floor. Fantastic standard throughout with large bathroom. Extremely clean, portered building. Ideally located next to the tube and all the best local amenities. This studio really is fantastic and better than anything for the same price. Location: Maida Vale W9,

Recipe Day!!!!

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.28, under Notting Hill Properties
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Quick Dinner for those Notting Hill Busy Mummies Amongst You:

Tarragon and Tomato Stuffed Salmon

Ingredients

2 salad onions, finely chopped
½ x 20g pack tarragon
2 x 500g packs prime salmon fillets, skinned
3 tbsp sun-dried tomato paste
150g Frescopronti Italian Sun Drenched Tomatoes (from the chiller) or Waitrose Cook’s Ingredients Sunkissed Tomatoes, drained, plus 2 tbsp of the oil
100g Waitrose Half-Fat Mayonnaise
75g Greek Yogurt
25g pack curly parsely, chopped

Method

  1. Prepare and light the barbecue. Pull the tarragon leaves from the stalks and roughly chop the leaves. Lay one salmon fillet, skinned side up, on the surface and spread with the tomato paste. Scatter with the tomatoes and tarragon. Season and position the second fillet on top, skinned side down, with the thick edge of one fillet against the thin edge of the other, to create an even thickness. Tie the salmon at 3cm intervals with kitchen string to hold the pieces together. Chill until required.
  2. Meanwhile, beat the mayonnaise with the yogurt, parsley, salad onions and some seasoning, then spoon into a small serving dish. Chill until required.
  3. Brush the top of the salmon with a little oil and position, oiled side down, on the barbecue over a gentle heat. Cook for 10-15 minutes until the lower fillet has turned opaque. Brush the top fillet with the remaining oil and carefully turn the salmon to cook the bottom fillet. (To check the salmon is cooked through, pierce a thick area of the upper fillet with a knife.) Transfer to a board and cut across into thick slices, removing the string. Serve with the flavoured mayonnaise.


Recipe Courtesy of www.waitrose.com



The Westbourne Pub- “The place to be” in Notting Hill

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.25, under Notting Hill Properties, Things To Do
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The Westbourne pub opened three years ago has become “the place to go” on a Friday for anyone craving a good old beverage after a hard days work or simply to enjoy a good atmosphere with plenty of young professionals and, let’s not forget, a plethora of male and female eye candy. Good banter, drinking and beauties aside, it was also awarded a place in the 2004 edition of the Michelin Guide having acquired a fabulous reputation for its tasty fare, ranging from rock oysters to pot roasted pheasant with bacon, shallots and oyster mushrooms. Fresh and vibrant in the summer and cosy and inviting in the winter, you simply cannot go wrong with this pub.

Contact details are listed below:

The Westbourne
101 Westbourne Park Villas
London W2 5ED
0207 221 1332
The Westbourne

Energy Performance Certificates – A Must For Landlords

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.23, under Notting Hill Properties
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green-house

You may need an Energy Performance Certificate if you are planning to sell or let out your house. Having a copy of a valid EPC when you are involved in such dealings, can help you significantly. EPC is included in the Home Information Pack (HIP) that the seller must have completed before beginning to market the property. As a landlord, you will be required to have a valid EPC before you can change tenants. An EPC assumes paramount importance when a building or property is put on sale or let out. Prospective buyers, often use it to refer when a property or building is let out or sold.

The rating given by accredited Domestic Energy Assessors provides the current energy and carbon emission efficiency rating. It depicts the amount of energy consumption and CO2 rating for your property. A favourable rating is indicative of the fact that the property is not causing harm to the environment.

Besides this, it also mentions the rating that could be achieved if you made improvements to the property. There are numerous advantages of having an EPC. It is said that every home that is marketed for sale must have EPC Energy Performance Certificates as part of a HIP (Home Information Pack), which details a home’s energy efficiency. You can get it from EPC certificate landlords.

A qualified Domestic Energy Assessor can offer you an Energy Performance Certificate. They offer a certificate after doing an in depth assessment of your property. The assessors are required to carry out a survey of the property prior to issuing a certificate. This can be done by a Home Inspector too. You can also get EPC certificates for let properties.

Saving energy will have a direct impact on the energy efficiency rating of the Energy Performance Certificate. Energy Performance of Buildings can help save energy consumption of buildings. The certificate will carry a favourable report on energy saving. It offers a rating for your home and also states if there is a need to carry out any energy saving improvement. The house is assessed on the following criteria:

  • Heat loss
  • Walls and lofts’ insulation level
  • Method of heating and controls used
  • Volumetric calculation of all floors Age of your building
  • Fixed light efficiency
  • Adjacent building’s thermal property

The rating is done on the following basis. If it is A, it is said to be highest level, most efficient and G, which is least efficient. The energy saving measures will be put in place prior to the assessment taking place for this to be evidenced on the EPC. Having an EPC helps a house owner or landlord save a substantial amount of money. This also has a positive impact on the environment. Hence,EPC for landlord provides many benefits.

Get an EPC now if you are a landlord or property owner.

Contact venetia@nottinghillproperties if you wish to find out more about how to hire an Energy Performance Assessor.

(Excerpt courtesy of http://www.energyperformancecertificatesepc.co.uk/)

Property Of The Week

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.21, under Property of the Week
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exterior1

A contemporary and newly refurbished studio in a private gated courtyard. With wood floors throughout and neutral decor the property consists of a separate eat-in fully-fitted kitchen, limestone finished bathroom and large studio room with pull-down murphy bed. The flat is furnished with modern styled items. Located around the corner from Kensington Church Street, Duke’s Lane Chambers has a multitude of shops, cafes and boutiques on its doorstep. High Street Kensington (Circle & District Line) is the closest tube station. 

Home Features 
•Central Heating 
•Dishwasher 
•Hardwood Floors 
•High Ceilings 
•Microwave 
•Washer/Dryer 

Community Features 
•Courtyard

Autumn in Notting Hill- A Lovers Paradise

posted by Venetia on 2009.09.17, under Notting Hill Properties
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Autumn heartAs I was walking to the office this morning the chilly air hit my face and gave me the first icy bite on my lips… autumn I thought…..golden skies, warm rustic tones and wintry woollen garments touching the skin for the first time in months.  What an ideal period to start thinking about the forthcoming weeks and, if you are single, finding someone to warm your heart and share a romantic stroll thorough the leaf strewn parks of London.  It is by no coincidence that the romantic comedy “Notting Hill” was set in this area.  Walking to work, I noticed the picturesque buildings with each individual home and shop exuding a little personality of its own.  From mansionesque, white dolls houses to higgledy piggledy cottages, it is reminiscent of wandering through a fairy tale land, lined with trees and numerous little coffee shops to hide  in and steal a kiss.

Holland Park, which is just around the corner, is ideal for hiding.  The ivied arch way can act as a lover’s tunnel through which one can walk and walk whilst exchanging longing glances in to the others eyes.  What is he thinking?  What is SHE thinking?  Well, you can hide away in one of the many little coffee shops and after a mug of warm hot chocolate find out all there is to know about Mr or Mrs Right. ..And if you haven’t found them yet, believe me there are MANY choices here in Notting Hill.  Yes, that is another thing I noticed whilst waltzing on my honey hazed, conquer coloured love walk to work this morning.  There are lots of lovely chaps and lasses here.

So, I said to myself, with wonderful architecture, pretty coffee shops, lovely faces and romantic nests I shall definitely be moving here soon and hopefully finding a heart warming, autumn red set of lips to kiss.

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