![]() Hatch End is on the Overground in Zone 6, and trains to Euston take 38 minutes. Travel: in Zone 5, Pinner is on the Metropolitan line and it’s a 25-minute ride to Baker Street. The largest family homes range from £665,000 - the price of an extended five-bedroom interwar semi in St Michael’s Crescent - to £3,995,000 for a six-bedroom detached house in Park View Road in Pinner Hill Estate. Four-bedroom houses range from £565,000 for a terrace house in Rickmansworth Road to £1.35 million for a detached house in Grange Gardens in Pinner Village. ![]() The town also has some very old houses left over from its rural past, including a Tudor cottage for sale in Wiltshire Lane for £695,000. Three-bedroom houses vary from £425,000, the asking price of a modern home in Farthings Close, to £875,000 for a detached Metro-Land house in Moss Lane. Pinner has an abundance of three- and four-bedroom family houses built in the Twenties and Thirties. A two-bedroom house in Latimer Gardens is for sale for £499,950. This estate was built along garden suburb lines in the Arts and Crafts style. There are two-bedroom houses in the Pinnerwood Park Estate conservation area. Two-bedroom bungalows currently for sale vary in price from £425,000 in Mount Park Road to £585,000 in Lyndhurst Avenue. There are two-bedroom period cottages in Pinner Village, while two-bedroom bungalows are scattered throughout the district. Two-bedroom flats, either period house conversions or in period or modern blocks, vary from £285,000 for a modern home in Pinner Grove to £499,950 for a mansion flat in Cecil Park, both of which are within walking distance of the Tube station and town centre. One-bedroom flats are mainly in modern blocks and vary in price from about £230,000 - which is the asking price for a one-bedroom flat in need of modernisation off Pinner Hill Road - to £299,950, the asking price for one in The Avenue in the Hatch End area. ![]() This historic town predominantly offers detached, semi-detached and terrace interwar properties, but there are also medieval cottages in Pinner Village, Edwardian houses and more modern flats. It wasn’t until the Twenties and Thirties that Pinner became one of those areas forever linked with Metro-Land and the outward expansion of London along the Metropolitan line. However, wide-scale development had to wait several decades. The Metropolitan Railway followed in 1885, with a station in Pinner itself. New West End Company BRANDPOST | PAID CONTENTĭevelopment came to Pinner in 1842 when London and Birmingham Railway opened a station at Hatch End. ![]()
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