Route de la Perelle, St Saviour's GY7 9NA
Planning permission has been granted to create seven high quality apartments within the existing hotel building, offering an appealing blend of coastal living with a modern design.
The approved plans include three spacious ground floor apartments, each providing two bedrooms and bright, well designed accommodation. Each of these benefit from private gardens/terraces, creating attractive outdoor areas ideal for relaxing or entertaining.
On the first floor, the development will offer four further apartments: three with two bedrooms and one with one bedroom.
All apartments have been carefully positioned to take full advantage of the surrounding environment, enjoying either beautiful sea views or open agricultural outlooks.
Practicality has also been well considered, with every apartment benefiting from allocated parking spaces (2 spaces for 2 beds and 1 space for 1 bed) and a generous 14 sqm private storage area, perfect for bikes, outdoor equipment or additional household storage.
• The owner will retain the hotel side as a revamped hospitality offer with various upgrades planned which the apartments will benefit from.
• Build costs will be mitigated through the conversion of the existing building and no requirement to replace the roof etc.
• The potential to structure any transaction in different ways to suit a potential developer / investor.
• The opportunity to alter the planning consent to suit prospective parties.
• A full information pack is available on request, including structural report endorsing the retention of the outer structure.
Farming has been at the heart of St Saviour’s for centuries. The parish is blessed with great swathes of lush pasture and sheltered valleys descending onto a westerly coastline. Three of the valleys were flooded to form the island’s reservoir, around which the millennium walk takes an hour or so to complete.
St Saviour’s church and community centre are the focal points for parishioners and regular events often attract island-wide attention, such as the church’s annual music festival and revelry. Hotels and restaurants in the parish are few, but good.
The many fine farmhouses in St Saviour’s, some dating from the 17th century, are evidence of the parish’s inherent prosperity, and new development has been sparse giving rise to premium house prices as demand is high.
Read our parish guide