HOUSE-HUNTERS have slammed an awkward but massive blunder in a £350,000 new-build – but can you see spot what’s wrong with it?
The luxury pad has four bedrooms and is situated on a new housing development in Liverpool.
The detached home boasts an open-plan kitchen and diner, a double oven and the lucky buyer gets their energy bills up to £2000 paid for the year, according to the ad on Rightmove.
Anwyl Homes, which is pitching the cosy freehold, has received some rift remarks from eager home buyers who noticed something wrong with the garage, which appears to be turfed over with a pristine lawn and flower bed.
The ad, which shows the home selling for £353,995, claims it comes with “four generous bedrooms and integral garage [that] help make this a fabulous family home”.
It comes as a rare Art Deco house from the 1930s has been catching eyes online for its unique design.
The London property, which sold recently for almost £2 million, has now been named as a Grade II listed building.
Located in Herne Hill, the house has been described as “something really special in terms of style”.
It was owned by the same family from 1956 until it was sold a short time ago.
Pictures of the interior reveal its unique and unusual design that has raised some eyebrows among online viewers.
Weird features like a lime green bathroom and oddly shaped hallway certainly didn’t put the new owner, who bought the bizarre property for £1.75 million.
Deep red carpet flows through the family home’s ground floor, up an angular staircase, giving way to green carpet upstairs, both concealing original hardwood floors.
The bright colour scheme is completed with a lemon yellow door and radiator set against more green walls. The exterior, meanwhile, is a more understated red and cream.
The property also features a ‘sun-trap’ bay window and curved doors. A curved entranceway completes the unique look of the almost 100-year-old house.
A spokesperson for Historic England said that the house ” transports us back to the architectural ideals of the 1930s where ‘dignified simplicity’ was favoured over excessive ornamentation”.
In February this year, the art deco classic was slated for demolition but was saved after the C20 society intervened to save it.
It was built in 1935-36 based on plans that won the Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition for architects Leslie Kemp and Frederick Tasker in 1934.
In fact, it is one of only two examples known to have been built in the UK.