Investment Opportunity for sale in Solihull, West Midlands

| Repayments£26,495

Homes & Property present this Investment Opportunity for sale in Solihull, West Midlands as advertised by Sellmyplot.Com, Sellmyplot Nationwide
Keen to Sell

Investment Opportunity for sale:
Solihull, West Midlands


This site is ideally located opposite Whitlock's End railway station and adjacent to an exisiting housing development.

Ref: FAP/RSSOL

Further details

This plot of land is 0.14 acres and is situated in an extremely accessible location from the main road, it provides enough land for a detached three bedroomed property with gardens to be built subject to the correct planning permission being granted.

The seller believes this would command a premium price in the event of a successful planning application.

Whitlocks End is located in West Midlands in the West Midlands . Whitlocks End neighbours with Dickens Heath, Tidbury Green, Majors Green. The average house price in Whitlocks End is one hundred eleven thousand, seven hundred seventy three pounds which is ninety eight thousand, eight hundred five pounds below the national average house price. The most popular properties in Whitlocks End are semi-detached houses.

In 1894, Solihull (including the parishes of Shirley, Baddesley Clinton, Barston, Lapworth, Balsall, Bushwood, Elmdon, Knowle, Nuthurst, Packwood and Tanworth-in-Arden) was made into the Solihull Rural District in the county of Warwickshire. In 1932 some of its rural areas were taken away when the RDC was succeeded by Solihull Urban District Council. Expansion continued and Queen Elizabeth II granted a charter in 1954 making Solihull into a Municipal Borough; ten years later it was given the status of County Borough. Reorganisation of boundaries and council responsibilities in 1974 created the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull by the merger of the Solihull County Borough and most of the Meriden Rural District, which forms the main rural part of the borough and county. It included Balsall Common, Barston, Berkswell, Bickenhill, Castle Bromwich, Chelmsley Wood, Elmdon, Fordbridge, Hampton in Arden, Hockley Heath, Kingshurst, Knowle, Marston Green, Meriden, Olton, Smiths Wood, Solihull, Shirley and Temple Balsall.

In 1986 the Solihull borough effectively became a unitary authority when the West Midlands County Council was abolished. It remains part of the West Midlands for ceremonial purposes, and for functions such as policing, fire and public transport.

The borough is bordered by the M6 and the M40 and split by the M42 which divides the urban centre of the borough from the rural south and east. The borough'
s transport links have led to a number of established large businesses being based in the borough, such as Land Rover, the National Exhibition Centre and Birmingham International Airport. A short automatic light transport system links the airport to the nearby Birmingham International railway station. Around three quarters of the borough is greenbelt and a large proportion of that is worked farmland. The Borough shares its boundaries with Birmingham to the west and north, Coventry to the east, Warwickshire to both the north and south, and Worcestershire to the south west. The borough contains a sizeable rural area known as the Meriden Gap (after the village of Meriden) which serves as a green belt separating the Birmingham conurbation from the City of Coventry.