Summary
- Asking price:
-
£240,000
- Sales revenue:
- £45,000
- Net profit:
- £12,700
- Years established:
- 9 in present ownership
- Employees:
- 1 full time, 1 part time
Business description
Just the place to be if you want to be your own boss, live in beautiful country, escape the rat race and have a new lifestyle. The shop is on a prime site, opposite the car park in the centre of this busy Pennine Dale, tourist village. Currently the shop sells artists' materials, prints, wooden toys, gifts, cards and confectionery and provides a bespoke picture framing service. There is the shop, a flat and extensive outbuildings. The outbuildings are used as a workshop for the picture framing and as storage but could be adapted and extended for other uses, craft workshops, gallery or extra domestic accommodation. The business is offered as a profitable, going concern.
Property information
- Property:
- Freehold
- Living accommodation:
- Recently, the flat above the shop has been completely rebuilt. Two bedrooms, two reception rooms, one of which could be used as an additional bedroom, fitted kitchen, bathroom and additional shower room. The main living room has a bay window looking out onto tree filled Horsemarket. There is oil fired, underfloor heating throughout, lots of exposed stonework, an old fireplace opening and the occasional beam. Plenty of private car parking and a single garage at the rear of the premises. The access to the flat is such that the flat, shop and outbuildings could be let as seperate units if required.
- Location:
- Middleton in Teesdale is a busy village with shops, accommodation, cafes, bank, post office, primary school & etc. It is in the popular Pennine Dales tourist and walking area, the Pennine Way passes the village. The shop is on a prime site, opposite the car park in the centre of the village and adjacent to most of the other shops and cafes. Although Middleton in Teesdale is in the upper part of the dale, it has good road access and is a popular ride out venue from the conurbations of Teeside, Wearside and Tyneside. Englands largest waterfall, the High Force, is a main tourist draw and is only 6 miles further up the valley.
Other information
- Expansion potential:
- The owners are well past retirement age so new, younger, more enthusiastic owners could soon restore turn-over and profit to former levels or might wish to embark on new ventures, anything from abacus making to zylophone repairs. Our interest was in painting, so we ventured into art materials, selling prints and doing picture framing. It has been a successful venture, what would you like to try?
- Competition / Market:
- The market is a combination of local and visitor needs. Quieter in the winter, very busy in the summer holidays. This is a village of small, independent shops, less than 15, covering a wide range, food, hardware, shoes, books, clothing, stationery and newsagent. Inevitably some overlap but no direct competition and no chain stores other than the Co-op convenience store.
- Support & training:
- If the new owners want to continue the existing business and would like our assistance, we are willing to help with introductions to our suppliers, advice about appropriate trade fairs and with training for the framing business.
- Reasons for selling:
- Retirement. We are well past retirement age and would like more freedom.
- Trading hours:
- 1000 to 1730, 6 days/wk
- Inventory / Stock value:
- £12,000
- Related documents:
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