Estate Details Available properties 

Perkins, Upper Road, Kennington, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX1 5LN

Scroll below to see all available properties
View properties at this development:
 
    Location County Care Level Type Beds Price
There are no properties listed on 55+ as being currently available.
For information on properties which may be coming available in the future please contact the managing agents at the address given above.

To review your search terms, click on the "Review Search" tab above,
or to clear your saved search terms, click the "Reset Search" tab.

Perkins consists of seven one-bedroom bungalows built in 1985.

Facilities include non-resident management and emergency alarm service.

Oxford is world famous as an ancient university town on the Thames. The city name means 'ford of the Oxen' and was strategically important throughout the middle ages. The city has numerous buildings of outstanding merit and remains Mathew Arnold's city of 'dreaming spires'.

Two of the earliest buildings are the towers of St Michael and St George and the latter was part of the Norman castle and the remains of its motte can still be seen opposite Nuffield College. The colleges have a distinctly recognisable form being built around lawned quadrangles with halls and chapels. The Bodleian Library, one of the oldest and most famous in the world, was opened in 1602 and the Ashmolean in the 1840s.

Tenure: Leasehold

General Information:

Managed by Perkins.

If you want to call the management company direct call , or if you want to contact the development direct, call


Please note:
Whilst every effort has been taken to assure the accuracy of the information provided, some inaccuracies may occur. It is important that you do not rely on this information and before any decision to view is made please contact the agent, manager or developer direct to discuss the information in more detail.

Original photography by 55+. All images on this website are protected by copyright, and must not be reproduced without permission. Photographs are of developments/ environments rather than individual properties.