Guide price

£1,100,000

(£324/sq. ft)

5 bed semi-detached house for sale
Station Yard, Steventon OX13

    • 5 beds

    • 3 baths

    • 3 receptions

    • 3,394 sq. ft

  • EPC Rating: E

Just added
Freehold
Added on 13/04/2026

About this property

  • Grade II listed former railway house designed by Brunel (1839)

  • Elegant period proportions with enduring architectural integrity

  • Thoughtfully extended with garden room and detached annexe

  • Light-filled garden room with bifold doors and underfloor heating

  • Five well-proportioned bedrooms across three floors

  • Characterful living spaces with bay window and wood-burning stove

  • Detached annexe offering independent, flexible accommodation

  • Private west-facing garden with structured outdoor living areas

  • Driveway parking and detached garage

  • Sought-after Oxfordshire village setting with strong connectivity

Arrival carries a quiet sense of occasion. Set behind a simple picket boundary, with the original stonework catching the light, Station House reveals itself not as a typical village home, but as something with deeper provenance and presence. There is a feeling, immediately, that this is a house shaped by purpose.

Built in 1839 and Grade II listed, the house was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel as part of the Great Western Railway infrastructure - a detail that underpins its proportions, its symmetry, and its enduring sense of solidity. What remains today is not simply a period property, but a piece of considered architecture that has evolved carefully over time.

The current owners have been custodians for nearly three decades. Their stewardship is evident in the way the house has been extended and adapted, not to overwrite its origins, but to support the rhythm of modern life. The loft conversion in 1999 introduced additional bedrooms without compromising the original structure, while later additions - the garden room and detached annexe – extend the footprint in a way that feels both natural and intentional.

The ground floor unfolds with a clarity that reflects the building’s origins. The dining room, with its generous ceiling height and period detailing, sits at the heart of the plan, a space designed as much for gathering as for everyday use. There is a quiet formality here, softened by the way it connects through to the rest of the house.

The living room offers a different mood. The bay window draws in light across the day, while the wood-burning stove anchors the space in the colder months. It is a room that shifts easily between seasons - open and bright in summer, enclosed and atmospheric in winter.

To the rear, the garden room alters the pace entirely. Introduced in 2015, it is lighter in tone and more contemporary in execution, with bifold doors opening directly onto the garden. Underfloor heating allows it to function year-round, and it has become a natural centre for daily life, somewhere between inside and out.

The kitchen and adjoining spaces are practical and well-ordered, positioned to support both family life and entertaining without interrupting the flow of the house.

Upstairs, the sense of proportion established on the ground floor continues with consistency.

The main bedroom sits to the front of the house, with a breadth and scale that allows it to feel composed rather than simply large. An original fireplace remains as a focal point, and there is a quiet separation from the other rooms that lends a degree of privacy.

Two further bedrooms on this floor are similarly well-sized, each retaining period detailing and a sense of individuality in aspect and proportion. A smaller adjoining room, currently used as an office, offers flexibility - either as a dedicated workspace or as an extension to one of the bedrooms, depending on how the house is configured.

The second floor, created through the loft conversion in 1999, introduces two additional bedrooms beneath the roofline. These rooms have a slightly different character, more enclosed, with softer geometry, and are well suited to guests, older children, or quieter retreat spaces. A bathroom at this level supports their independent use, making the floor feel self-contained.

Bathrooms throughout the house have been introduced and updated incrementally over time, aligned with the various phases of extension. On the first floor, a family bathroom serves the main bedrooms, positioned conveniently off the landing. At second floor level, the additional bathroom supports the loft rooms, allowing for a practical separation of daily routines.

On the ground floor, a further shower room is located off the inner hall, particularly useful when the house is in use for entertaining.

Across all levels, the arrangement of bedrooms and bathrooms reflects a house that has been adapted with long-term use in mind - balancing privacy, practicality, and flexibility without disrupting the integrity of the original plan.

To the side of the house, a private driveway provides off-street parking for two vehicles, set within the plot. The detached garage, constructed as part of the 2007 annexe scheme, sits beyond - offering secure storage or potential for further adaptation, subject to the necessary consents.

Outside, the garden extends predominantly to the west, capturing the afternoon and evening light. It is both open and structured - with defined areas for planting, sitting, and cultivation -and connects directly back to the house through the garden room. There is a sense of enclosure without restriction, and a rhythm to how the spaces are used across the day and through the seasons.

The separate annexe, built in 2007, sits apart from the main house and offers genuine independence. Whether for guests, extended family, or as a workspace, it adds a layer of flexibility that is increasingly rare.

Beyond the boundary, Steventon remains a well-connected Oxfordshire village, with a strong sense of community and access to surrounding countryside. Daily life here moves easily between the house, the garden, and the wider landscape.

Station House is not defined by a single feature, but by the coherence of its parts - architecture, adaptation, and long-term care working together. It is a house that has been understood and respected, and one that offers the same opportunity to its next owner.

N.B. Kindly note that select images used within our promotional content have undergone virtual staging processes, showcasing possible arrangements and aesthetics within the property; however, the actual space might differ from these depictions.

EPC Rating: E

Mortgage calculator

Monthly repayment

£5,502 per month

Whole of market comparison

70+ lenders and 10,000+ products

How much could I borrow

In partnership with

mojo logo

The monthly repayments provided are estimates and should be used as a guide only. The actual amount you can borrow will depend on your personal financial situation and subject to a full application. For a more precise estimate, please use the Mojo mortgage calculator. Your home or property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage.

More information

  • Tenure

    Freehold

  • Council tax band

    F

  • Ground rent

    £0

Report this listing

Stowhill Estates

Logo of Stowhill Estates
Email agent