Special offer

Halloran Park, The Ice Rink and Public Transportation to Save Gas Money; All Close to this Colonial in Mint Condition!

By
Real Estate Agent with Howard Hanna Cleveland City Office
Carole A. Cohen, Realtor® | Howard Hanna Company | 216-348-7455
3566 W. 120th Street, Cleveland, OH
The redesigned kitchen highlights this pretty colonial in walking distance to parks, schools and transportation.
3 Bdrm Single Family House
offered at $95,000
Year Built 1926
Sq Footage 1,141
Bedrooms 3
Bathrooms 1 full, 0 partial
Floors 2
Parking 1 Car garage
Lot Size .08 acres
HOA/Maint $0 per month

DESCRIPTION

Redesigned kitchen and bath, richly refinished wood floors, spacious room sizes and many upgrades like a newer furnace, a/c, disposal, roof and panel box. This is an architecturally interesting front porch colonial in a neighborhood full of parks and close to shops, hiighways, public transportation and recreation facilities. A $100 gift certificate to Sherwin Williams awaits the buyer of this lovely home.

see additional photos below
PROPERTY FEATURES

Central A/C Central heat Hardwood floor
Tile floor Living room Dining room
Refrigerator Stove/Oven Basement
Washer Dryer Balcony, Deck, or Patio
Yard

COMMUNITY FEATURES

Garage parking Swimming pool(s) Tennis court(s)
Playground


OTHER SPECIAL FEATURES

2005 Timberline® 35 year roof with warranty

ADDITIONAL LINKS

Map of property
Website
Mortgage calculator
ADDITIONAL PHOTOS

Seller contact info:
Carole A. Cohen, Realtor®
Howard Hanna Company
216-348-7455
For sale by agent/broker

powered by postlets Equal Opportunity Housing
Posted: May 31, 2007, 8:04pm PDT
Maureen Francis
Coldwell Banker Weir Manuel - Bloomfield Hills, MI
Coldwell Banker Weir Manuel
What pretty book cases.  I love the leaded glass.
Jun 03, 2007 12:59 PM
Carole Cohen
Howard Hanna Cleveland City Office - Cleveland, OH
Realtor, ePRO

Hi Mo! It still fascinates me about Cleveland architecture, that even the utilitarian styles of homes have some beautiful features. I bet most of the homes built in the early 1900s have the leaded glass. And something tells me you have similar housing stock in some of your areas?

Jun 03, 2007 01:54 PM