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House and home

Bungalow living royal life

(79 Posts)
Willow68 Wed 18-Aug-21 18:46:37

Hi, has anyone sold their house and moved to a ready made village of static homes for over 45s, I have been looking at royal life by glows by the sea. Any advice or experience of this?

MissAdventure Wed 18-Aug-21 22:53:19

Well, I do hope someone reported her! grin
I got the feeling that there may be a few of that ilk.
A man told me off for daring to glance at the lunch I was trying to eat instead of holding his gaze for the full 1.5 hours he spent telling me all about his working life, and how well thought of he was.

Callistemon Wed 18-Aug-21 22:49:40

Roolz is roolz.
She did cheat a bit and have a greenhouse!

MissAdventure Wed 18-Aug-21 22:46:23

Our has sheds and dogs!
There were lots and lots of both.

Callistemon Wed 18-Aug-21 22:43:44

Some state no dogs allowed, or at least no dog larger than chihuahua size.

No sheds - my relative missed having a woman shed.

Doodledog Wed 18-Aug-21 22:42:24

I have PM'd you, Willow68.

Callistemon Wed 18-Aug-21 22:40:28

Fridayschild

Just had a look at Royale Life. “86 developments across the UK” actually means across England and Wales”. None in Scotland, none in Northern Ireland. Stopped looking! I’m a bit fed up with England and Wales being called the UK! They are only part of it. Hrrumph ?

At least Wales got a mention for once grin

Blossoming Wed 18-Aug-21 22:37:32

JaneJudge

I think we are all quite aware what they are or the gist of it if we have a television and watch local news grin

I don’t have a television or watch local news. Just trying to be helpful, should have known better.

JaneJudge Wed 18-Aug-21 22:00:35

Yes Lucca confused but these were brick built

Lucca Wed 18-Aug-21 21:51:25

JaneJudge

all I will say is, my friend bought a bungalow in a village which wasn't 'on a complex' but was for over 50s only. She bought it (for over 800k !!!) and then all the neighbours complained when she had to look after her grandchildren! She said she had bought it thinking because they were all over 50 they would have grandchildren or having them soon and it turned out they wanted the quiet life - can't say I blame them but maybe it is something to consider

£800k ?!?!

Fridayschild Wed 18-Aug-21 21:11:16

Just had a look at Royale Life. “86 developments across the UK” actually means across England and Wales”. None in Scotland, none in Northern Ireland. Stopped looking! I’m a bit fed up with England and Wales being called the UK! They are only part of it. Hrrumph ?

Chewbacca Wed 18-Aug-21 21:09:25

At around £250,000, plus ground rent and site fees, they're not a cheap option. Have a look at the reviews on TrustPilot.

MissAdventure Wed 18-Aug-21 21:05:05

They didn't mind grandchildren staying on my friend's park.
There were a couple of people with grandchildren who had come to live with them.
I think it had upset a couple of people, but it was ironed out with the help of the committee.
There seemed to be lots who either were on it, or seemed to desperately want to be.

midgey Wed 18-Aug-21 21:03:14

I think that the costs involved are very often just as much as a brick built home. Cost of the site often increases significantly.

Willow68 Wed 18-Aug-21 20:57:30

Oh really, That's interesting to know… I was also thinking grandchild could visit and family, I guess it’s a nice idea but a lot of minuses too …

JaneJudge Wed 18-Aug-21 20:47:34

all I will say is, my friend bought a bungalow in a village which wasn't 'on a complex' but was for over 50s only. She bought it (for over 800k !!!) and then all the neighbours complained when she had to look after her grandchildren! She said she had bought it thinking because they were all over 50 they would have grandchildren or having them soon and it turned out they wanted the quiet life - can't say I blame them but maybe it is something to consider

Willow68 Wed 18-Aug-21 20:39:48

Yes I looked at the Royale life developments, I only come across them today, I’m just interested to find out more about park living. I’d rather fancy over 45s, gated and nice area of the country. It doesn’t have to be royal life it was first one I come across… so any feedback or information is welcome ?

JaneJudge Wed 18-Aug-21 20:20:42

I think we are all quite aware what they are or the gist of it if we have a television and watch local news grin

Blossoming Wed 18-Aug-21 20:16:27

I think that Willow is referring to Royale Life developments.

www.royalelife.com/our-developments/

MissAdventure Wed 18-Aug-21 20:07:13

I used to chat with a mum and daughter who lived in our park home, and they loved it.
They said it was like being on holiday all the time.
I also noticed a fair few people who may be classed as vulnerable, but it seems everyone looks out for them and helps them, and they, in turn help where they can.

JaneJudge Wed 18-Aug-21 20:01:13

I think it depends on your personality and needs. The homes/sites look pretty snazzy these days

netflixfan Wed 18-Aug-21 19:48:43

My Auntie moved to a park home when she didn’t have that much money after a nasty divorce in her 70’s. Happiest years of her life. She made so many lovely friends, they had the funniest times together! The park owner was kind and helpful.

MissAdventure Wed 18-Aug-21 19:40:54

I think it was the community part that made me slightly ill at ease.
It seemed it may have been a bit too cloying for me, but then I'm a miserable old bat.

MissAdventure Wed 18-Aug-21 19:36:55

I went to someone's park home a few weeks back.
We had lunch in the cafe on site, and it was quite an experience!
I must say, her home is a lovely size (2 bedroom) and the amenities were very good.
It's also secure, with lots to do, a couple of shops, swimming pool and daily goings on.

Callistemon Wed 18-Aug-21 19:27:25

Do you mean homes like Park Homes for the over 50s eg a one storey building with solid foundations as varian said ?

Relatives of mine bought one, they maintained it as well as they would a brick built bungalow, ie new windows and doors when they needed to etc, there was an excellent community spirit and in fact it has sold recently for a very good price (more than they paid for it many years ago).

Be aware that the park owners will charge ground rent, there are restrictions and they do take a percentage when the home is sold.

varian Wed 18-Aug-21 19:20:41

Is it a bungalow. in the sense of a one storey building with solid foundations?

If so it might be a good investment.

However if it is a mobile home it will lose you money year by year.