26 Thomas Street 5 Portland, ME 04102
Description
1601886
$6,335
0.41 acres
Condo
1905
Victorian
Cumberland County
Listed By
MAINE LISTINGS - IDX
Last checked Nov 14 2024 at 10:55 AM GMT-0400
- Full Bathrooms: 2
- Half Bathroom: 1
- 1st Floor Primary Bedroom W/Bath
- Walk-In Closets
- Dishwasher
- Disposal
- Dryer
- Gas Range
- Microwave
- Refrigerator
- Washer
- Williston West Condominium Association
- Near Public Transit
- Neighborhood
- Intown
- Historic District
- Landscaped
- Sidewalks
- Level
- Corner Lot
- Fireplace: 0
- Foundation: Granite
- Heat Pump
- Multi-Zones
- Interior Entry
- Crawl Space
- Brick/Mortar
- Dues: $512/Monthly
- Roof: Pitched
- Roof: Fiberglass
- Sewer: Public Sewer
- Energy: Double Pane Windows, Low E Windows, Programmable Thermostat
- On Site
- Common
- 5 - 10 Spaces
Estimated Monthly Mortgage Payment
*Based on Fixed Interest Rate withe a 30 year term, principal and interest only
This two-story residence comprises two bedrooms with en-suite bathrooms and an open plan kitchen, dining room and living room replete with an upper floor open den/office.
It's challenging to find a condo in its price class on the peninsula, especially with its 1,768 +/- SF living area.
Amenities include high ceilings, high-end finishes, coffered ceiling, elaborate wrought-iron stair system, upstairs laundry, natural gas-fired range, Tektone buzzer access and one parking space in the paver courtyard. Association enjoys a secluded patio.
The restored High Victorian Gothic brick former parish house, designed by nationally known local architect John Calvin Stevens, was built in 1905. It borders the courtyard along with the former historic Williston-West Church, built in 1877, and added to the National Registry of Historic Places in 1981.
Enjoy a stroll in the tree-lined Western Promenade Historic District, two blocks from Waynflete School. while enjoying a plethora of diverse architectural styles, including Queen Anne, Colonial Revival, Italianate, Second Empire, Victorian Gothic, Shingle, and Greek Revival, constructed in the latter part of the nineteenth century through the 1920s, just outside your door.