Its really not a very pretty one Feltwell , in fact its quite obscene. worth a try though.
Skier why not hire a big lorry , grab a mate and take a period garage road trip?
you can just about make it out in a pic in this thread , there is a garage under all that foliage.
http://www.periodproperty.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=11381
to be fair driving all the way from north wales to pick up a crappy old garage is a bit adventurous , also it will need a fairly substantial concrete slab to build it on which is a lot of work for a pig sty.
old horse boxes make great pig stys.
The one I flogged wasn't exactly pretty either - half painted in masonry paint (1 side was up against a building so never painted) and too small to put most modern cars in. Be totally honest in your description and put it on for a quid, buyer dismantles & takes away, I reckon it will go.
Mine went to a bloke who wanted it to put on a farm for storing his BMW Z3 over the winter. Point is, there are people who just want a functional building for storage, if it's going on a farm or industrial unit they don't care what it looks like. Concrete garages are hideous but functional, they're very secure and don't rot or need much maintenance. I find they're always damp though, no matter what you do with them.
I'd be tempted if it was larger as I could do with some more undercover space for some tractor implements. I throw a tarpaulin over them around this time of year but, frankly, I suspect it's a waste of time. It keeps the rain off but they still seem to get wet with condensation, which then can't dry off quickly because of the tarpaulin.
If only I'd known, we just bought a garage and I think we were ripped off it was an awful lot more than you are talking about. It was right near our house though so we didn't have to move it anywhere, and it has made His Lordship very happy. Mr P thinks we plan to use it incorrectly.......................
Cars can be permissible in garages - so long as they're old ones that need lots of tinkering, and preferably haven't been on the road for a while (my friend has just got his Jag mot'd - not finished the restoration but it's now working and legal. It was a 2 year restoration, he started it age 18 and has just turned 42 ! :lol: ) Of course such cars need to be surrounded and probably covered as well in all the essentials that belong in any garage, all those items that will come in useful one day.
However - ordinary modern cars just don't belong in a garage. A pristine garage with a modern car sat in it is just plain wrong. Men need to tinker.
I ended up freecycling it, i just needed shot pretty sharpish so off it went to become someones log store.
Now without any height restrictions i can fit the whole landy in.