Have a look at this neat 3 bedroom home. With the option to set it up as your own home or as an investment property, this is worth checking out. Consisting of the three bedrooms, lounge, and kitchen, all with lovely wooden floor boards. The lounge has an old-style open fireplace. Also included is a bathroom with shower, laundry, and the toilet. Alongside the home is a carport through which you have access to the back yard. There is plenty of room out the back for the kids and pets to play, or to develop a garden. The property is fully fenced.
Directly across the street is a nice park area with play equipment and a BBQ with seating for that get together with friends and family. The hospital and the towns major sporting facilities and ovals are located nearby for the kids to involve themselves with.
Call Ian Hanna on 0427215076 for more information or to organise a private inspection of this property.
This property at 5 Ashworth Crescent, Narrogin is a three bedroom, one bathroom house listed for sale by Ian Hanna at Elders Real Estate.
For more information about Narrogin, including sales data, facts, growth rates, nearby transport and nearby shops, please view our Narrogin profile page.
If you would like to get in touch with Ian Hanna regarding 5 Ashworth Crescent, Narrogin, please call 0427 215 076 or contact the agent via email.
Track this property
Track propertyThe townsite of Narrogin is located in the great southern agricultural region, 192 km south east of Perth and 32 km east north east of Williams. It is located on the Great Southern Railway, and when this line was opened in 1889, Narrogin was one of the original stopping places. The railway line was a private line, and the Company that built the line declared a private townsite here in 1891. The railway was purchased by the Government in 1896, and in 1897 Narrogin was gazetted as a government townsite.
Narrogin is an Aboriginal name, having been first recorded as "Narroging" for a pool in this area in 1869. The meaning of the name is uncertain, various sources recording it as "bat camp", "plenty of everything" or derived from "gnargagin" which means "place of water".