Jump to content

Lodger sought for King sized room


MmV

Recommended Posts

The king sized room is situated in a stunning 4 storey Victorian house 3 mins from Lordship Lane, 2 mins from East Dulwich's recently renovated leisure centre & pool, award winning restaurants, numerous independent boutiques, & lifestyle & organic food shops.


The quiet and private room comes with a king sized bed, some storage & a TV. It is situated on its own floor with adjoining shower & WC. It overlooks a spectacular well stocked secluded garden, which also has a patio for al fresco dining. Accommodation comes with shared use of garden, conservatory, & kitchen with washing machine & dishwasher. The property has WiFi throughout. Water, gas & electricity bills are all included. A cleaner - who comes once a fortnight to vacuum & clean shared areas. Telephone & Council Tax excluded.


We are looking for a professional, responsible, non - smoking, very clean, very tidy, self sufficient, & independent lodger. Would suit a sensible, quiet person who is in fulltime employment. No couples or pets please. Share with two film industry professionals who enjoy cinema, motorbikes, good food & nice wine.


References, deposit & 1 month's rent required in advance of tenancy commencement.


The room will be available from 30th Jan - possibly before.


Location: East Dulwich, Crystal Palace Road


Rent: ?800 per calendar month


Email for appointment to view.


Best,


MmV.

Hi there,


I have just seen this post on the ED forum.


A bit about myself:


My name is James and I am a 31 yr old currently living near Dulwich library. I work as a project manager at a branding/design agency and prior to that I worked in the music/events industry as a performer/promoter and designer. I have been living in East Dulwich since last June and absolutely love the area so although the tenancy at my current address is about to run out I am keen to remain in the vicinity.


I love film (often to be found at the ED picture house!), music and all things graphic design. I have a fairly busy work routine but enjoy socialising and am a very tidy, considerate housemate and know how to do the washing up and make a cup of tea! I have been living in a larger shared house and so am definitely looking for something a little quieter as whilst I like to enjoy myself every once in a while I favour peace and calm at home.


If you would be interested in meeting me then I am just around the corner and can provide references and deposit as required. I will actually be house sitting until the 15th February on Crystal Palace Road but would be able to start rent payments as of the end of Jan/ 1st of Feb as needed.


Many thanks and I look forward to hearing back from you soon


Best wishes


JR

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • Looks like they do recognise a trades union USDAW - Sainsbury’s and Usdaw sign a new national agreement to improve trade union organising and representation within the business
    • Trees are great - I plant and raise my own and petition the council to look at damaged specimens and plant more - but they need to be tended to when they’re in non-woodland spaces. I encourage all those who have a strong liking for trees to plant them, grow from seed etc. - much better for all than tapping on keypads. 
    • Would they keep until Christmas?
    • As a customer of DKH I have sympathy with the staff but this a matter for their trade union to address. The law states that temperatures in the workplace must be “reasonable”, and adds guidance that a reasonable minimum temperature is 16C for sitting down jobs like checkouts or 13C for physical work like packing and stacking.  The law also states that there must be easily readable thermometers installed in the workplace so that staff can check the temperature. When I still worked, these would be mercury thermometers red-lined at 16C, so staff knew when it was permissible to stop work if they were uncomfortable. However, I always worked in trade union represented jobs. I suspect (but certainly don’t know) that a lot of Sainsbury’s staff these days don’t bother to join the union, so are not protected (please put me right if you know otherwise).  In any workplace, you either take collective action to improve things or just accept the conditions imposed on you. If staff are in a union, they need to take a hand in making sure the union and its reps do their job in representing them.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...