A Norwich property has featured on BBC's Homes Under the Hammer.

Presenter Tommy Walsh was on the outskirts of the city to look at a set of properties part of the same lot up for sale in Costessey. 

Walsh said the property was 'unusual' as it consists of a shop and a flat above, a house, and a barn out the back.

The property was listed for a guide price of £230,000.

Walsh commended the shop's ground floor as bright and spacious, as well as its decent-sized back office but noted that the ground floor might have been refitted improperly a number of times and would need redoing.

Exiting through the original French doors at the back, Walsh headed upstairs to see the two-bed flat over the shop, complimenting its "fantastic" reception room and Victorian window box. 

He took a good look through the barn at the back, saying it would make a lovely residence or games room. 

Auction House East Anglia's Bryan Baxter said the property's appeal is in its investment opportunity, adding 'the sum of its parts is greater than the whole'.

He recommended the shop and barn undergo renovation and conversion and estimated that if fully modernised the properties combined could fetch £750,000 on the market. 

It was bought in July 2021 for £258,000 by Dan, who had been on the programme before when he converted a grade-II listed office in Norwich into a family home.

Sixteen months on, Dan and his team had turned the two-bedroom flat into a three-bed, as well as added an en-suite to the master bedroom. 

The detached house received a comprehensive refurbishment, inside and out. 

Delays in receiving planning permission meant Dan was unable to convert the outside barn in time for filming but the groundwork for its development had begun. 

Of an initial 'open-ended' renovation budget of up to £180,000, £50,000 was spent renovating the shop, flat and house, with another £125,000 estimated to complete the barn conversion.