About the Sellaphix Home

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About the Sellaphix Home

on May 18, 2018, 09:53:54 AM

The Sellaphix Home in London
34 Upper Montagu St
Marylebone, London

The Sellaphix family lives in a narrow brick rowhouse (built in about 1890) on a mostly muggle street, with a few other Magical families living discreetly nearby. It's a modest house and well lived in. They're pleased to have a roomy back garden where they have a garden for vegetables and potions reagents.

On the lower floor is a living room, dining room, half bath, and kitchen. As soon as you walk in, you're in a passage way with stairs up and entrances to the lower rooms. The exit to the back garden is in the kitchen. Tucked under the stairs is the entrance to the first floor bathroom, and the stairs to the cellar. There's a tiny coat closet near the kitchen.

Both the living and dining have a fire place.The kitchen was a later edition and is bright and sunny.

Up the stairs are two bedrooms and a shared full bathroom. The larger front bedroom has a large closet, fireplace, and a bay window. The smaller back bedroom (for Figaro and Frank) has two small closets, two windows to the back garden (one just above the kitchen roof), and a fireplace. There is a small hall closet.

  • They are not connected to the Floo Network
  • There is an Anti-Apparition Charm on the house. Family and close friends know to Apparate to the back garden.



About Marylebone
West of Bloomsbury and Fitzrovia, Marylebone extends north from Marble Arch, at the eastern edge of Hyde Park. Most first-time visitors head here to explore Madame Tussaud's waxworks or walk along Baker Street in the footsteps of Sherlock Holmes. ... Marylebone Lane and High Street are home to some specialist boutiques and food shops. Dickens wrote nearly a dozen books while he resided here. At Regent's Park, you can visit Queen Mary's Gardens or, in summer, see Shakespeare performed in an open-air theater. Marylebone has emerged as a major "bedroom" district for London, competing with Bloomsbury to its east. It's not as convenient as Bloomsbury, but the hub of the West End's action is virtually at your doorstep if you lodge here, northwest of Piccadilly Circus and facing Mayfair to the south. Once known only for its town houses turned into B&Bs, the district now offers accommodations in all price ranges, catering to everyone from rock stars to frugal family travelers.[1]
 1. From Frommer's
Last Edit: September 26, 2019, 08:57:20 PM by Figaro Sellaphix
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