We have 69 Landmarks for you...
3 nights
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Deep in the woods sits this octagonal folly – with a real surprise inside. The ceiling and walls of the main room are festooned with shells, while in the basement is a cold plunge pool.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£701
equivalent to £116.83 per person per night
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The Birdhouse was designed in 1783 by the architect James Wyatt in a spectacular natural setting that could serve to define the Picturesque movement. Today, it is a romantic hideaway for two.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- No
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£806
equivalent to £134.33 per person per night
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This very clever scale model of a French chateau sits on a hill above the River Trent in the middle of the Lincolnshire countryside.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£664
equivalent to £110.67 per person per night
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Our restoration of Danescombe Mine was one of the earliest conversions of an industrial building into a house. The result is a wonderful exotic hybrid in a wooded valley leading to the Tamar.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£858
equivalent to £143.00 per person per night
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A fairytale cottage in a wild and beautiful glen, this diminutive former schoolroom makes a perfect hideaway or writing retreat for two, or even one.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£573
equivalent to £95.50 per person per night
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Houghton West Lodge is one of four houses that guard the approaches to Houghton Hall, one of England’s finest Palladian houses and once home to Britain's first Prime Minister.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£580
equivalent to £96.67 per person per night
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A fine, two-storey Jacobean porch salvaged from a great house once beloved of the poet and playwright John Dryden but now lost.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£571
equivalent to £95.17 per person per night
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The Pigsty’s classical design was supposedly inspired by Squire Barry’s travels around the Mediterranean in the 1880s and offers striking views of Robin Hood’s Bay.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£809
equivalent to £134.83 per person per night
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A tiny, circular tower standing on the boundary of a cricket pitch, Prospect Tower was built around 1808. Approached along an avenue of walnut trees, Lord Harris called it his “whim.”
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£773
equivalent to £128.83 per person per night
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The Summerhouse stands in beautiful woodland on the Shuttleworth Estate. The outstandingly fine brickwork of this foursquare folly is likely to date from the early 18th century.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£790
equivalent to £131.67 per person per night
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This simple and evocative cottage, from around 1840, was built to serve one of the monumental pumping engines that sprang up as the Steam Age took on the challenge of draining the Fenland.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£573
equivalent to £95.50 per person per night
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This tiny pavilion was a majestic grandstand for the enclosure in front. It is a mature expression in miniature of all that was best in Tudor and Jacobean architecture.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- No
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£590
equivalent to £98.33 per person per night
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Canons Ashby is a 16th century house, hardly touched since 1710. Our Landmark is at the top of a tower, and its light and pretty rooms have views of the beautifully restored gardens.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- No
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£563
equivalent to £93.83 per person per night
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Ty Uchaf means ‘the top’ or ‘highest’ house. It sits at the head of a valley above Betws-y-Coed. A datestone for 1685 was found in the tumbledown pigsty.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£464
equivalent to £77.33 per person per night
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Built in the 17th century, the Warren House was home to the warrener of the estate. In the 18th century a decorative facade was added by Vanbrugh, Thomas Archer or Robert Adam.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 3 nights
-
£725
equivalent to £120.83 per person per night
Map view