12 cute cottages you can rent out in the grounds of hotels

Ballyfin
Ballyfin

Some of our smartest hotels are sprucing up their smaller outhouses for the benefit of guests who want a mixture of grandeur and privacy

Spring Cottage, Cliveden, Buckinghamshire

In 1857, the Duke of Sutherland turned his ­attention at historic country house Cliveden to timber-framed Spring ­Cottage, which lay within the estate on the banks of the Thames. Originally a Gothic-style summerhouse, it was enlarged into a cottage, keeping the original, octagonal vaulted plaster ceiling and adding a Gothic-style loggia and turret. The spring nearby was considered to have rejuvenating powers, and it was a popular place with the Duchess of Sutherland, who often received Queen Victoria there, the monarch arriving by royal barge.

Fast-forward just over a century, and while Cliveden had already had its fair share of scandals, Spring Cottage’s turn came in 1961 when society osteopath Stephen Ward rented the cottage from the Astors. It was on one of the hottest weekends of the year around the Astors’ outdoor swimming pool (which still exists today), that Ward’s guest Christine Keeler first met John Profumo who was staying at Cliveden. The rest, as they say, is history.

Today, Spring Cottage has been beautifully restored, offering a cosier, less formal setting than Cliveden, yet with the use of all its facilities from the elegant dining room to the spa and that swimming pool. There is a log fire in the sitting room, two double bedrooms and a third with sofa beds for children. There is a kitchen with an Aga and a wooden ­dining table. Views are on to the flower-filled garden and the flowing River Thames.

Spring Cottage (sleeping six) costs from £2,055 per night, B&B. clivedenhouse.co.uk

• Read the full hotel review: Cliveden

Cliveden's Spring Cottage
Cliveden's Spring Cottage

Church Lodge, Heckfield Place, Hampshire

An 18th-century Georgian house which sits in the middle of a 400-acre estate in the Hampshire countryside, Heckfield Place is a project which is far more than the hotel at the centre of it, echoing the importance of the Manor House in days of old. The organic Home Farm, run on biodynamic principles, provides much of what the kitchen, under culinary ­director Skye Gyngell, delivers to the table; from roast farm vegetables with warm yogurt and fermented red chilli to slow-cooked lamb with viola artichokes, peas and preserved lemon dressing. Monthly markets selling produce are open to the locals, as is the sleek, underground, screening room complete with Ferrari leather-clad chairs.

The original black-and-white timbered gatehouse, now called Church Lodge, was renovated and opened in September last year with the same attention to detail as Heckfield Place. Paintings by Bunt, their story penned and hidden in the frame, hang on the Farrow & Ball painted walls. Two cosy bedrooms, with books on the shelves and drawers trimmed with leather handles, come with an elegant, wood-panelled bathroom with a slipper bathtub. Downstairs, the kitchen comes with a butler’s sink and wicker baskets for the vegetables, and the adjoining sitting room looks on to the garden through its bay windows. It is an ideal space for families who want privacy.

Church Lodge (sleeping four) costs from £1,400 a night, B&B. heckfieldplace.com

• Read the full hotel review: Heckfield Place

Church Lodge at Heckfield Place
Church Lodge at Heckfield Place

The Hayloft & Woolsack, The Newt, Bruton, Somerset

Just as Heckfield Place fulfils a greater role in the community than your normal country house hotel, so too does The Newt, which opened last year to great acclaim. Owners Koos Bekker and Karen Roos, who already had ­Babylonstoren in their native South Africa under their belt, changed their plans to make 17th century Hadspen House their private home, feeling it was simply too good not to share. What they have gone on to create is a supremely stylish working country estate, encompassing farmland, orchards, gardens – both vegetable and formal – a farm shop, a Cyder Press and Cellar using Somerset apples and a History of Gardening Museum, all open to the public.

The Hayloft and Woolsack have been converted from an 18th-century farm building which was originally used to store hay and wool, the latter the source of Somerset’s wealth until American cotton destroyed the market. There is a wood-burning stove in the sitting room of the Hayloft, which has a king-size bed in the mezzanine above, a bathroom off the sitting room and a door from there through to the Woolsack with twin beds and its own shower room.

The Hayloft and the Woolsack (sleeping four) are available from £450 per night including breakfast, in-room larder, high tea and garden tour. thenewtinsomerset.com

• Read the full hotel review: The Newt

The Hayloft & Woolsack, The Newt
The Hayloft & Woolsack, The Newt

The Coach House, Beaverbrook, Surrey

While there are numerous reports of Charlie Chaplin and Winston Churchill visiting Cliveden, it seems they also had time to enjoy the Roaring Twenties at the home of politician and press baron Lord Beaverbrook at his Victorian mansion in the rolling Surrey hills. Opulent throughout, it included Italianate gardens and England’s first home cinema, elegantly wood-panelled. Eighteen suites in the main house are named after the good and great who stayed there frequently, from Rudyard Kipling, who wrote a poem for Beaverbrook, now framed in the lobby, to Churchill, whose suite contains the same bath from which he used to dictate to his secretary.

A short stroll away from the main house, the original Victorian coach house was converted and launched at the end of 2019, housing six, pet-friendly, suites on two floors, all interconnecting and most large enough to sleep two adults and two children, making a base for a party of 21. Designed by Susie Atkinson, interiors are countryside chic with whimsical colours and rustic touches and some bathrooms are resplendent with copper bathtubs.

The Coach House (sleeping 21) costs from £4,350 per night, B&B. beaverbrook.co.uk

• Read the full hotel review: Beaverbrook

The Coach at Beaverbrook
The Coach at Beaverbrook

The Pavilion, Gidleigh Park, Devon

The Pavilion at Gidleigh Park is a thatched cottage that sits within woodland in the hotel’s 107-acre estate. The cottage sleeps up to four, with two bedrooms and bathrooms, an open-plan panelled sitting room with kitchen diner and a private veranda overlooking the croquet lawns. Facilities at the Tudor-style hotel include a tennis court, bowling green and 18-hole putting course.

The Pavilion (sleeping four) costs from £846 per night, B&B. Minimum stay two nights. gidleigh.co.uk

• Read the full review: Gidleigh Park

The Pavilion, Gidleigh Park, Devon
The Pavilion, Gidleigh Park, Devon

Keeper’s Cottage, Lucknam Park, Wiltshire

The three cottages set within the grounds at Lucknam Park have proved so popular that there is currently one more in the pipeline. Squire’s Cottage, a four bedroom property within easy reach of the impressive Espa Spa, launched in 2019 while the latest addition, Thatcher’s cottage, opened in 2020.

But it is Keeper’s Cottage which opened in 2018, at the end of the drive, which brims with the cosiness that a country cottage should do. Stone-built with a pretty, flower-filled garden and a Cotswold stone well, it has three double or twin bedrooms, sleeping six, and a sitting room with sloping ceilings and wood floors topped with rugs.

It has a dining room and a fitted wood kitchen with butler’s sink; and comes with a welcome hamper containing champagne and breakfast staples. For dinner, those who do not want to cook their own are strongly advised to book a table at Michelin-starred Restaurant Hywel Jones for dishes such as Isle of Gigha halibut with melted leeks, Jerusalem artichokes, hazelnut and lemon thyme jus gras.

Pet-friendly Keeper’s Cottage (sleeping six) starts from £1,150 per night. Minimum stay two nights. lucknampark.co.uk

• Read the full hotel review: Lucknam Park

Keeper's Cottage Lucknam Park
Keeper's Cottage Lucknam Park

Old Thatch Cottage, The Pig at Combe, Devon

This mellow-stoned Elizabethan manor house set in the Otter Valley and just a few miles from the sea offers the easy charm that the group is famous for along with its potting shed spa treatment rooms and emphasis on locally sourced food. Set within the walled gardens is the Old Thatch Cottage, with original stone flagged floor, wood burning stove and two bedrooms. One has a four poster bed and roll top bath; the other, double or twin, is also furnished with an en-suite shower.

The Old Thatch Cottage (sleeping four) costs from £425 a night, B&B. thepighotel.com/at-combe

• Read the full hotel review: The Pig at Combe

The Pig at Combe
The Pig at Combe

Apple Cottage, Boath House, Nairn, Scotland

Situated under the big skies of the Scottish Highlands, Regency Boath House has long attracted visitors to its fine restaurant and impressive walled garden. Set within those walls, an old stone bothy dating back to 1650, and originally used for storing apples, was a few years ago converted into pretty Apple Cottage, its walls clad with ceanothus. Providing a self-catering option for a couple who want a home rather than a hotel, it offers a cosy ­sitting room with wood burning stove, a double bedroom, shower room and a kitchen with views out into the garden.

The Apple Cottage (sleeping two) costs from £290 per night. boath-house.com

• Read the full hotel review: Boath House

Apple Cottage, Boath House
Apple Cottage, Boath House

The Gardener’s Cottage, Ballyfin, County Laois, Ireland

Ballyfin has long been admired as one of the most distinguished late Georgian houses in Ireland, and since its launch in 2011 one of the country’s most impressive hotels with lavish period interiors. Last year they opened The Gardener’s Cottage, which had been just that, set in a corner of the walled garden with views over the parkland and lake on one side and the vegetable garden and flower borders on the other.

Interiors come courtesy of London-based designer, Colin Orchard, who has created an elegant, uplifting space with antiques and colourful fabrics. The sitting room has an open fireplace at either end. Upstairs, there are two bathrooms and a charming bedroom with a balcony and stairs to a hot tub on the private terrace.

The Gardener’s Cottage (sleeping two) costs from €2,000 (£1,800) per night, full board. ballyfin.com

• Read the full hotel review: Ballyfin

The Gardener's Cottage at Ballyfin
The Gardener's Cottage at Ballyfin

The Bothy Cottage, South Lodge Hotel, West Sussex

Bothy Cottage, at 19th-century neo-Jacobean beauty South Lodge in West Sussex, features four en-suite bedrooms, a full kitchen, sitting room with wood-burning stove, dining room and secluded garden with sun loungers and seating area. On top of that, the (admittedly substantial) price includes access to the spa.

The Bothy Cottage (sleeping eight) costs from £4,550 per night. exclusive.co.uk

• Read the full hotel review: South Lodge

The Bothy Cottage at South Lodge, West Sussex kitchen
The Bothy Cottage at South Lodge, West Sussex kitchen

Ludlow Cottage, The Manor House, Wiltshire

Those looking for a Cotswold village escape in Castle Combe can book The Manor House's Ludlow Cottage. Expect a high-beamed bedroom with super king-sized bed, a large lounge with oak panelling, an open fireplace and stained glass windows, and a bathroom with whirlpool tub and walk-in shower. There is also access to a small garden at the rear of the cottage.

Ludlow Cottage (sleeping two) costs from £2,450 for a seven-night stay. exclusive.co.uk

• Read the full review: The Manor House

Ludlow Cottage, The Manor House, Wiltshire bedroom
Ludlow Cottage, The Manor House, Wiltshire bedroom

The Fogga and Thack, The Coniston Hotel Country Estate & Spa, Yorkshire

Up in Yorkshire you'll find The Coniston’s two private cottages, The Fogga and Thack. The Fogga has six bedrooms, a wood-burning stove in the living room plus an outdoor hot tub boasting views across the Dales. The Thack meanwhile resembles a country farmhouse, and also has a large hot tub.

The Fogga (sleeping 12) costs from £1,650 per week; Thack (sleeping 10) from £1,665. theconistonhotel.com

Fogga, The Coniston Hotel, Yorkshire
Fogga, The Coniston Hotel, Yorkshire

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