We have 12 Landmarks for you...
List view
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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
- 4 nights from
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£345
equivalent to £43.13 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
- 4 nights from
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£272
equivalent to £34.00 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
- 4 nights from
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£281
equivalent to £35.13 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
- 4 nights from
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£454
equivalent to £56.75 per person per night
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This beautiful little pavilion has two distinct faces and has a breath-taking panorama. Approached from the wood, this rustic cottage with a thatched roof houses an elegant interior.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights from
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£300
equivalent to £37.50 per person per night
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A Georgian folly within an outstanding Picturesque garden, the Ruin was built in about 1766. On the edge of a steep wooded gorge, it was one of several buildings scattered across the gardens.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights from
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£308
equivalent to £38.50 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
- 4 nights from
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£266
equivalent to £33.25 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
- 4 nights from
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£267
equivalent to £33.38 per person per night
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This eighteenth-century Gothic summerhouse sits beside the River Esk near Carlisle. Remote and peaceful, the three large windows in the main room give striking views over the river.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 3
- 4 nights from
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£293
equivalent to £24.42 per person per night
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Freston Tower is a six-storey Tudor folly that looks out over the River Orwell. There is a single room on each floor with the sitting room at the top to take advantage of the unrivalled views.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- No
- Sleeps
- 4
- 4 nights from
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£468
equivalent to £29.25 per person per night
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Situated on the Worcester and Birmingham Canal, Lock Cottage was built between 1790 and 1815. Many lock cottages were ruthlessly demolished during the 1950s, making this a rare survivor.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 4
- 4 nights from
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£257
equivalent to £16.06 per person per night
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A banqueting house for Old Campden House built in 1613 by wealthy merchant Sir Baptist Hicks. The house burned during the Civil War, but its Banqueting Houses survive.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2 +2
- 4 nights from
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£444
equivalent to £27.75 per person per night
Map view