We have 59 Landmarks for you...
Midweek
-
Standing guard over Tewkesbury Abbey, this grand building of about 1500 provides a captivating base from which to explore the interesting town of Tewkesbury, the Cotswolds and Cheltenham.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights
-
£796
equivalent to £99.50 per person per night
-
A medieval timber-framed building sitting on the church green at Clare, an unspoilt Suffolk market town. This welcoming and comfortable house exudes history.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights
-
£796
equivalent to £99.50 per person per night
-
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
-
£776
equivalent to £97.00 per person per night
-
The Chapel is a tiny grey granite building in the rural hamlet of Lettaford, a settlement on the edge of Dartmoor that has been lived in since at least 1300.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights
-
£540
equivalent to £67.50 per person per night
-
Listed Grade II*, the dairy was conceived to represent a tiny Italianate chapel topped with a bell tower, and with four corner pavilions.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights
-
£772
equivalent to £96.50 per person per night
-
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
-
£700
equivalent to £87.50 per person per night
-
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
- 4 nights
-
£756
equivalent to £94.50 per person per night
-
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
-
£772
equivalent to £96.50 per person per night
-
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
- 4 nights
-
£428
equivalent to £53.50 per person per night
-
Whiteford Temple is an ornamental granite folly with views towards the Tamar Estuary. It was built in the 18th century for Sir John Call, a military engineer who had made a fortune in India.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2
- 4 nights
-
£640
equivalent to £80.00 per person per night
-
Bridge Cottage is an idyllic thatched cottage situated in Peppercombe, a steep and wooded valley through which a stream runs down to a meadow before tumbling to a beach in a fine waterfall.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 3
- 4 nights
-
£772
equivalent to £64.33 per person per night
-
One of three Landmarks in the remote upland hamlet Rhiwddion, Ty Capel was built in 1860 for the slate quarrying community that once lived and worked here.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 3
- 4 nights
-
£420
equivalent to £35.00 per person per night
-
Mill House dates from 1700 and is mainly built of stone with a thatched and slated roof. No. 1 is the slightly larger of two cottages and has a wide fireplace in the sitting room.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 4
- 4 nights
-
£640
equivalent to £40.00 per person per night
-
Designed and constructed by James Mansergh and Robert Rawlinson, work began on Appleton Water Tower in 1877 to provide a clean water supply to the Sandringham Estate.
- Dogs Allowed
- Yes
- Fire or Stove
- Yes
- Sleeps
- 2 +2
- 4 nights
-
£1,048
equivalent to £65.50 per person per night
-
William Beckford designed Beckford’s Tower in the 1820s as his museum and treasure house. Today the Tower recreates the flavour of Beckford’s extravagant and sumptuous interiors.
- Dogs Allowed
- No
- Fire or Stove
- No
- Sleeps
- 4
- 4 nights
-
£1,028
equivalent to £64.25 per person per night