Homes & Gardens

COTSWOLDS RETREAT

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Diverse architectu­ral styles are harmonious­ly brought together with soft hues and considered schemes.

Awelcome sense of calm washes over you as soon as you step inside the impressive entrance hall of Anne and James Martin’s home in the Cotswolds. A wide staircase sweeps up one side of the double-height space while a fire burns brightly beneath, creating an air of comfort and relaxation that is impossible to resist.

This sense of serenity, combined with plenty of scope for entertaini­ng, was exactly what the couple were looking for when they bought the house as a retreat from their busy London lives. Although the property was tired and in need of modernisat­ion, they were determined not to compromise its essential character.

As this was the first time the Martins had owned a second home, they brought with them no furniture and no preconceiv­ed ideas about how the interior should look. “We knew we wanted the style to be sympatheti­c to the age of the building, but at the contempora­ry end of that,” says Anne. They realised they would need the help of an interior designer to make this happen, and research

led them to Sims Hilditch, an Oxfordshir­e-based practice with experience of working on properties in the area.

The oldest part of the Martins’ house was built in 1650, but additions were made two centuries later, and a key task for Garry Meakins, head of design at Sims Hilditch, was to create a harmonious scheme that would unite its different period features.

Garry started with the double-height Victorian entrance hall, choosing a rich shade of moss green for the walls. This became the keynote for the palette in the rest of the house, where it is echoed in softer shades depending on the size and style of each room. “That green tone and everything branching off it is crucial to the continuity of the design,” he says, “so while the room shapes vary quite wildly, the journey through the house feels comfortabl­e.”

Comfort, in both aesthetic and physical terms, was another essential element of the Martins’ brief, as they often invite friends and family to stay. “We didn’t want people to come in and feel that they couldn’t sit down because it would mess up the cushions,” says Anne. “This

is quite a big house and it would be easy for it to seem imposing, so it was important to us that it should feel like somewhere you can immediatel­y relax.”

To achieve this, they worked with Garry to choose furniture that not only looked good, but was not too precious to be used regularly, and several rooms were carefully repurposed to suit the Martins’ lifestyle. To this end, a storeroom was turned into a handy boot room and an area of the kitchen was sectioned off for use as a practical utility area, while one of the original five bedrooms upstairs was sacrificed in order to make a bathroom for the main bedroom suite.

The couple, together with their young son, spent their first night in the house just eight months after buying it, and their lifestyle here could not be more di≠erent from that in London. “We lead an outdoor life when we’re at this house,” says Anne. “We go on lots of walks, ride horses and cycle. It’s lovely to watch our son grow up learning about nature and wildlife, and using his imaginatio­n rather than looking at a screen. We’re very lucky.”

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 ??  ?? SITTING ROOM
Elegant seating, arranged for convivial conversati­on by the fire, exemplifie­s the relaxing mood of the Martins’ home.
Interior design, studio sims Hilditch, studiosims­hilditch.com. Charles sofa, from £2,090;
Amelia armchairs, from £630...
SITTING ROOM Elegant seating, arranged for convivial conversati­on by the fire, exemplifie­s the relaxing mood of the Martins’ home. Interior design, studio sims Hilditch, studiosims­hilditch.com. Charles sofa, from £2,090; Amelia armchairs, from £630...
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