The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Your home in the west – of Perthshire

A striking eco home in Highland Perthshire could be lifted straight from the New England countrysid­e. Jack McKeown meets the man who built it

- jmckeown@thecourier.co.uk

Clad in larch and with a white picket fence bordering its wraparound porch, Skykomish looks like it belongs in rural Maine or Connecticu­t. In fact, it sits in the hamlet of Garth near Fortingall in Highland Perthshire.

The four-bedroom home has been a labour of love for owners David and Christine Proctor – with the emphasis on labour.

“We built it ourselves,” says David, 69, a self-employed quantity surveyor who looks after all the Post Office’s Scottish properties.

“I took a 12-month sabbatical from work, which turned into 18 months and we lived in a caravan on site.”

The couple found a one and a half acre plot on an elevated site with aspects across Glen Lyon to the River Lyon.

“What attracted me was the views and the mature trees on the plot,” he continues.

David drew the plans himself before getting Dunkeld-based architect Paul O’Shea to tidy them up and put them to the local authority. Planning was granted within seven weeks and David set about building his house.

“It had always been a dream of mine to build an eco home,” he explains. “I’ve spent my life building things for other people and before they put me in a box, I wanted to do this.”

David worked 12-14 hours a day, seven days a week to build Skykomish. Two friends from Cornwall helped him build the foundation­s and erect the timber frame. His nephew did the plasterwor­k and David did almost everything else. Remarkably, he was around 66 at the time.

“I used RW Bell to do the heating and electrics and got a roofer to do the slating,” he explains. “Apart from that, I did everything myself – installed kitchen and bathrooms, put up the walls, doors on, decorated.

“I can honestly say I enjoyed every minute of it.”

The accommodat­ion stretches to a kitchen dining room, drawing room, reading room, study, utility, WC, four bedrooms – one with en suite – and a master bedroom. There’s a double garage, incorporat­ing David’s workshop and a large woodshed. A porch wraps around three sides of the house.

A lot of work went into making Skykomish environmen­tally friendly and cheap to run. With deep layers of insulation and all seams carefully taped, it’s virtually airtight.

A ground source heat pump provides heating and hot water while a mechanical heat recovery system transfers warmth from stale air. All lighting is low-energy LED.

“It’s exactly what I envisioned,” David enthuses. “The house costs around £300 a year to run. Sometimes, it’s so warm that even in winter we need to open windows. And of course, the benefit of all that insulation is the house is wonderfull­y cool in summer.”

The couple are selling up so they can be closer to their two children and grandchild. They’re sad to be going, however.

“I’ll miss the setting,” David says. Highland Perthshire is a magnificen­t part of the world.

“We have breakfast and our evening meal on the porch more evenings than not – and that’s all year round.

“If it’s cold, you just put another jumper on.

“I’ll also miss the trees, particular­ly the giant sequoia. She’s 130ft tall and just an absolute beauty.”

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 ??  ?? Skykomish is on sale through Savills for offers over £700,000. www.savills.com
Skykomish is on sale through Savills for offers over £700,000. www.savills.com

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