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The property

Open to the challenge, the couple had decided to knock down an existing one-storey structure and replace it with this modern version of a cottage orné, a stylised, Romantic-era rustic retreat. The AONB status of the area meant it took four years for planning permission to be granted and a further three years for the building work to be completed. However, the result – a home with an exquisitely conceived structure, full of character and architectural details with inviting living spaces – was well worth the wait. Having an interior designer in the family (Tor Vivian) meant that the owner was able to involve her in the project from the start. ‘Tor knows our style and she also understands what a family needs.’

Living room

In terms of the arrangement of the rooms, they decided on an open-plan kitchen, dining and sitting room, a large hall that doubles as a sitting area and library for the couple, and a side entrance with a boot room. There is also a separate playroom which, when the children are older, will become a more grown-up sitting room. The owner found the two antique armchairs on eBay and covered one in pink and the other in green fabric, a pairing that became the starting point for the room’s decorative scheme.

Dining room

When they were younger, each of the children had their own chair, brightly painted by the owner. Now that the chairs are outgrown, they hand on the wall, their colours chiming with paper bells – Christmas decorations which, one year, were never taken down.

Hall

The front door opens into a generously sized space, which the owners use as a library and sitting room.

Boot room

Tor designed the shelving, with a neatly incorporated bench, to surround the internal window to the kitchen.

Kitchen

‘We wanted something quite modern and easy to clean,’ says the owner of this open-plan space. Angled wall lights allow the mood to be easily changed.

Main bedroom

As the house has been designed to evolve with the family, so its decoration has developed over time, an advantage of the long design-and-build phase. ‘It was quite organic;’ says the owner. ‘Tor told me to pick a couple of colours and to work outwards from there. I love pink and green together, so that was the starting point for many of the rooms.’ Furniture that she had collected over the years, including family heirlooms and pieces picked up at auctions and junk shops, have been reupholstered in a decorative mix of pattern and colour. ‘We felt that we already had lots of lovely furniture, so we bought very few new pieces,’ she says, who covered several chairs and a sofa herself in patchworks of fabric offcuts.The owner covered the sofa at the bed using off cuts of vintage fabrics taken from a sample book given to her by a curtain-maker friend.

Bedroom

Instead of buying new furniture, the owner revamped pieces the family already owned, including this armchair, which she has updated with a pretty offset of printed fabric.

Bathroom

Tor designed the vanity unit with a look that ties in with the architectural style of the house.

Child’s bedroom

The chosen pattern-on-pattern style is showcased perfectly in this room, where the map mural, which was found online and cut to fit the wall, is contrasted with a colourful irate fabric on an armchair bought from a local auction house. This pretty scheme was put together with a number of good finds: the bed was outside a wrought-iron factory, the side table was bid on at auction, and the armchair was a Freecycle piece that the owner painted and recovered with a variety of fabrics.

Exterior

The house is set in woodland in the Nidderdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The overall look is one of comfort, colour and ease, a relaxed ambience that belies the meticulous thought and care that has gone into its planning. Although it is a house that was seven years in the making, it will be at the heart of its owners’ lives for many more to come. Photography/ Jody Stewart Interior Design ⁄ Tor Vivian