South African Owner to Transform Hadspen House in Somerset into Hotel
Date: April 2018
Location: Between Pitcombe and Ansford (20 miles from Glastonbury), Somerset, UK
Name: Hadspen House – opening April 2019
No. of Keys: 30 – 35
Seller: The Ford family, owners since 1785, sold the House in 2013.
Buyer: South-African Koos Bekker, the owner of Babylonstoren, a preserved Cape Dutch farm estate in the Drakenstein valley with a hotel, spa, restaurant and winery who acquired the property in 2013.
The Grade II-listed house and estate are set to be restored and transformed into a hotel with around 30 to 35 bedrooms, a spa and a visitor centre, which will also feature an 80-cover restaurant using fresh produce from the kitchen garden, a 70-80-cover café, pool, farm shop and cider mill – similar to those featured at Babylonstoren.
Planning permission from South Somerset District Council also allows for the repair and re-opening of the estate’s historic gardens to the public.
The hotel will be managed by Andrew Foulkes, former manager of the Abbey hotel in Bath and 2017 Cateys Manager of the Year.
The planning application reads: “The aspiration is to create a high quality environment which will enable the historic park, gardens and buildings to be accessible to the public and to accommodate up to 100,000 visitors per year.
“Through these proposals there is a vision to give visitors the most exciting experience of what rural Somerset has to offer, including orchards and apple growing; walks through woodlands, parkland and gardens; and exploring the local heritage of cheese and cider production as well as the contemporary culture of good local produce and fine dining.”
The aim is to retain the features, materials and character of the existing buildings and to use traditional techniques and local materials to retain the farmstead feel.
The project is being overseen by Benjamin + Beauchamp Architects and AZ Urban Studio.
Price: It was on the market through Knight Frank and Symonds & Sampson for £13m (in 2012/13)… It sold in 1785 for £19,500 to Henry Hobhouse, scion of a successful Somerset family of merchants, landowners and Liberal politicians.
The estate has been the Hobhouse family seat ever since. Distinguished family members include Sir Arthur Hobhouse (1886-1965), probably best remembered as the architect of the system of national parks of England and Wales.
THPT Comment: Delighted to see another fabulous piece of history being preserved by a forward-thinking hotelier.
First Seen: The Caterer