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Holiday Homes

(95 Posts)
Tiley Fri 17-Jan-25 09:21:28

Wow our immediate neighbours have sold there 17 bedroom home to a family in London who want it as a holiday home. Wow and they say there is no money about. Reckon they'll have to have a housekeeper at the very least. We have always got on with our neighbours and will be sorry to see them leave but fully understand they want something smaller now that their children are all grown and left home.

Calendargirl Fri 17-Jan-25 09:27:33

17 bedrooms?

I thought you must mean 17 rooms.

Tiley Fri 17-Jan-25 09:28:42

No 17 bedrooms

karmalady Fri 17-Jan-25 09:39:26

They will convert it to basic hotel type accommodation, the government are paying good money for basic rooms to hold 3

A money earner

Primrose53 Fri 17-Jan-25 09:41:14

We know a couple who own two huge houses in large gardens in the same village. Swimming pools, stream through the garden, pretty landscaped gardens with woodland, sauna, gyms etc. each house is fully furnished and they live in each one 6 months of the year.

vickymeldrew Fri 17-Jan-25 09:47:15

Oh dear oh dear. Maybe a “holiday home” for someone, but not repeat holidays for the buyers. More likely to be an air bnb investment…….

Cossy Fri 17-Jan-25 09:52:27

Goodness !

NotSpaghetti Fri 17-Jan-25 09:54:24

I hope you don't find it becomes a "party house".

However, the manor house in my mother-in-law's village did become a (very expensive) party house and only had very careful guests. I don't know if that's because others were put off by the compulsory staff which came with it...

Because it was set back from her home she really hardly noticed once she'd got over the change from a family home.

17 bedroom properties must be quite rare!

Lathyrus3 Fri 17-Jan-25 09:55:12

vickymeldrew

Oh dear oh dear. Maybe a “holiday home” for someone, but not repeat holidays for the buyers. More likely to be an air bnb investment…….

Yes, I think it’s an airbnb investment too.

V3ra Fri 17-Jan-25 10:10:53

I'm intrigued as to how many children they had, to need a house that big?!

Babs03 Fri 17-Jan-25 10:16:23

A holiday home for how many??
Obviously I have no idea of how the other half live. And if they can afford that as just a holiday home of course they will have staff. I certainly wouldn’t want to clean it and strip that many beds etc.

Sago Fri 17-Jan-25 10:32:33

Well a post about a holiday home for a London family has now suggested party houses, a hotel/basic hostel, air b and b.

How about it’s a London family who want a country weekend/holiday home?

Lets hope they are lovely, employ some local people, support local businesses and make wonderful neighbours.

vickymeldrew Fri 17-Jan-25 10:37:52

Sago - you are a lovely optimistic person who puts me to shame ! Let’s hope you’re right .

Tiley Fri 17-Jan-25 11:05:25

Sago

Well a post about a holiday home for a London family has now suggested party houses, a hotel/basic hostel, air b and b.

How about it’s a London family who want a country weekend/holiday home?

Lets hope they are lovely, employ some local people, support local businesses and make wonderful neighbours.

Oh I do hope you are right
One good thing for us is we have a high brick wall all along the perimeter of our land

Homestead62 Fri 17-Jan-25 11:36:15

I cannot put too much on here but house next door to us was rented out for a while. It was awful, nice enough people but the lady of the house was strange. I actually became convinced she watched out of her window, as I just needed to put a foot in my garden and she'd be there. I didn't like their dog either, it was rather unpredictable and I'm wary of dogs as it is. Fortunately, we have lovely neighbours with a young family now. I do hope they stay. Nothing against the previous tenants at all, just found it a bit difficult coping with a constant presence. I'm quite a private person.

petra Fri 17-Jan-25 11:45:25

Perfect for swingers weekends.
There are a lot of them around.

Barleyfields Fri 17-Jan-25 11:46:43

It would be an extremely large and well off family who wanted a 17-bedroom house as a holiday home just for themselves. My money would be on this house being turned into a hotel or rented out as a party house. Planning permission would be needed for a hotel or for renting out for holidays for more than 90 nights a year. A party house in a village near us caused a lot of noise nuisance to neighbours which the council had to deal with. Hen and stag parties - you can imagine …

Grammaretto Fri 17-Jan-25 11:51:13

Big country mansions are much in demand here in the Scottish Borders.
Families rent them for party weekends, Christmas etc and my DD found one to hire for her Hen weekend.

In Edinburgh many of the 5 room tenement flats are let to students or young singles, who have one room each and pay to my mind extortionate rents. About £700 pm each plus bills. There are queues of people wanting them.

The one I saw recently had one shared bathroom, a small kitchen and no communal space. Wet washing hanging in the hallway.

Someone is making a lot of money.

Primrose53 Fri 17-Jan-25 11:57:47

Homestead62

I cannot put too much on here but house next door to us was rented out for a while. It was awful, nice enough people but the lady of the house was strange. I actually became convinced she watched out of her window, as I just needed to put a foot in my garden and she'd be there. I didn't like their dog either, it was rather unpredictable and I'm wary of dogs as it is. Fortunately, we have lovely neighbours with a young family now. I do hope they stay. Nothing against the previous tenants at all, just found it a bit difficult coping with a constant presence. I'm quite a private person.

Have you ever read the Margaret Forster book “The Seduction of Mrs Pendlebury”?

crazyH Fri 17-Jan-25 12:11:20

I have one of those next door - Homestead62 - she constantly stands by her window (behind the curtains) and then , when she pops in for a coffee, I get the third degree - where did you go? What did you buy ? And on and on …….

HelterSkelter1 Fri 17-Jan-25 12:34:41

Of course there is money about Tiley. Always has been. Always will be.

I expect really wealthy people keep quiet about it.
Did they have loads of children? Or were the bedrooms staff quarters?

Are you trying to tell us you have lots of bedrooms as well. Personally I wouldnt want the hoovering so am not impressed. Or envious. Am a bit oh for heavens sake this morning.

I think I will have a break from GN am a bit weary of the veiled racism and Daily Mail opinions as well.

RosiesMaw2 Fri 17-Jan-25 13:15:05

Are you trying to tell us you have lots of bedrooms as well. Personally I wouldnt want the hoovering so am not impressed. Or envious. Am a bit oh for heavens sake this morning

gringringrin
My reaction too!
(I see OP has land where most of us lesser mortals have gardens )hmm

Allira Fri 17-Jan-25 13:23:31

V3ra

I'm intrigued as to how many children they had, to need a house that big?!

I suppose it depends if they had to share or how many bunk beds you could cram into each bedroom.
Could be 32+ children.

Barleyfields Fri 17-Jan-25 13:25:38

The OP might have a high brick wall on the boundary of her ‘land’ but does she own it? If not the new people might knock it down. High walls tend to cost a bit to maintain.

valdali Fri 17-Jan-25 13:27:34

In the middle of a never-ending attempt to declutter here, so glad I've only got 4 bedrooms! If I had 17, I'd be able to open a second hand shop!

How weird the couple with 2 big houses in the same village who live in each for 6 months of the year? Just can't think why you would.