Courtyard Mews at Longueville House
Aufenthalt
Outdoor
Essen und Trinken
Aktivitäten
Wanderwege
Gardens
Ballyhoura
Nagles
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Adresse:
Longueville House, Mallow, County Cork, Ireland P51 H9K8 ,
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A Classic Home from Home
Adjacent to the historic manor house at the heart of the estate, and surrounded by parkland, orchard and vigorous gardens, lies this elegantly maintained country house mews, the epitome of stylish country living.
It is available as a self-catering vacation rental for short term lets (from three nights to three months). Three night minimum stay policy applies. The mews is a stand-alone self-catering property.
Longueville House services and facilities are reserved exclusively for hotel guests. Guests of the mews may pre book our private dining room on nights when Longueville House is open and subject to availability.
Courtyard Mews 10 Guests
Upstairs -
Five bedrooms all with private bathroom comprising of -
Four double bedrooms (one ground floor level) plus one twin bedroom
All bathrooms with bath/shower combinations, wall mounted hair driers, fluffy cotton towels, luxury toiletries.
Downstairs -
Artisan Farmhouse Kitchen with Aga Stove
Neff electrical oven and Neff appliances
Smart TV(55") in family den with open log fire
Well stocked bookcase for adults and children plus cards & board games
Dining & drawing room combination with wood burning stove
Entrance lobby with guest loo
Utility room - full size freezer & spare fridge, washer & drier machines, boot press, coat rail, Belfast sink, broom cupboard
Outside -
The Courtyard Mews is part of the 400-acre Longueville House Estate, itself home to a 300-year-old listed Stately Georgian Country House - steeped in history, now a charming stand-alone self catering Country Home with five guest bedrooms and available to rent.
As the name implies, the mews occupies one side of a large and partly cobbled, neo-classical courtyard, with fine a topiary centrepiece, to the rear of the main house.
Visitors are free to roam across this working estate where all the produce for the large house is grown. There is a fabulous reclaimed walled kitchen garden for vegetables, and a 32-acre cider apple orchard used to produce on-site artisan cider, some which is double distilled into an exclusive and unique Apple Brandy. The majestic group of oak trees in the parkland to the front of the house was planted in 1815, to celebrate Wellington's victory at the Battle of Waterloo. Closer to the main house lies a wild flower meadow which comes into full bloom in mid July. The property links down to the banks of the River Blackwater.