February 1, 2022

Home from Home: Create the Perfect Coastal Retreat

Many of us already aspired to owning a coastal – or country – escape. Now, after the uncertainty of the past couple of years, along with ever-changing hoops to jump through merely to travel abroad, it’s even more desirable.  We all long for a bolthole, somewhere to escape to at the end of a demanding week; somewhere to decamp for the Summer, for the children to enjoy the seaside as they grow up. How lovely it would be for them to continue to visit as young adults, too. That’s when we’d know we’d created a long term Happy Place. 

Corner of a rustic living room showing a beige sofa with textured blue-and-white and red patterned cushions, a wooden side table with a carved ceramic lamp and small potted plant, and wood‑panelled walls with a white door and hanging coats.
Pebble-tiled floor and stone window sill meeting a plastered corner with a slim recessed wall light casting a warm glow.
Upward view of a wooden staircase with oak treads and black risers beside a white shiplap wall featuring a thick knotted rope handrail mounted on metal brackets and small recessed step lights.

Beauty and Comfort Combine

It’s essential that a retreat must be every bit as beautiful – and as comfortable – as a main residence, just as tastefully finished and with every conceivable luxury and convenience – albeit usually in a rather more compact space. After we’ve worked on a client’s home, they often entrust us to design, style and optimise their coastal property or holiday home. 

We love a coastal project. The design approach is much the same as with all our projects but using the coastal context and taking inspiration from the surroundings, we can embrace a more relaxed, laid-back scheme. Think tranquil palettes, creased linens, driftwood or precious beachcombing finds and rustic timbers and finishes. 

Rustic dark living room with a stone-topped fireplace beneath a large black-and-white sailing ship print, a carved wooden dog statue beside an open doorway leading to a sunlit corridor with slatted doors, and a leather armchair and textured lamp in the foreground.

Welsh Country Cottage or Sandbanks Chalet

Often, a coastal project will involve remodelling a traditional stone cottage or adding an extension to a period property. Occasionally, it’ll be a purpose-built villa or even a luxury chalet on a designated development. While working sympathetically with the building and its plot, crucially, we consider our client’s lifestyle, their needs and desires, and ensure the result will work well for them. 

It must be perfect. After all, this is to be THEIR happy place, their sanctuary and the place where many memories will be made. We take that responsibility very seriously indeed.

Rope-base table lamp with a linen shade beside a textured grey upholstered headboard and layered white and beige pillows on a neatly made bed
Rustic kitchen workspace featuring a hammered copper apron-front sink and dark stone countertops under a wide window with a distant countryside view, a bridge-style faucet, small potted plant on the sill and exposed wooden ceiling beams.

Coastal Considerations

When designing and planning a coastal retreat or a holiday home of any description, there are countless considerations. Here, we’ll address a selection – but please, do get in touch with your own thoughts or queries.

  • First impressions last. A cliché, yes – but only because it’s absolutely true. Your second home needs to look inviting, and that warm welcome feel needs to continue beyond the threshold. If you’re arriving after a difficult week at work, or having endured a hellish journey and struggled through horrific traffic, you need to feel that stress dissipate, and your shoulders relax, the very second you approach.

  • Storage. Now, while you don’t expect to need quite so much closet space and storage for larger or occasional items as at home, it still makes sense to allow some convenient storage so as not to clutter calm zones. Storage for an entire family’s lifetime of belongings may not be necessary, but top of the wish list is often a utility-cum-store room for wetsuits, kayaks and other water sports or outdoor paraphernalia.  

  • We usually recommend that social spaces are given key considerations over the bedrooms in your coastal retreats. Many clients find that they’re perfectly happy with more compact sleeping areas in holiday homes. This can facilitate additional wow factor space and budget allocated to the day-to-day living and social spaces.

  • Soft furnishings and bedding can add to the calming, coastal feeling too. But practicality must also be a consideration. It’s probably best to avoid anything too fussy or heavy, and think about cleaning and maintenance too. 

  • Kitchen space is also important. Whilst we may not choose to spend a great deal of time cooking on traditional holidays, often our coastal retreats are more of a home-from-home. A  well-equipped and reasonably roomy kitchen can be high on the list of priorities. A large, scrubbed wooden dining table can really reflect that coastal ambiance, and perhaps consider a decent bar area within the kitchen. Our holiday homes by definition regularly become party central.

  • That leads us neatly on to the outdoor space. As would stunning bifold doors… Where room and budget permit, a pool is always likely to be a winning option. Failing that, perhaps dedicate space for entertaining and outdoor catering – be that a sizeable barbecue, a fire pit or pizza oven. Outdoor kitchens, coupled with plenty of dining and lounge seating to enjoy that evening sundowner can add a whole new dimension to our holiday home. 
Spacious rustic-luxury living area with a vaulted white plank ceiling and dark exposed beams, reclaimed wood walls, a beige sofa with patterned cushions and a blue armchair, a wooden round table by floor-to-ceiling glass doors overlooking the countryside, and mixed lighting including a chandelier and woven pendant lamps.

Holiday Home Happy Place

One frequent concern that arises is if the property is also an investment, to be used for holiday lets. Whilst we’d advise on being very clear on insurances and deposits to protect your investment (and its furnishings) we’d also suggest that your ideal client, your target demographic, is someone just like you. Thus, plan and design for YOU. They’ll love your seaside sanctuary just as much as you do, care for it like their own – and return year on year to their own hired happy place. 

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