Facilities
- Sleeps - 4 + 2 on sofa bed
- Bedrooms - 2
- Bathrooms - 1
- Cloakroom - 1
- Bed linen - Yes
- Open fire - Yes
- Private garden - Yes
- Central heating - Yes
|
- Shops - 2 miles
- Eating out - 2 miles
- Fishing on River Earn nearby
- Golf - 2 miles, 4 miles and Gleneagles 10 miles
- Walking and cycling from the door
- Pets - Yes
- Smoking - No
|
Accommodation: Ground Floor: Hall. Sitting room with open fire and sofa bed. Dining room. Kitchen. Toilet with WC and wash hand basin. First Floor: Double bedroom. Twin bedroom. Bathroom with shower over the bath. Parking for 2 cars. Garden furniture.
Services: Oil fired central heating. Washing machine. Fridge/Freezer. Electric cooker. Microwave. TV with Video and DVD. HiFi/CD. Cot and Highchair available on request.
Availability: Available all year for weekly lets. Price is all inclusive rate including heating, bed linen and towels. Holiday cancellation insurance is available on request. Price range £360 to £520 per week.
Property information
Only an hour from Edinburgh and Glasgow airports, and 6 miles from the city of Perth, the Coach House at Forteviot offers a beautifully refurbished and high standard of accommodation for four persons. Although attached to the owners' house, the Coach House is completely separate with its own private front door and French doors that lead out from the sitting room to a private garden at the rear.
Nearer to hand there are attractive towns and villages to visit with a number of distilleries open to the public. For the outdoor enthusiast this is excellent walking and cycling country, fishing is available and there are many excellent golf courses within an easy drive. Forteviot was rebuilt by the first Lord Forteviot, Chairman of Dewar's distillery, between 1925 and 1927 with attractive cottages and wide lawns laid out to a design by James Miller in the style of an English garden city. Forteviot is, however, much older than it seems. It was the ancient capital of the Pictish kingdom of Fortrenn and a favourite residence of Kenneth MacAlpin and Malcolm Canmore. Its church dates from 1778 and its village hall was opened by Sir Harry Lauder.