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COLD REMEDY

Homes & Interiors Scotland

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January - February 2020

NOW REORIENTATED TO FACE THE SUN, THIS REVIVED COTTAGE IS READY FOR WHATEVER THE WEATHER CAN THROW AT IT

- Caroline Ednie

COLD REMEDY

Environmental sustainability is not restricted simply to reducing plastic or eating less meat; it extends to our built heritage as well. Rescuing an old property – recycling it, effectively – is often a much greener option than knocking it down and putting something brand new in its place. The owners of this house in the Cairngorms National Park must have been sorely tempted to take the latter route, however, when they first saw the dark, dank and neglected condition it was in.

They’d been searching for a suitable rural site on which to build a new home, but when a three-bedroom Victorian cottage at the edge of the ancient Abernethy forest in the Cairngorms came on the market, they decided to take a look. It scarcely met their requirements for a “comfortable, contemporary, practical, safe and enjoyable home to retire to” – in fact, it had very little going for it at all, as project architect Thomas Fitzgerald of South Queensferry-based WT Architecture explains: “It had no connection to the garden or to the forest beyond. The living spaces were isolated by internal corridors, with unlit and treacherous level changes, and the entrances were uninviting and impractical.”

Rather than raze it to the ground, though, he and the owners looked to preserve the cottage’s Victorian character and modernise it at the same time. “The aim was to put contemporary living spaces into a light and open extension. It was vital to give the clients spaces that had both a visual and a physical relationship with the garden and the woods.”

Homes & Interiors Scotland से और कहानियाँ

Homes & Interiors Scotland

Homes & Interiors Scotland

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'Tis the season for comfort food, late-night cocktails and revisiting old classics

time to read

3 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

Homes & Interiors Scotland

Alice ClayArt

Maker of nature-inspired sculpture and objets d'art

time to read

2 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

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STYLE & SUSTENANCE UBIQUITOUS CHIP

To most Glaswegians it is just The Chip, a restaurant so ubiquitous in city guides that the Ubiquitous is now redundant.

time to read

2 mins

November - December 2025

Homes & Interiors Scotland

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ESCAPE RIVER CABIN

An off-grid bolthole with a touch of luxe hotel living

time to read

2 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

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FORCE OF NATURE

This East Lothian house is no longer at the mercy of the elements, thanks to an ingenious architectural rethink

time to read

5 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

Homes & Interiors Scotland

LIVING IN HARMONY

A brand-new house with a century-old garden? At this Perthshire home, they're made for each other

time to read

5 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

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LIVING THE DREAM

Reviving this grand London villa fulfilled a long-standing ambition of both the designer and the owner, creating a luxe family home in the process

time to read

5 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

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Jasmine Linington

The Edinburgh-based artist and maker creates art, textiles and products using seaweed as her primary material

time to read

1 mins

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Homes & Interiors Scotland

Kerb appeal

This small front garden now packs a punch, thanks to an effortlessly chic planting scheme and private spaces to take a breather

time to read

2 mins

November - December 2025

Homes & Interiors Scotland

Homes & Interiors Scotland

TASTEMAKER EMILIO GIOVANAZZI

The first time Emilio Giovanazzi was asked to create a cocktail list, he was working in Paperinos, the beloved but now-closed Italian restaurant in Glasgow that belonged to his uncle. “It was a great place, and it would consistently win awards for its wine list,” he recalls. As the city’s eating habits evolved, they needed to think of a way to attract a younger crowd. Emilio's dad (who owned La Parmigiana restaurant), figured cocktails was the answer. “He went to a charity shop and picked up the first cocktail book he could find,” says Emilio. “And it happened to be The Savoy Cocktail Book.”

time to read

1 mins

November - December 2025

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