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This Sussex country house hotel has a spa, outdoor pool and rooms from £165
This Sussex country house hotel has a spa, outdoor pool and rooms from £165

Telegraph

time3 days ago

  • Telegraph

This Sussex country house hotel has a spa, outdoor pool and rooms from £165

What's the point of an English country hotel? For me: a venerable old house, graciously repurposed, in a beautiful location with plenty to see and do in the vicinity. It should act as a comfortable, attractive, kindly base to return to after an excursion, preferably with a spa in which to relax. There are plenty of addresses that offer these things, but one knotty problem remains: can you afford it? And if so, does it cut too many corners in terms of design, comfort and service? The Alfriston has just opened in the medieval village of the same name, where fairytale St Andrew's Church sits on a rise overlooking the village green and the Cuckmere River, with the old Clergy House, the National Trust's first property, next to it. So far, so very good. Location (lovely village; glorious, uninterrupted Downs views): tick. Things to see and do (Glyndebourne, Charleston House, Eastbourne, Rathfinny Wine Estate, Long Man Brewery, walks high on the Downs, on the Seven Sisters cliffs or along the Cuckmere River, canoeing, paddle-boarding, paragliding): tick. Value for money? Let's look at that. First, the back story. This is the fourth boutique hotel in the Signet Collection, which started with the excellent Mitre at Hampton Court in 2020. Backed by investors, owner Hector Ross then opened the Retreat at Elcot Park near Newbury, the Barnsdale in Rutland and now this, formerly Dean's Place, which began life as a 14th-century farmhouse and became a hotel in the early 20th century. Its previous general manager, James Dopson, whose parents-in-law were the owners, has stayed on, thrilled with the refurbishment. The heated outdoor pool has been given a facelift, though the gardens need work, while the new spa contains a secret weapon called Alessandra, whose facials and massages were, my friend Geraldine and I both agreed, the last word in blissful relaxation. Ross is a delightful fellow who with his wife Sammy has project managed each hotel himself, and often helped out building them. But four hotels in five years is a lot and corners, in the process, have been cut in terms of design. This, he tells me, is the last one: now to perfect what he has so rapidly created. This is not the only boutique hotel in tiny Alfriston. Hotel Inspector Alex Polizzi was probably not best pleased when Ross landed here too, but in fact the two hotels complement one another. What the Star, one of three Polizzi Collection hotels, lacks in location (it looks on to a car park though its courtyard garden is lovely), it gains in the peerless interiors of Olga Polizzi, Alex's mother, and is altogether more polished and luxurious – and therefore expensive: from £340 for a standard double with breakfast as opposed to £165 at the Alfriston. Take your pick. At the Alfriston, you will find an attractive colour palette throughout, particularly in the airy dining room; prettily decorated bedrooms, each with a statement headboard, coir carpeting, patterned fabric lampshades, sparse art on the walls and neat, functional tiled bathrooms. But no radio, no flowers, no books, no minibar, making it fall short of boutique luxury. But my Sussex room had wonderful views and it was called Ravilious, which is nice, because he is my favourite English artist. The Star also gives guests a chance to dine elsewhere on their second or third night at the Alfriston, and vice versa. Geraldine, who came with me when I reviewed the Star in 2021, and I both thought that would make a perfect break. I tell you what else makes a perfect break. A swim in the pool (drinks brought to us), a spoiling spa treatment, a visit to this-must-be-the-South-of-France Rathfinny Wine Estate, then a short drive and an early evening stroll, followed by lolling on a bench on Seaford Head with a bottle of Rathfinny bubbly and stunning views of the Seven Sisters cliffs and the Cuckmere Valley. There were a few dog walkers about and a group of Korean tourists who had come to see the Seven Sisters, which feature in a popular series back home. The weather was lovely and we felt we were having a special day. Back to the Alfriston for an excellent dinner from a simple menu – jamón ibérico and a pork chop for me, moules and lemon sole for Geraldine – a comfortable night and a help-yourself buffet breakfast (again, several notches down from what you would find in a luxury establishment). But value for money? I think so.

The Alfriston hotel review: a reimagined South Downs spa stay
The Alfriston hotel review: a reimagined South Downs spa stay

Times

time23-05-2025

  • Times

The Alfriston hotel review: a reimagined South Downs spa stay

When you park outside the Alfriston hotel's main entrance, it seems impossible that behind the tiny, wisteria-clad frontage are two restaurants, 38 bedrooms (of which seven are in the coach house) and a spa. This Tardis-like former country manor, part of which dates from the 14th century, has welcomed guests since the 1930s. Now renamed and refreshed as the Alfriston, the previously tired hotel has been bought by the Signet Collection, a boutique chain. The minigroup, owned by the entrepreneur Hector Ross, has performed CPR on three other historic properties including the Mitre at Hampton Court and the Retreat at Elcot Park (both previous high achievers in the annual Times and Sunday Times 100 Best Places to Stay in the UK list) and Alfriston's makeover follows the same lead. It's a ten-minute drive from Charleston — the early 20th-century hangout of Vanessa Bell and Virginia Woolf — and the hotel's interior designer Georgie Wykeham has drawn inspiration from the Bloomsbury group's pattern-heavy decorative style. There are five unique suites, with something to suit everyone, from couples to families. This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue Score 8/10No expense has been spared on the arts and crafts-style decor in the bedrooms: sofas are upholstered in Colefax and Fowler fabrics, puffy headboards have dramatic elephant prints from GP & J Baker and the carpets are so boingy they're almost trampoline-like. Ground-floor rooms — nearest the restaurant and bar and in the newer part of the building — are mostly standard doubles in the Classic category, although even these come with robes, the Signet Collection's own smellies made by Bramley and a bottle of madeira for a nightcap. Rooms in the older section vary in size and configuration but offer leaded glass windows and original beams, with the top suites featuring freestanding tubs in the bedroom area, in addition to large rain showers in the bathroom. Family rooms have bunk beds with books and a cuddly lion for little ones. There's room service, but help-yourself pantries stocked with sweets and crisps on each floor will stave off any midnight munchies. Score 8/10Dinner in the 1554 Brasserie has a slight bias towards seafood, whether it's starters of potted smoked trout, Fowey mussels or daily specials such as a sharing plate of seabass with fennel and salsa verde. But meat fans won't be disappointed with perfectly pink rib-eye steaks, melty slow-cooked lamb and a duck cottage pie topped with heaps of mash. Desserts are imaginative; our favourite was a colossal take on a Ferrero Rocher, with a squidgy chocolate mousse covered in an almond crust. The wine list is a carefully selected roster of affordable Italian, French and Spanish numbers, plus fine wines available by the glass (from £16) and a special selection of pinot noir and bordeaux. Breakfast is in the Orangery, with its walls featuring a gorgeous hand-painted woodland design by Florence Sherwood. There is a buffet with serve-yourself teas and coffees and a decent enough selection of components for you to build a full English. • 13 of the best luxury hotels in Sussex The 10m heated outdoor pool is popular with families, while inside is a spa with a sauna, relaxation area facing the gardens and three treatment rooms. A new addition since the refurb, the wellness centre has attracted experienced therapists performing bespoke massages and facials from the British beauty brand Gaia. Elsewhere there's a Mucky Boots Welly Wall, where guests can borrow footwear for South Downs yomps. Kayaking on the Cuckmere River and electric bike hire are other ways to explore the local countryside. • 15 of the most beautiful places in England Score 8/10With wonky, half-timbered pubs, elegant tea rooms and a bookshop called Much Ado, Alfriston — inland between Newhaven and Eastbourne — is a cartoonishly quintessential English village. The Alfriston is right on the South Downs Way (you can watch rucksack-clad walkers from the restaurant) so shorter walks to Cuckmere Haven (a nine-mile round trip) through Friston Forest and Westdean are easily done in a day — that's if the Rathfinny Wine Estate's tasting rooms, a 30-minute walk away, don't lure you first ( B&B doubles from £150 Restaurant mains from £20Accessible YFamily-friendly YDog-friendly Y Laura Jackson was was a guest of the Alfriston (

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