
Architect Amin Taha has restored this Grade II-listed vicarage in Cornwall, blending old Victorian features with new.
Crowan dates back to 1880. The main home was originally designed by JP St Aubyn, a church architect who worked in the Gothic Revival style popular in the late 19th century. Taha – who trained under Zaha Hadid before eventually setting up studio Groupwork – has restored the building’s existing features while bringing it into the 21st century.

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House

Photography: via The Modern House
The house clocks in at over 5,000 sq ft and is set across three levels. Shared living spaces fill the ground floor, including a dramatic double-height dining hall and two linked reception rooms with period fireplaces.
While the entrance hall, library and six bedrooms all feel steeped in history, the kitchen is a new addition: the timber structure features a pitched glass roof and leads onto a private corner of the garden.

Crowan is on the market via The Modern House for £1.75m – and offers a lot of bang for your buck. Beyond the main home, there are three further dwellings set within the estate’s five-acre grounds, including the Gardener’s Cottage, Coach House and Woodman’s Cottage.

The largest cottage is arranged over two levels and contains two bedrooms, while the other two comprise a single living area combining kitchen, living room and sleeping zone. All are lined with birch-ply and have underfloor heating, ready to be used as holiday lets or guesthouses.

Crowan’s house and gardens are within in lush surrounds that include a walled garden, a woodland, and an ornamental pond (now a swimming pond) fed by a tributary of the River Hayle.
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