Corehouse Farm
A Bed and Breakfast in Lanarkshire
Corehouse Farm
- Lanarkshire
- B&B
- £££
- Calendar
- 1 x Double
- 2 x
A warm family welcome awaits all visitors to Corehouse Home Farm, a traditional working farm with sheep and horses, offering quality bed and breakfast accommodation in Lanarkshire, Scotland. Located at the top of the Clyde Valley, beside the Falls of Clyde Nature Reserve, and near the historic New Lanark World Heritage Site and the town of Lanark. Guests are welcomed all year round in excellent, comfortable accommodation in the farmhouse annexe. There are two family rooms and one double room available for overnight or longer stays as required. The family rooms include a double bed and bunk beds. Each of the rooms is tastefully furnished to a very high standard and include en-suite bathroom and shower facilities, as well as tea and coffee making facilities. Guests have their own sitting room in which to relax and watch TV or play board games, or can wander round the farm and pay a visit to the nature reserve and stunning Falls of Clyde.
Guest Facilities
- Guests get own house keys
- Parking on site
- Garden
- Sitting Room
- Full Cooked Breakfast
KirkfieldbankLanark
ML11 9TQ
T 01555 661377
Please tell the owners you found them through Private House Stays
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Double
Type: Double Capacity: 2 adults Bathroom: Ensuite Shower In Room: A Double room with ensuite bathroom
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FAmily1
Type: Capacity: 4 adults Bathroom: Ensuite Shower In Room: A Family room with a Double bed and 2 bunk beds and ensuite bathroom
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Family2
Type: Capacity: 4 adults Bathroom: Ensuite Shower In Room: A Family room with a Double bed and 2 bunk beds and ensuite bathroom
What other people say
"We highly recommend booking through Private House Stays. We organised our whole Scottish trip using it."Hank and Marlene Kopoknok
Utah, USA
Location
Show Local Points of Interest
The Private House Stay's Guide
Lanarkshire
The county of Lanarkshire is split into North and South and surrounded by many counties - Stirling, Falkirk, West Lothian, Scottish Borders, Dumfries and Galloway, East Ayrshire, East Renfrewshire and Glasgow. The county is probably most famous for The New Lanark World Heritage Site which was built in 1785 by David Dale, a Scottish industrialist, to take advantage of the water power of the Falls of Clyde, to spin cotton much of which is commemorated at Summerlee Heritage Park.

