Financial Times Europe - 02.11.2019 - 03.11.2019

(Grace) #1

2 ★ FTWeekend 2 November/3 November 2019


I very much like


the idea of creating
a kind of fantasy

for guests to enjoy —
an escape from

everyday life


Lavish love on


your guest


bedrooms


My guest bedrooms feel tragic and
unloved, no matter how hard I try to
cheer them up. I want to start again
— but how?

Guest bedrooms should be supremely
comfortable and a pleasure for friends
and family to spend a night or two in.
We should have just as much
decorative fun with them as we do
with our own bedrooms because,
even though they might not get as
much use,they should never feel
unused and cheerless.
They must be filled with pictures,
objects and the right touches to help
create a warm and inviting
atmosphere. I very much like the idea
of creating a kind of fantasy for guests
to enjoy — an escape from ordinary,
everyday life.
Let’s start with the walls. At home in
Gloucestershire I had an idea to paint
one of our two guest bedrooms a
chocolate brown colour. Duncan vetoed
the idea and I think he was probably
right. Would a visiting friend, frazzled
from the city, want to spend a weekend
in a dark room? I rather liked the idea
of spending a night inside a chocolate
gateau but I guess it is not for everyone.

We decided we
wanted these spaces
to feel light and fresh, so
ended up painting one a
peachy pink and the other a soft, light
blue. Not exactly groundbreaking, but
our landing is a brownish mustard and
our guest bathroom is an incandescent
shade of arsenic (protective glasses are
provided upon entry), so the bedrooms
offer light relief.
We have had fun experimenting with
headboards. They are still being made
— our own will be shaped like a broken
pediment in egg-yolk yellow linen.
Guests will get either an emerald-green
pagoda or a more classic olive rectangle
with cut corners. Headboards must not
be boring, but if you are not sold on an
unusual shape, at least consider your
choice of fabric.

Incorporating old
furniture into a bedroom
instantly adds character and
warmth. I adore bashed and
bruised brown furniture,
such as the chest of drawers
I bought for one of our guest
rooms from the Arundel-
based dealer Spencer
Swaffer, and I am currently
eyeing up a George IV
mahogany wardrobe from
Edinburgh’s Georgian Antiques
for the other. Made in about 1830, it
is thin and tall (perfect for the alcove I
have in mind) and fairly plain, with
only a few hooks inside. It is topped
with a proud, raised plaque and
decorative scrolls. It is marvellous.
Final touches make all the
difference. Think in layers: ticking
striped bed linen, say, with a block-
printed throw (I recommend the
Organic Shop near Cirencester for
these). Of course, you will need piles of
books for flicking through first thing in
the morning. Well-chosen books will
make any forgotten old room feel used
and loved.
I have tried to give proper thought to
the selections in our guest bedrooms

because I know what most of our
guests will want to read about. Or,
more likely, I know what I think they
want to read about. (If you come to
stay for the weekend, I hope you will
enjoy brushing up on folk customs of
the Cotswolds and the life of King
Ludwig II of Bavaria.)
What else? Water in a handsome jug,
a couple of glasses (special ones for
guests, please — I favour splodgy,
brightly coloured Murano tumblers
from Laguna B, pictured, available via
Rita Konig’s online shop), fresh flowers
in a silver beaker.
If you want to try something truly
extraordinary, think about tenting the
ceiling and adding curtains around the
bed. I am thinking of a much-loved and
shared photograph of a city guest
bedroom by the interior designer Veere
Grenney, which showcases this device
to startling effect. The room is small,
but all the elegant fabricsmake it feel
extremely luxurious — the opposite of
tragic and unloved.

Luke answers readers’ questions on design
and stylish living every week. Email him at
[email protected] and follow him
on Instagram @lukeedwardhall

House Home


Lift your


sights


with Kaprun — the agent is selling a
new three-bedroom penthouse there
for €799,000. Further west in Ober-
gurgl, in the Tirol’s Ötztal valley, the
new Kirchenkogel gondola last year
openedanewsectionofthemountainto
skiers, including off-piste. The lift takes
2,400 people an hour up to the top
(2,839m) of the Kirchenkogel moun-
tain, complete with champagne and
caviarservice.
Alpine Marketing, an Austrian ski
property agency, is selling apartments
at Obergurgl Lodge, with spa and park-
ing from €452,400 with a guaranteed
net rental return of 4 per cent from the
managementcompanyStratusHotels.
With or without champagne, the lift is
helping to attract skiers, whose num-
bersincreasedby3percentintheÖtztal
valley between the 2017/18 and 2018/19
seasons, according to the Office of the
Tyrolean Provincial Government. This
contrasts with a fall in numbers in high-
profile resorts, such as St Anton am Arl-
berg and Kitzbühel (the latter is cur-
rentlyupgradingits35-year-oldlift).
HoteliersintheAlbergsaythatvisitor
numbers decrease when the snow
across Austria is good because skiers
can choose resorts at lower altitudes,
whichtendtobecheaper.
Of the three major Alpine markets,
Austria has fared best for second-home
price growth, according toa report by
UBS, the Swiss investment bank.
Between 2013 and 2018 Austrian Alpine
pricesrose 20 per cent, outperforming
the French Alps, which were up by 15
per cent, and Switzerland — down 4 per
cent. Reasons forSwitzerland’s decline
include the strength of the Swiss franc,

Continuedfrompage 1

restrictions on the construction of
secondhomesandlowrentalyields.
UBS identifies the Valais’ Saas Fee as
thesoleSwissprimemarketresortdefy-
ing this trend, with price growth of 14.3
per cent in 2017-18 alone andaverage
prices of €9,300 per sq m. These results
cannot be attributedsolely to new lift
infrastructure, as there have also been
hotel upgrades andrestaurants opening
inthetraditionalhigh-altitudeskitown,
says Simon Malster. “For the smaller
resorts like Saas Fee and Grimentz, the
introduction of the annualMagic Pass
[in 2016] is almost as important as new
lifts in giving access to a wider range of

resorts [30] for property owners,” he
says. The Magic Pass is issued by a joint
venture between the resort partners
and costs€500 or adults andf €270 for
children for the winter seasons. The
agent is selling a four-bedroom resale
chaletinSaasFeefor€1.2m.
For pretty little Grimentz in Switzer-
land’s Valais, a link in 2013-14 to the
higher altitude Zinal has also helped it

buck the downward price trend for
Swissresorts.
“A decrease in lift queues and a
doubling of the ski area has helped
sustain tourism numbers, at a time
when visitors to Switzerland were down
5 per cent,” says Will Herrington of
the agent Frozen Action. “Apartments
in the piste-side Les Chalets d’Adelaide
development have increased by 17
per cent since the lift went in.” Prices
now start from€769,000for a two-
bedroomapartment.
Lift company strategy can also
hold things back. “The former manage-
ment focused on creating extensions —
of connecting Saas Fee to Zermatt, a
resort very keen not to be connected to
us — rather than improving the current
lifts,” says Simon Bumann, chief execu-
tive of Saastal Bergbahnen, the Saas Fee
liftcompany.
“We are investingSFr6.5m-7m this
yearonrefurbishinggondolas,aswellas
SFr5m on artificial snow-making to
keep the top of the ski area viable as the
glacierbeginstomelt.”
A new connection to Italy via Monte
Rosa is perhaps more viable than Zer-
matt “one day”. But as many Alpine
locals can attest, waiting for a lift can
takedecades.

Inside


Andermatt


Swissskiresortontheascent
Pages6&7

UKproperty


KentishTowntaintedby
London’sslowdown
Page4

Design


Woodenitbenice:Poradataps
intoitsItalianroots
Pages12&13

Architecture


HowAlpinedesignscaled
newheights
Pages8&9

Gardens


Hottipsforcomposting
Page14

Interiors


Howtomakeyourchaletchic
Page15

RobinLaneFox


Kew’sJurassiclark
Page16

House & Home Unlocked

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cFrance here are few restrictionsT
on buying residential property in
the French Alps, or requirements to
rent out your holiday home. The
exception are some of the larger
developments that are sold on a
leaseback scheme, which involves
leasing your property back toan
operator for a period of typically
nine to 11 years withsome weeks
for personal use.

cAustria enerally only EU citizensG
may purchase property in Austria
(unless they purchase via a
company with one of the directors
an EU citizen), with the exception
of a small number of homes with
“second-home” status — or
Zweitwohnsitz. In most Austrian ski
resorts new-build developments
come with “buy-to-let” status and a
rental obligation, which requires
owners to rent out their property
for a certainnumber of weeks per
year, to prevent “cold beds”in
tourism areas.

cSwitzerland here areT
restrictions imposed at a national,
regional and local level on where
and what foreigners may buy in
Switzerland. The Lex Koller law
established a permit system so only
certain properties are eligible for
foreign ownership. Foreigners may
only buy a residential (second
home) property in tourist reasa.
However, since 2012 the Lex Weber
law has preventednew building
permits being granted for second
homes in any communes where
second homes already make up 20
per cent of thestock. There are a
few exceptions where old permits
are still valid such as inAndermatt
(see pages 6 and 7); plus there can
be further restrictions at a regional
(canton) and local (commune) level.

How to buy: the
mountains to climb

Global ski trips per region
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Sources:  International Report on Snow & Mountain Tourism; Skiresort.info

Eastern Europe and Central Asia
Asia Pacific
Americas
Western Europe
Alps

Ski infrastructure investment in the Alps
m



















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Ski lifts installed across all continents
Number, -




Europe

North America 




Asia


Australia and Oceania

When the snowacross


Austria is good, skiers
choose lower-altitude

resorts, which are cheaper


(Top)
Apartments at
Obergurgl Lodge
start at
€452,400;
(above) four-
bedroom chalet
in Saas Fee,
€1.2m; (right)
Saas-Fee,
Switzerland
Alamy

Luke Edward Hall


Readers’ questions


Ski Special


Gstaad, Switzerland, €4.08m

Kitzbühel, Austria, €10.68m

Méribel, France, from €1.3m

Sebastian Devenish

NOVEMBER 2 2019 Section:Weekend Time: 10/201930/ - 17:47 User:elizabeth.robinson Page Name:RES2, Part,Page,Edition:RES, 2, 1

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