Greenwoods Farm
Tinklers Lane, Slaidburn, Lancashire
Guide Price
£1,275,000
"A stunning five-bedroom barn conversion (over 5,000 sq. ft.) with vaulted ceilings, luxury kitchen, acre grounds, stables, garage, and breathtaking Bowland views. Peaceful yet well-connected location."
The Property
High on a quiet flank of Bowland, with Pendle Hill watching gently across the valley, Greenwoods Farm rises from the land like an old stone poem retold in light and glass. Once a working dairy barn, now over 5,000 sq. ft. of living space, it keeps its soaring beams and mighty fireplaces, yet moves with the easy rhythm of the seasons – in spring, as life lifts across the fields, doors open to honeysuckle-framed terraces, wildlife ponds stir, orchards bud and the greenhouse and raised beds wake to colour and growth; in high summer, life spills out under vast evening skies, with friends around the firepit and children racing barefoot across the lawn. Autumn brings the gathering in, apples, plums, pears from your own trees, light softening over Pendle, flames kindling in the Clearview stoves. Winter wraps the house in quiet, its stone walls and timbered roof holding the warmth until the first lambs and first swallows return. This is not simply a house, but a moorland sanctuary tuned to the turning year, a barn reborn to let you live fully in the changing light of the hills; it is, quite simply, the home you were always meant to come back to.
Set high above the valley, this generous five‑bedroom family home of over 5,000 sq. ft. combines soaring vaulted ceilings, exposed beams and twin fire‑lit reception rooms with a beautifully appointed walnut and quartz dining kitchen, garden room, formal dining room, study, boot room and a fully fitted utility with plant room.
The reception hallway at Greenwoods Farm feels like a room in its own right, a wide, light‑washed space where the outside world is gently set down at the door and the calm of the house begins. Honeyed stone flags run underfoot, cool and quiet, leading in from the substantial oak front door, flanked by full‑height glazing that frames views of the garden and fields beyond. Soft, neutral wall tones and understated patterned wallpaper create a warm, elegant backdrop, while long, lightly textured drapes pool at the sides of the windows, lending a sense of softness to the barn’s solid bones. Overhead, simple lantern‑style pendants add a gentle glow, and from this central hall oak stairs rise to the first floor, glazed double doors open towards the fire‑lit sitting room, and a wide opening leads through to the kitchen, every turn offering a glimpse of light and warmth, so that arrival feels like a slow, welcoming exhale.
The kitchen at Greenwoods Farm feels like the warm heart of the barn, a broad sweep of honeyed walnut and pale stone where light pools and lingers across the day. Cabinets in richly grained timber run the length of the room, their curves softening the space, while a large island in smooth quartz stands solid and inviting at the centre, with a wine fridge quietly waiting beneath. A full suite of integrated Miele appliances, twin ovens, steam and combi ovens, induction hob, plate warmer and a built‑in coffee machine beside the impressive fridge‑freezer and wine rack, brings a calm, professional precision to the warmth of the wood, so that morning coffee, family suppers and big celebratory feasts all feel effortlessly at home here. Underfoot, cool stone tiles keep the room grounded in its rural setting, while overhead the halo of recessed lighting in the feature ceiling canopy turns evening cooking into something almost theatrical. To one side, a round dining table sits in the glow of the bay window, perfect for easy everyday meals, and just beyond, doors open to the garden/ sun room and the formal dining room, so life can drift naturally between cooking, eating and simply sitting in the light, with the valley and its changing seasons always just beyond the glass.
The sun room feels like a gentle outpost of the landscape itself, a calm, light‑filled space where three walls of glazing gather up the garden, fields and distant horizon and bring them quietly indoors. Soft, stone‑toned tiles and muted paintwork keep the palette restful, so the real colour comes from outside: the fresh green of spring pushing across the lawn, early blossom trembling on the hedges, the sharp blue of a clear summer morning, or the burnished golds and russets of autumn drifting past the windows. In high summer, the doors can stand open to the terrace so that conversation, birdsong and the scent of cut grass move easily between inside and out; in winter, when frost spiders the panes and the sky hangs low over the fields, this becomes a cocoon of warmth and light, the perfect place for a book, a blanket and a mug of something hot as you watch weather roll over Bowland. From the first pale light of January to the long, honeyed evenings of June, this is a room made for simply sitting still and letting the year turn in front of you.
Beyond the kitchen and great room, the rest of the ground floor unfolds in a series of quietly hard‑working, deeply comfortable spaces that make country life here feel effortless. The rear hall links everything together, a practical artery from which you step into the boot room ‑ the natural pause between field and house, with room for muddy boots, wet dogs and armfuls of logs and into the calm, light study, where twin windows frame big‑sky views and make working from home feel anything but confined. A sleek, modern utility room with generous cabinetry, cool stone tiling and its own walk‑in shower sits alongside the laundry and boiler room, keeping the behind‑the‑scenes running of the house neatly out of sight, while a handy downstairs cloakroom is perfectly placed for family and guests.
On the entertaining side of the barn, a large, fire‑warmed sitting room stretches out in soft neutrals and warm timber floors, anchored by a handsome fireplace at one end and, at the other, a glorious picture window with a telescope set to the ever‑changing silhouette of Pendle Hill, a space as well suited to noisy family film nights as it is to quiet stargazing. Between kitchen and sitting room, the formal dining room offers a more intimate stage for suppers, its stone flags, soft drapes and sparkling pendants catching the last of the evening light as doors open to the terrace and the fields beyond.
The principal bedroom at Greenwoods Farm feels like a private loft above the landscape, a sweep of soft carpet and high, vaulted ceiling where great honey‑coloured trusses cross the room in confident arcs. Light falls in gently from the window, drawing the eye out across fields and hedgerows, while a palette of heathered purples and warm neutrals keeps the space calm and cocooning, equally suited to early‑morning light and late‑night lamp‑glow. Through a discreet door, the en‑suite bathroom becomes its own small sanctuary: stone‑tiled and quietly luxurious, with a deep bath set under a wide rooflight so you can soak beneath open sky, and a walk‑in shower and vanity that make even everyday routines feel unhurried.
The main bathroom at Greenwoods Farm feels more like a serene spa than a family space, a broad, light‑filled room where soft stone tiles run unbroken underfoot and gentle stripes on the walls add just enough pattern to keep things warm and elegant. At its centre, a sculptural freestanding bath sits ready for long, unhurried soaks, flanked by twin windows that frame green fields and open sky so you can watch the weather move while the water steams. Along one wall, a generous double vanity with vessel basins and a wide mirror keeps mornings calm and ordered, while at the other end a vast walk‑in shower, enclosed only by clear glass, offers a more invigorating start to the day. Every detail, from the ladder radiator and neat shelving to the soft roman blinds and careful lighting, is designed to make this a room you linger in, a quiet, luxurious pause in the rhythm of the house.
The rest of the first floor at Greenwoods Farm stretches out along a long, softly carpeted landing, glimpses of beams and countryside views appearing at each turn, with two staircases giving the whole level an easy, flowing feel between the different wings of the house. Four additional double bedrooms open off this space, each with its own characterful palette of calm greens, soft blues and warm neutrals, all oriented to take in the fields and trees outside their windows so mornings begin with light and sky. A stylish further en‑suite, tiled in mellow stone with a walk‑in shower and sleek contemporary fittings, ensures that family and guests are as well looked after as the owners, whilst the family bathroom is close at hand along the corridor. Near the master suite, a bright further room offers enticing flexibility ‑ equally perfect as a dressing room, nursery or single bedroom, a reading room, playroom, or a second home office with Bowland as its backdrop. Together, the two staircases, wide landings and sequence of restful bedrooms give the upper floor the feeling of a private, self‑contained retreat, with space for everyone to find their own quiet corner at the end of the day.
Externally
Outside, Greenwoods Farm spills gently into the landscape, as if the house itself were a pause in the long, low sentence of fields and sky. The approach is quietly cinematic: a gated gravel drive unfurls towards the barn, passing a simple, low‑maintenance front garden where coloured gravel and rockeries lie composed behind a dry stone wall, Pendle Hill rising in the distance like a constant, watchful presence. The drive comes to rest at a stone‑built double garage with electric up‑and‑over doors, power and light; just beyond, two stone stables and a tack room wait, suggesting early rides out over the moorland and the soft thud of hooves on frosty mornings.
To the rear, the garden becomes a series of outdoor rooms, each open to the ever‑changing sky. A raised patio reaches out from the house beneath a wooden pergola, its beams threaded with honeysuckle and trailing vines, where summer evenings stretch long and golden, and al fresco suppers are held beneath the gaze of Pendle and the rolling Bowland fells beyond. From here, paths slip away past a wildlife pond with its quiet filtration and an ornamental pool with a fountain, where water catches the light and throws it back in broken fragments, dragonflies skimming the surface as if stitching sky to reflection. Raised flower beds lift colour and scent into the air, while a dedicated firepit area, with oak‑topped stone gabions for seating, gathers people close as the light fades, flames echoing the last embers of sunset over the moor.
Further down the garden, the mood softens to something more contemplative. A decorative stone seating nook, held in the gentle curve of dry stone walls, offers a sheltered refuge for solitary mornings and hushed twilights, a place to watch cloud‑shadow drift across Pendle, to feel the weather turn and the seasons pivot. Beyond, an open sweep of lawn runs towards the working heart of the plot: a generous vegetable garden with a tall 12ft x 10ft greenhouse, disciplined green oak raised beds and an orchard of apple, plum and pear. Here, blossom, fruit and falling leaves mark out the year in their own quiet calendar, so that life at Greenwoods Farm is lived not only within its walls, but out in the air and light, in step with the hills, the moorland beyond, and the slow, enduring rhythm of this remarkable landscape.
Key features
Description
Local Information
Greenwoods Farm remains reassuringly connected. Excellent schools are close at hand, with a primary school in Bolton by Bowland and senior schools in Sawley and Clitheroe, while renowned independent schools such as Stonyhurst College, Oakhill and Moorlands are also within easy reach. A school bus from Bolton by Bowland runs to Giggleswick School during term time, further broadening the choice of education in the area. The property is well placed for commuting, with strong road links to East Lancashire business centres and beyond, and nearby Clitheroe offers a full range of everyday amenities, from shops, bars and café́s to supermarkets and the celebrated Bowland Brewery. This corner of the Ribble Valley is rich in places to eat and linger, with outstanding pubs and restaurants scattered through the Trough of Bowland AONB, adding to the area’s reputation as an affluent, aspirational destination known for its café culture, deep rural heritage and exceptional quality of life. Greenwoods Farm is, quite simply, a rare opportunity to own a truly magnificent home in one of the most desirable locations in the country.
Services
Mains electricity, borehole water supply, oil fired central heating & a sewage treatment plant.
Tenure
Freehold
EPC
Rating C
Council Tax
Band H
Wayleaves, Easements & Rights of Way
The property is being sold subject to all existing wayleaves, easements and rights of way, whether or not specified within the sales particulars.
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Gallery
Location
Tinklers Lane, Slaidburn, Lancashire
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