Catalogue

 

Annick's House

A rare opportunity to own a very unique house located in the popular village of Peyia. Full of character and charm, this delightful home is situated close to the beautiful old church and a short stroll to all the amenities of the village, yet totally private and secluded. Mediterranean seaviews can be enjoyed from every room. The house has been lovingly restored over the years, staying faithful to the village style and using the original techniques, local stones, metalwork and Cypriot antiques.

 

 
     
 

The House

 
 

 

 

Annick's House, Peyia,

Village Centre,

Pavlou Liasida Street.

Tel: 00357 99 893863

Tel: 00357 26 622635

Tel: 00357 26 621514

 

A rare opportunity to own the prettiest and most unique house in the village of Peyia.
The house is constructed over two substantial plots, located in the heart of the village, yet private and secluded.

Centrally located, close to the old church and with wonderful sea views from every room.

The house has been lovingly renovated over the years, staying faithful to the style and using original techniques, local stones, Cypriot antiques, original external lamps and metalwork.

The original building was large and built of local stone and an important property as indicated by is proximity to the church. Later, between the years c1850 - 1890, is was used as the village school.

The house has many interesting levels, each with its own character but retaining its theme and charm throughout with individual courtyards and terraces, private, separate corners and balconies with wonderful views down to the coast.

All furniture, fixtures and fittings are included as they are integral to the property. All items have been selected and carefully restored to enhance and fit with the aesthetics of the house.

All items, including pots, plants, metal work, all antiques, outside Cypriot lamps, metal frames for climbing plants, all window furnishings, roman blinds, roller blinds, wooden blinds and curtains are all part of the charm of the house and are included in the price.

No description can do justice to all the aspects of the house, its features, charm and unique atmosphere. It must be seen and experienced to be appreciated. Much love, care and attention to detail has gone into making this very special house a very special home.

Why not 'test-drive' the house yourself !? Contact us to book a week staying in Le Balcon or the Summer House! We look forward to welcoming you!

Price: £495,000 CYP. Negotiable.

Original plans on request. Full Title Deeds.

     
     
 

Gallery

 
 

 

   
 
     
 

Peyia Village

 
 

 

 

 

 View over Peyia

 

Peyia Church

 

 

 

Peyia Village (also spelt Pegeia), is one of the most attractive and friendly villages in south-west Cyprus.   

The hillside village is situated 14km northwest of Paphos Town and 3km north of Coral Bay Resort. Probably the most popular and desirable place to live in Paphos, Peyia has an attractive cistern-fountain square, a beautiful church, a number of good cafés and tavernas, a charming little pub, banks, supermarkets, butcher, fishmonger, baker, pharmacy, and other shops providing various goods and services  - all the amenities and facilities the fortunate residents of Peyia could wish for. Several family-run tavernas and restaurants serve excellent fresh food at great value for money. 

Peyia village overlooks the sea with stunning views across the valley and along the coast. The village enjoys the advantages of a quiet rural location, the glorious panorama of the sparkling Mediterranean and the wonderful views of the surrounding mountains and countryside. Close enough to Paphos Town and only two kilometers (a five minute drive) from the resort area of Coral Bay where there is also a great selection of shops, bars, cafés and restaurants and the best Blue Flag beaches in Paphos. The beautiful sandy beaches, the crystal blue sea and the peculiar rock formations are unique to the Coral Bay area.

     

 

Coral Bay

 

Sunset at Corallia Beach

 

Magazine Article

Annick's House: The Aesthetic of a Style. By M. Hekkers.

Annick came out of her Sandorini blue front door wearing a stripped burgundy jelabee which fell over her body like silk, ending at a pair of bear feet standing on a layer of a Marmara, white stone floor. Holding a dog at arms length and the front door in the other, she encouraged me to come in and join the little paradise Annick has been gradually creating for the past seventeen years.

Over Greek coffee presented in a glazed, blue, pottery coffee set, Annick happily sat and told the story that had brought her to this magnificent place; the old elementary school of Peyia village in the town of Paphos that had now been turned into a one and only household, bearing treasures of past roads and distinctions of unique antique restorations and Greek, Asian Style.

“I found this place by pure coincidence. I signed the contract the very same day I visited the then abandoned house and moved in the following day. At the time, the place was in a chaos and immense work had to be done in order to make it look like something, but, I knew what I was doing. I had pictures in my mind; it was just a matter of bringing them to reality”.

When Annick was a child she had travelled back and forth from India, turkey, Greece and Belgium. Having a father as an ambassador she had the opportunity to be in touch with oriental identities and grew to love their extremes of colours, minimalist style and originality. “For me, it was as equally important to integrate the Cypriot culture and style as it was to stigmatize the house with individualities that I had encountered and treasured in my life”.

Each independent room is found on a multiple of levels and has been given a name depending on the location and style Annick has given to them; The Balcony, The Summer House, the Apothiki (Greek work for storeroom).

The main building houses the main living room, the library, kitchen, main bathroom and main bedroom. This area maintains a similar style throughout although it is one that is quite tricky to pin point.

“The area where I spend most of my time has to be aesthetically appealing but functional at the same time. The bulk works are that of intensive quality and long life expiry dates. The rest was left to my own creativity. I wanted to play more with fabrics, colours and materials; I find it’s the details that make a difference”.

Once away from the entrance courtyard that is furnished with wooden benches and spread out white canvas umbrellas, the first step indoors leads you to the main living room which has been sprinkled with Indian fabrics and khilims that drape above the heights of a stone floor that carries the weight of wooden furniture that have been restored by Annick herself.

In the corner stands a traditional Cypriot fire place that holds a stone plate as a sill which in its turn holds pictures, sea shells, antique printing coupons and dried flowers. The mixture of baize and oriental colours and that of metal ornaments along with pottery and wood brings quite a unique combination of style, quite cleverly fitted together to bring a final touch of multi-stylism!

The kitchen is one of a peasant that has been brought into a technologically advanced and country side looking one. Still bearing white stone floors, the benches are made out of clear pine wood divided by a seventy by seventy centimetre stone sink and the emplacement of a five eyed ancient kitchen stove look alike. Up above are wooden shelves either fixed to the wall or dangling from the ceilings separately bearing hooks which have traditional sausages, garlic loafs and stainless steel kitchen utensils hanging upon them, dangling by the side of miniature Pithary pots and wooden chopping boards bunked above them. The back of this room leads you to a set of steps that take you to a back exit and a storage room built under the grounds of the kitchen. Here, every seasonal change will predict what the shelves will be enriched with. May it be home made chutneys and pickles, collected sea salt or sun dried tomatoes and olives ready to be treated, you will find them labelled and exposed on a hand made wooden shelf circumfusing the whole side wall.

Up above, the library fills an entire wall of books, accommodated by a CD collection and the office area. So as not to spoil the space with technological appliances, the computer is scarcely placed within wooden frames and cupboards, the music system is delicately placed between books while paintings of both Annick’s husband and father in law, who happens to be a surrealist, hang upon the walls. Attached to the library sits the bathroom which has a green tint to it as opposed to the blues, baizes and earthy colours that have captured the building up to now. Bamboo shoots fill the corners of the bathroom with a small exit leading you back to the courtyard you had originally walked into.

As you walk through a one man archway, steps lead you to the main bedroom made out of wood from head to toe. Wooden floors, cupboards, window frames, chests and bed seize you with a hollow echo and a smell of wood polish you could potentially find in old Irish pubs. The bedroom has a double glassed door which opens onto an internal courtyard covered by the greenery of a grapevine and livened up with clay pots of time, lavender, jasmine and orchids. The courtyard being divided on two levels holds two sitting areas decorated with cushions made of chequered blue and white cushions tied back to metal chairs and in-built stone sofas.

Moving north, a quaint door to the side takes you to an independent guest bedroom accommodated with an in-built plaster bed highlighted with oriental, multicoloured and flowery designed tiles which lay at the dividing point between the bed and floor. Accompanied is a Cypriot wooden desk, a former bathroom make-up desk with distinctive wooden towel hangers on its side and a single draw bellow the desk top.

“This is probably the room I have spent the less time and energy on, but I have something in mind. For many years I have wanted to set up a loom that I have carefully stored away. It’s a big and beautiful wooden piece, the carpets and fabrics that can be made on it are priceless. I can picture myself in my old age spending my time on it. This room is just right, that’s the next project I’ll be working on”.

Returning back to the courtyard, a circular stair case takes you to the highest point of the household. From the tallest room in the house, which is now accommodated as an apartment with an independent kitchen and bathroom, one can walk out onto the balcony and view the sea at a distance, the small town of Paphos to the right, the Akamas peninsula to the left and the lively village atmosphere a couple of metres below, thus excusing the name Annick has given to this area; “The Balcony”. Inside the apartment stands a double four poster bed still maintaining its flowery decorations engraved in the metal work and white linen curtains draping from the top right down to the floor. Once more, wooden cupboards, kitchen tables and chairs are scattered around the room this time presenting a differentiated and new style of ornaments; art nouveau lamps and mosaic made mirrors.

“This part of the house was finished off in 2001 although I can’t help myself from making additional changes from time to time. Living in a warm country such as Cyprus and having adapted to the local rhythm that persists during the summer, the afternoon siesta which lasts from one till four has no better accompaniment than a swimming pool”.

The house finds itself between windy and narrow roads in the centre of the village and according to Annick the placement of a pool wasn’t one of the easiest tasks. Being a customer who knew what she wanted, the pool had to be one of a deep blue sea colour and had to find its appropriate setting. On an upper level which gives one the opportunity to view the internal courtyards of the residence and the spectacular view on its right hand side, the pool is placed between Carob, olive and lemon trees, accompanied by a vegetable garden and wooden sun beds. The stone floors paved around the pool gives a warm feeling to your feet when it has spent the day in the sun light while the blue skies unravels the feeling of being in the middle of nowhere yet right in the centre of a small town.

“I find it quite appealing to go for a swim and then go to the vegetable garden to collect what I will have for supper! I grow my own aubergines, tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers. As the food lover that I am I have also incorporated spices for final touches to my home made dishes.” As Annick spoke to me, she held her hand up and dispersed smells of lavender, sage, parsley and phenyl. “Cyprus has the perfect climate to accommodate me with my sense of smell. Near the sea front I’ve found wild spinach, corn flowers, mushrooms and snails during the winter”.

With the accomplishment of the pool came along another project. That of a summer house which lies to the one side of the pool. “I felt like being a little more extravagant, whereas I was pretty conservative in the colours and styles used in the rest of the house, I decided to make this arrangement a little more “funky”. I dressed the bathroom walls with Egyptian designs made out of red, green and white mosaics making the small bathroom look Moroccan while still keeping an ancient touch to it. I played with bamboo roller blinds and brought in one off pieces of furniture with a red ochre tiled floor. I can say it was one of the projects I enjoyed doing most”.

Annick had always been good with her hands. Although her family had originally pressured her to go into business studies, she finally took up what she liked when she came to Cyprus. She expresses a love for Cyprus and its heritages and plays with the traditional and fundamental uses of objects. Upon the walls you can find old bread making boards hung and used as shelves, cheeses making woven baskets used as pen holders, napkin holders and dried flower “vases”. Pithari pots emerge in all corners of the house and traditional Cypriot wardrobes engraved with the local flowery handiwork are loaded with TV sets to disguise the “atrocity”, as Annick says, of technological appliances. Even the doors of these wardrobes were transformed into glass ones to expose the local dinner dishes she had purchased from various local pottery makers who made multicoloured glazed kitchen wear out of clay.

Annick is quite caught up in the old style households and the ancient methods of restoring these but she has nothing against combining modern and old. “We live up to different standards nowadays and I don’t think many people would be willing to live as our ancestors did. Mixing the old and the new is a style in itself and a much more complex one as well. Today’s fashion has a tendency to turn towards electric and bright colours with rigid shaping and much less detail and this can be hard to combine with older styles. I guess what is important is to follow your personal style and pick out specific things you enjoy during each change within the fashion world. What’s for sure is that things keep coming back and antiquities have always been something to have. Whether you appreciate and enjoy their history and aesthetic is an entirely different chapter. To me, the mere sense of touch and optical queries these kinds can bring to you and your household is one to treasure and one I will never stop hunting for”.

Around three years ago Annick and her husband took their fashion further. In the same village and a five minute walk away from home, the couple have opened their own restoration and antique shop. The shop is founded in an old traditional stone house with each room accommodating their appropriate utensils. The bedroom holds beds, chests and four poster beds for children, the kitchen supplies wooden chopping boards, spice draws and traditional cooking books, the living room is crowded with wanders that were once in use; old school maps, bread boards, sofas and lamps.

“At first I only indulged in providing personal satisfaction with my ideas and handy work. Today, I realise that I can give people ideas and provide them with what some may think is the impossible. I try and preserve cultural heritages, whether Cypriot or foreign and I believe this isn’t seldom done through antiquities. Cooking books, old techniques and languages all compensate for ancient treasures. I find it important for antiquities to be treated the way they should be and I hope that I can give this feeling to others”.

 
 

The Tour

 
     

The entrance to the house is through double wooden blue gates which lead into the delightful, first-level, private courtyard cosseted by high walls. Here there is a well-established garden, original stone walls and a covered sitting area with awning

     

Entering the main house reveals an open-plan living space. Here is the dining room and the kitchen both decorated in the traditional style. Some of the features are: a Marmara stone floor, original external walls of 80 cms width and wooden shutters. The kitchen area to the right has Cypriot handmade fitted pine units, a sandstone sink, fitted electric oven/gas hob, a double-fridge, an extractor unit and original tiles as a back decorative motif. Below the kitchen, a staircase leads into a cool cellar of 20m2. A door in the cellar opens to the lower street level. Very easy for parking and convenient for bringing in the shopping. The cellar offers good storage and is the perfect wine cellar.

     

 To the left is a spacious dining area with a decorative, caste iron wood burner for heating.

     

Ahead is a large built-in, comfortable sitting area with a working fireplace, TV and telephone. The perfect place to relax and entertain.

     

Continuing on to the left is a spacious library, study and office area with telephone and separate line for a computer. There are fitted bookshelves in patina pinewood, radio aerial, wall and ceiling lamps.

     

Adjacent to living area and bedroom is a traditionally decorated bathroom of 8m2. Featuring old Cypriot doors, bath, fitted bathroom cabinet with basin and a storage cupboard.

     
In the far wall of the office/library area is a character staircase, which gives access to the light and spacious master bedroom (16m2). Master Bedroom features include a wooden floor, air-conditioning, ceiling fan, fitted floor-to-ceiling wardrobe units in patina pine. French doors lead directly into the to beautiful second level courtyard.

     

On entering the second-level courtyard (which can also be accessed from the first- level courtyard) there is a decorative stone staircase to the left, with iron hand rails and a perpetual, relaxing water feature. Her also is a storage room for firewood, a traditional Cypriot oven and many Mediterranean plants. The original metal frame  supports the grape vine and a profusion of bougainvillea.

     

To the right are traditional blue shutters and a rare, antique blue door which leads to a delightful double bedroom with A/C - originally the old stable!

     
Moving on up the stone staircase leads into an independent apartment featuring a wide covered balcony with canopy. The balcony enjoys wonderful panoramic views of the Mediterranean Sea and Paphos coastline from St Georges to Paphos Town. The accommodation consists of a spacious living room and bedroom area with an antique Cypriot wrought iron bed and an open fireplace. Other features include a fitted kitchen, a separate shower/bathroom with w.c., double-glazed windows and patio doors, decorative wood ceiling, TV, satellite system and ceiling fan. The apartment has a romantic atmosphere. This part of the property currently generates an excellent regular income for holiday rentals.

     

Retracing steps down the staircase and back to the second-level courtyard: passing through a character arch in the far wall, reveals a very charming covered dining area. Old tiles and old round beams feature here, with an traditional Cypriot stone sink. 

     

A small set of white steps leads to another level and the private, dark blue swimming pool (8x4m) as well as the pretty garden. The surrounding of the pool is completely paved, offering ample space for sunbeds and parasols. This area is also totally private. Various stone walls add even more interest. The well-stocked garden has fruit trees, lemon, nectarine, orange, apple, avocado and olive. There is an automatic light for the garden area and the pool. An irrigation system looks after the plants. A staircase at the end of the garden leads to a set of double blue gates, providing a further entrance and exit for the house.

     
Not finished yet! This level also offers another wonderful little sitting area situated outside the Summer House. In one direction, The Summer House overlooks the pool and garden areas. It is an independent studio, perfect for visiting friends or family. The Summer House features a fully equipped kitchen, sitting area, TV, ceiling fan, bathroom with shower and w.c. (the bathroom is attractively decorated with mosaic tiles). Again much thought has gone into the decoration, with wooden windows and a panelled, patina ceiling. The Summer House also enjoys a pretty view over the bougainvilleas and across the first-level courtyard and onwards to the sea.

     
     
 

Plans

 
     

     
     
     

Contact Annick:

Telephone:

 00357 99 893 863
 

Telephone:

 00357 26 622 635
 

Telephone:

 00357 26 621 514
 

Email:

 annick@spidernet.com.cy
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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