The Crafted at Powdermills property occupies a historic Grade II-listed Georgian country house in Battle, East Sussex, set around a seven-acre private lake and surrounded by ancient woodland and pastures. The hotel comprises 55 rooms and suites within the main house, three private cottages with kitchens and living areas, a pub, restaurant, cocktail bar, craft barn and art studio. The project was initiated by hospitality entrepreneur Chris King as the first location for the Crafted brand, a new series of hotels and clubs rooted in nature, creativity and communal space.
Interior and spatial design for the main house and public areas was overseen by London-based studio House of Dré, which preserved heritage architectural features while introducing locally sourced materials, bespoke British-made furniture and crafts from regional makers, including timber elements by Sebastian Cox and ceramics by Holly Dawes. The site also integrates wellness and outdoor activity facilities such as forest yoga spaces, lakeside saunas, paddleboarding and cold-water bathing areas.
Rural Boutique Hotel Projects
Crafted at Powdermills Redevelops a Georgian Estate into Hotel
Trend Themes
1. Heritage-led Hospitality - Repurposing listed historic estates into hotels demonstrates a model where conservation-led design meets premium lodging, enabling differentiated guest experiences built around authenticity and provenance.
2. Nature-rooted Guest Experiences - Integration of onsite lakes, ancient woodlands and outdoor wellness amenities signals a shift toward immersive nature-based stays that blend recreation, restoration and seasonal programming.
3. Local Craft Integration - Embedding regionally sourced furniture, ceramics and maker collaborations within interiors highlights a move toward co-created environments that elevate local creative economies and product narratives.
Industry Implications
1. Boutique Hotel Development - Conversion of country houses into small-scale hotels points to a development niche favoring adaptive reuse and high-margin experiential offerings over standardized chain models.
2. Wellness Tourism - Provision of forest yoga, cold-water bathing and lakeside saunas reflects a wellness segment that increasingly packages outdoor, nature-immersive therapies alongside accommodation.
3. Artisanal Furnishings and Ceramics - Demand for bespoke British-made furniture and handcrafted ceramics indicates a market for premium, limited-run design pieces tied to hospitality storytelling and retail opportunities.