
The views from this first-floor apartment in St Ives, Cornwall are ruggedly spectacular. The crashing waves lend a rhythmic backdrop to its bright living space, which is complete with original floorboards and a cosy log-burning stove. Pednolver Terrace sits the heart of the town, close to its sublime sandy beaches, local produce-serving restaurants and impressive cultural scene.
Setting the Scene
For many years, St Ives’ importance as a market town and fishing harbour ensured a continual chain of trade passing through the port, but in the 19th century, the area took root as a cultural hub for artists. Painters were attracted by the extraordinary clear quality of light and scenic subject matter. The area became internationally renowned for its ‘Plein Air’ style of painting, the St Ives modernist period and countless influential artists associated with the town.
From this apartment’s vantage point, it’s easy to see why; its rooms ring with sunlight, highlighting the tactile yet pared-back interiors and restorative colour palette (the latter was inspired by Barbara Hepworth’s St Ives studio). The apartment is on the middle floor of a tall Victorian stone-built terraced house and bears many of its era’s hallmarks, including tall ceilings, a wide bay window and beautiful pine floorboards. Its views are mesmerising, stretching unobstructed towards Godrevy Lighthouse – the unexpected inspiration for Virginia Woolf’s Hebridean novel ‘To The Lighthouse’ (1927).
Interested? Let’s talk
Related Listings
- A Garden with a History: a quiet inheritance, tenderly reimagined by designer Tom Faulkner
- Salt and Stone: seven storied seaside homes in the South West
- A Private View: from relic to ruin to renewal — inside SPAB’s seven-year rescue of St Andrew’s Chapel
- A Private View: two artists embrace their pirate spirit in a creative and storied home by the sea
- A Room of One’s Own: the attic studio where painter Will Calver captures the poetry of everyday life