Where colonial style meets Caribbean living. Set within a garden, each of the suites is individually designed. The original plantation house was built in 1944 on the site of the original Quaker Battery Station and was then called Camelot, a name still retained today as one of the signature suites in the Great House as well as the hotel’s restaurant.The house was converted into a hotel and by the 1980s was well established as a luxury boutique hotel with a reputation for fine food and wines. The Cobblers Cove main house, now known as the Great House, was built in 1944 by Joss Haynes and has undergone extensive renovations and expansion works over the years to complete its transformation from a family beach house to a luxury boutique resort hotel. Happily today the iconic pink and white building still retains the beauty of the original architecture with its charming bay windows and turreted roof tops. Cobblers Cove has always been proud to embrace its Bajan heritage which is reflected in the use of indigenous resources throughout the hotel – the original steel in the buildings came from the old island railway, the decorative coral rock was carved on the island and all the furniture is made in Barbados. The architecture blends the grandeur of an English estate with the laidback style and tropical vibrance of the Caribbean. The same potent combination gives Cobblers Cove its authentic character and charm.