House of the Year

(Pictures)
(Synopsis)
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== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
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Top interior designer [[Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen]] tours Northern Ireland, visiting three homes in each county. Which will he pick as the best?  
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Top interior designer [[Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen]] tours Northern Ireland, visiting three homes in each county. Which will he pick as the best? Strictly speaking it's not up to him: he's the host and all-round master of ceremonies but the actual choice lies with Des Ewing, an architect; Michael Dunn, a freelance property consultant; and Suzanne Garuda, another interior designer.
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In his efforts, he's guided by Des Ewing, an architect; Michael Dunn, a freelance property consultant; and Suzanne Garuda, another interior designer.
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Fell off air for more than a decade before the success of [[Scotland's Home of the Year|Scotland's]] and [[Wales' Home of the Year]] prompted a revival. While the ''House of the Year'' format is legally distinct from those young upstarts, viewers will find far more similarities than differences, the key point of separation - other than an on-screen host - being that ''Home'' has a scoring system (nebulous and subjective though it may be), while ''House'' simply has the judges discuss the properties and announce a winner. But it seems reasonable to suppose that it will appeal to the same audience as those shows, and for the same reasons.
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== Champions ==
== Champions ==

Revision as of 21:41, 24 October 2024

Contents

Host

Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen

Co-hosts

Judges (2010-12): Des Ewing, Michael Dunn, Suzanne Garuda

Judges (2024-): Jane Larmour, James Fairley, Patricia McGinnis

Broadcast

BBC One Northern Ireland, 22 February 2010 to 6 February 2012 (19 episodes in 3 series)

BBC One Northern Ireland, 23 September 2024 to present

Synopsis

Top interior designer Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen tours Northern Ireland, visiting three homes in each county. Which will he pick as the best? Strictly speaking it's not up to him: he's the host and all-round master of ceremonies but the actual choice lies with Des Ewing, an architect; Michael Dunn, a freelance property consultant; and Suzanne Garuda, another interior designer.

Fell off air for more than a decade before the success of Scotland's and Wales' Home of the Year prompted a revival. While the House of the Year format is legally distinct from those young upstarts, viewers will find far more similarities than differences, the key point of separation - other than an on-screen host - being that Home has a scoring system (nebulous and subjective though it may be), while House simply has the judges discuss the properties and announce a winner. But it seems reasonable to suppose that it will appeal to the same audience as those shows, and for the same reasons.

Champions

2010: Arts and Crafts-inspired house in Donaghcloney, Co. Down, for Nicola and Angus Waddington
2011: Clifftop house in Newcastle, Co. Down, for David and Frieda Scott
2012: Contemporary barn in Saintfield, Co. Down, for Pamela and Drew Wylie

Web links

BBC programme page

Pictures

The original judges. (l-r) Des Ewing, Suzanne Garuda, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen, Michael Dunn.
And from the revival: Patricia McGinnis, James Fairley, Jane Larmour and the returning Laurence Llewelyn Bowen.

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