Garvock House Hotel  
STB four star award and Scotland Hotels of Distinction
Garvock House Hotel
St. John's Drive
Transy, Dunfermline
KY12 7TU, Scotland UK
T: +44 (0)1383 621067
F: +44 (0)1383 621168
E: sales@garvock.co.uk

Dining At Garvock

Dining at Garvock House Hotel

Gracious dining in a truly relaxed and peaceful Georgian house - Garvock House is a privately owned hotel, nestled in a woodland setting.

Corporate Events

Business In Edinburgh

Professionalism, unbeatable service and attention to detail are the hallmarks of Garvock House as a venue for corporate events and celebrations in Scotland.

Edinburgh Weddings

Edinburgh Wedding Venues

Garvock House Hotel is one of the most fabulous wedding reception venues anywhere in the East of Scotland, and for that matter – the whole of Scotland.

Local Area

Experience the living past in ancient Dunfermline, Walk through 900 years of Scottish history in a day.

Dunfermline 's royal and monastic past dominate the town which can boast a royal palace, a 12th -century abbey (which is the final resting place of Robert the Bruce and the burial site of eleven other Scottish kings and queens), the restored 15th-century Abbot House and the cave in which St Margaret bathed the feet of the poor. King Malcolm Canmore established his court after the death of Macbeth at the now ruined fortified tower in the heart of Pittencrieff Glen. Dunfermline was the birthplace of James I in 1394 and of Charles I in 1600.

It is also the birthplace, in 1835, of philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, and the Carnegie Trust has benefitted the town greatly. The first of many Carnegie Libraries was built here in 1881 and both Carnegie Hall and Pittencrieff Park were gifted to the town by the 'Star-spangled Scotchman'.

Carnegie's birthplace, a humble weaver's cottage has been preserved and extended to include a museum of his life.

Close by is the Royal Burgh of Culross, with its picturesque 17th century cottages, now fully restored. Meander through the cobbled streets skirting the Firth of Forth shoreline, overlooked by the red pan-tiled roofs of the harled whitewashed cottages. Culross was the birthplace of St Mungo, patron saint of Glasgow.

Along the coast lies Limekilns, the ancient port of the Benedictine monks of Dunfermline. Follow the coastal walkway east, past the magnificence of the Forth Bridges, to Aberdour, with its fine castle, granted by Robert the Bruce to his nephew in the 14th century.

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