A modern Classical creation
Jeremy Musson explores the awardwinning Chitcombe House in Dorset, which was created in 2014 in the Classical tradition
The best new country houses speak to their landscape setting and should feel as if they had grown out of it. Chitcombe house, completed in 2014, is just such a building, with an uncomplicated, traditional english form appropriate to the quintessential Dorset landscape in which it sits.
The undulating nature of the approach from the village lends expectation to the visitor’s first encounter with the house. It is compactly planned, with façades of cleanly cut ham-stone and roofs of red-brown handmade clay tiles. To one side are the coursed rubble walls of a courtyard and ancillary buildings step sharply down into the little valley in a satisfying way to create a natural sense of invitation and welcome (Fig 1).
Chitcombe was designed by Stuart Martin, an architect based near Dorchester, who has long specialised in such understated and elegant houses, using good-quality local materials enlivened by well-considered and restrained detailing. Mr Martin’s clients, Roderick and Lydia Wurfbain, are Dutch nationals who have lived in england for decades and whose workbase is London.
They previously owned a farmhouse in the same area, but, with a large family, were
looking for a bigger property. The aim was to find something suitable for extended family life that was also an easily manageable base both for weekend hospitality and their enjoyment of country pursuits, so the interiors had to work well for smaller or greater numbers, as occasion demanded.
After a long search, the Wurfbains eventually purchased a small farm with about 500 acres of land. The initial intention was to extend the existing building, but they finally decided to build a new house appropriate to the locality that they loved. In 2008, they interviewed a number of architects before selecting Mr Martin, who has wide experience of working on English country houses.
He learnt much of his craft from his early years with London-based architect Benson & Bryant, for whom he worked in 1989 to 1994, after graduating in architecture from the University of Nottingham. He moved to Dorset to work with the specialist building company Saint Blaise, based in Evershot in Dorset, in 1994–96, where he provided some of the technical drawings for the company’s acclaimed restoration of Prior Park, outside Bath, and oversaw repairs at Wayford Manor, a 16th-century house altered by Harold Peto.
Mr Martin then set up his own practice in 1997, based at Lewcombe Woods Farmhouse, near Evershot in Dorset. Early commissions included the refurbishment and rethinking of a number of historic country houses, including 18th-century Whitfield in Herefordshire, and he was appointed inspecting architect to Longford Castle and estate in 1999, a post he still holds today.
As well as numerous major extensions, designed and executed with artistic sensitivity, he has also completed seven new houses since that date, mostly in the SouthWest. His buildings are in the Classical tradition and evoke the 17th and early 18th century, but he also draws for inspiration on another golden age of country-house design: the early 20th century. Mr Martin counts Detmar Blow and Edwin Lutyens as particularly important figures in the history of English domestic design and they have shaped his vision of what makes a good building.
The Wurfbains recognised that, although they wanted all the amenities of good 18thcentury or early-20th-century houses they had known or admired—including Horn Park near Beaminster in Dorset by Lawrence Dale of 1911, where Mr Martin has also worked—they would not need the large service areas associated with them.
The first design for Chitcombe was ready in 2009. It was not initially successful at the planning stage, but, eventually, permission was granted. Mr Martin explains: ‘I aimed to combine a design that responded to the Wurfbains’ very clear brief and to use materials local to the area, with a Classical sensibility.
‘Chitcombe House is designed with a sense of proper solidity
I was also conscious of Lydia and Roderick’s Dutch background.’
The playfulness we see in the work of Erith and Lutyens seems especially apparent in the organic feel of the courtyard formed by the house and the L-shape of the service buildings along the east and north sides. There are also quirky touches unlikely in any other period, such as the seemingly ‘floating’ dormer window that lights the steps leading from the entrance courtyard to the garages on the level below.
Mr Martin’s strong grounding in the history of English architecture is manifested in the differentiation of the façades, each devised to make the best of its own particular location, orientation and function. The differences are almost subliminal: the windows are largely of the same character, the materials consistent and each elevation has dormers of the same dimension placed at regular intervals around the roofscape, yet each is quite distinct.
Once you pass between the gate piers that announce the entrance to the front court, the central three bays—of five—on an essentially H-shaped plan are bold and playful: the main entrance door is approached by steps and the doorcase, with its finely detailed ‘Gibbsian’ surrounds, and the sash window above are set in smooth ashlar, enlivened with panels of knapped flint, a local Dorset building material (Fig 4). Two tall sash windows (16 panes over 16) frame the doorcase, with an oval window underneath, each like an inverted lower-case i.
This formulation would never have been thought of in England in the late 17th century, however, it does feel the sort of note struck in designs by Lutyens. Indeed, it loosely echoes, for instance, the window arrangements of Tavistock House, built in 1904 for
Country Life in London’s Covent Garden.