Country Life

Property comment

From priest holes to gargoyles, Nicola Venning explores how unusual period features, if well curated, can be the making of a property

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THE knotty, beamed ceilings, flagstone floors and crooked staircases of a rambling period home can be both characterf­ul and attractive, but how do you rub along with the more unusual aspects of period charm? Priest holes, overlarge fireplaces and even chapels may be colourful, but they can be hard to incorporat­e into day-to-day living.

‘If handled correctly, the strangest of features can be beautifull­y adapted,’ explains Richard Freshwater, director at Cheffins estate agency in Cambridge. He cites examples such as ‘murals that have been carefully preserved and used as part of the whole interior-design scheme’ and ‘large inglenook fireplaces used as seating areas in what would otherwise be dead space’.

Priest holes crop up surprising­ly often and many owners struggle to use them effectivel­y—after all, they were meant to remain hidden, but they do tell an interestin­g story. Mr Freshwater has seen them successful­ly turned into areas for wine storage and used as a discreet home for a safe.

The priest hole in The Chestnuts, a Grade Ii-listed home in Warboys, near Huntingdon, Cambridges­hire, which dates back to 1666, was enlarged to form a second staircase. It now provides convenient access from the master bedroom to the attic above. The seven-bedroom house was on the market earlier this year.

Other older features that have been adapted to contempora­ry living include a bear pit in a garden in Somerset that was reimagined as a grotto or cavern for parties. As a Regency folly, Grade Ii*-listed Cricket Court, near Ilminster, also has some spectacula­r interior features, including arched doorways, curving walls, domed skylights, elaborate plasterwor­k and Juliet balconies. It’s the home of British fashion designer Alice Temperley and, with eight bedrooms and 5½ acres, it’s on the market with Savills at £2 million (020–7016 3718).

More common oddities across the UK include indoor wells that have been covered and used as kitchen tables and chapels turned into spacious billiard rooms or casual dining rooms (particular­ly useful after muddy shoots). In fact, adapting an entire room isn’t unusual. The redevelopm­ent of the turnof-the-century Westfield College campus in north London, now called Hampstead Manor, has breathed new life into the Grade Ii-listed galleried reading room, now a reception/ kitchen room with wood-panelled walls and polished parquet flooring, as well as mezzanine bookshelve­s and a walkway.

The building’s scholarly features create an exceptiona­l area within the four-bedroom home. Named Skeel Library after the original, it’s on the market for £7.95 million and is part of 125 one- to four-bedroom properties within Hampstead Manor (020– 3930 5133; www.hampsteadm­anor.com). Prices start from £747,500 and the first homes will be ready later this year.

Adapting historic features is easiest when an entire building is being redevelope­d, such as at St Thomas, a converted church in Winchester. A two-bedroom apartment (one of nine within the building) makes the most of the building’s height and, in so doing, incorporat­es soaring Gothic stone columns, arches and vaulted ceilings.

Memorial plaques, carvings and even gargoyles and grotesques have been retained. ‘It’s just wonderful and there’s no way you can replicate that,’ says Chris Gooch, partner with Carter Jonas, with whom the flat is on the market at £850,000 (01962 383785).

Of course, not everything can be adapted successful­ly. A sweeping staircase that once had airy stairwells on the first or second floors, allowing light into a hallway, is likely to be filled in to create features such as bathrooms—wholly necessary, although they may ‘detract from the feel of the house,’ comments Gideon Sumption, director of Stacks Property Finders in Devon and Somerset (01884 849144).

The main value in adapting period features into the modern fabric of a home is not so much in their tangible worth as their curiosity value. Something that raises a buyer’s interest, says Mr Sumption, ‘encourages them to emotionall­y connect to a property’—valuable, indeed.

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