House Beautiful (UK)

ESCAPE TO THE CITY Home to an interiors stylist, this eclectic cottage in Dulwich in south London is full of colour and character

- WORDS CAROLINE ATKINS PHOTOGRAPH­Y BRENT DARBY STYLING BEN KENDRICK

Renovating a wreck in the pretty London suburb of Dulwich meant one couple were able to add a contempora­ry glass extension

to the old cottage, creating the perfect blend of old and new

Dulwich Village is about as countrifie­d as London gets, with its green spaces, playing fields and tree-lined roads. But even for Dulwich, Julie Hailey’s house is extraordin­arily pretty. A late17th-century former kiln-worker’s cottage built on a private road in this quiet south-east corner of the capital, its weatherboa­rded exterior is edged by a white picket fence and willow hurdles, and its cool, subdued paint shades are more reminiscen­t of a traditiona­l beach house than a city suburb.

When Julie and her husband David bought the Grade II-listed house in 2003 from The Dulwich Estate (the charity responsibl­e for protecting the area’s historic character), it had been empty for about a decade, and it took more than a year of working every spare minute for David to make it habitable. They renamed it Ned’s Cottage, but their son Ned was only a baby at the time and doesn’t remember the move. His older brother Harvey, now in his twenties, has clearer memories of the long weekends spent labouring to get it ready.

‘David is a builder and shop fitter – and a perfection­ist – so everything had to be done absolutely right, which took time,’ says Julie, an

interiors stylist whose online shop supplies vintage furniture and bespoke pieces made by her talented husband. Most of the authentic character had been ripped out, with thin carpets laid on top of concrete floors and original fireplaces fitted with electric bar heaters. ‘Even the weatherboa­rding was rotten: you could push your fingers through the timber,’ Julie adds. But David changed it strip by strip – each piece planed to fit – had all the windows remade to match the originals and replaced the front door with an exact replica.

The sitting room has a simple cottagey feel that reflects the age of the property, with terracotta tiles underfoot, horizontal boards panelling the chimney breast and painted shutters at the windows. But after this you discover the building’s real surprise: a contempora­ry extension that opens up the ground floor into a spacious L-shaped kitchen and dining room. This was Julie and David’s biggest challenge: how to replace the flimsy 1950s extension built onto the back of the original two-up, two-down cottage with something new but sympatheti­c. ‘We had to get permission from The Dulwich Estate, Southwark Council and the listings department,’ Julie recalls. But because it’s a single storey and hidden behind the garden fence, the couple were

allowed to go for a modern, mostly glazed structure that combines clean lines with traditiona­l elements – and an echo of the building’s industrial past.

With its three large skylights, the kitchen’s boarded ceiling contribute­s to the beach-house feel. Bright ceramics, old jelly moulds and craftsmanm­ade chopping boards add to the rustic mood, while Julie’s larder supplies are stored in an old painted cupboard, originally bought as a wardrobe for her first flat more than 25 years ago and now fitted with shelves. In contrast, the large dining table was made by David from reclaimed oak building timbers and scaffold-pole legs, the stainless-steel appliances are uncompromi­singly modern, and the chunky, square-cut floor units are made from cast concrete, creating a series of open slots and shelves into which drawers and appliances can be fitted as necessary. ‘We made them in the garden,’ says Julie. ‘We drew the design, then David found someone to help him with the casting. We incorporat­ed pea-shingle in the surface – which was incredibly messy to sand but is very pretty when the light catches it.’ Wooden drawer fronts match the dark-toned floorboard­s and reconditio­ned cast-iron radiators, from Lassco architectu­ral salvage yard in south London, have a timeless quality. Throughout the house industrial-style fittings unite the old and the new. So the bathroom, which had to stay downstairs due to listing restrictio­ns, has sleek contempora­ry fittings against one wall of original exposed brick, while the other is of cool slate tiles. Upstairs in the main bedroom, the brick chimney breast discovered behind crumbling plaster is a reminder of the local kilnworks, and the scaffoldpo­le bedframe (another of David’s designs) sits beneath joists that have been left exposed so the ceiling space soars into the pitched roof.

Julie’s forays into salvage yards and antiques markets, as well as inspiratio­n drawn from favourite shops including Liberty and Baileys Home, have given the cottage its unique character. It’s a house of contrasts: pretty painted furniture next to functional metal lockers and wall racks, plain woven grain-sack cushions alongside zingy retro prints, soft grey walls and woodwork giving way to unexpected areas of contempora­ry wallpaper. The simplicity of this traditiona­l timbered building lends itself well to the different styles. More than three centuries on, it’s weathering the changes with style.

For Julie and David’s online furnishing­s (including scaffold-pole beds and vintage metal cupboards) go to thewoodpig­eon.com

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