Scottish Daily Mail

LIVE IN A NISSEN HUT ... FOR £1.4MILLION!

Second World War hangar converted into a five-bedroom luxury home

- Daily Mail Reporter

IF you’re a military historian, this could be the perfect home for you – if you have £1.4million to spare.

A former Second World War hangar that once housed bomber crews is on the market after being transforme­d into a luxury five-bedroom home.

The property was one of thousands of Nissen huts built across Britain using prefabrica­ted sections and with distinctiv­e curved roofs clad with corrugated sheets. Many were later abandoned or used as storage by farmers. But one hangar, set in the countrysid­e near Dunmow, Essex, has been converted into a home with two acres of gardens.

The building, one of three surviving larger-than-average Nissen huts in the grounds of a Georgian property, once housed RAF and American personnel.

The hut’s original shape and structure were retained for its conversion into a two-storey, four-bathroom property, which has a lift to the upper floor with its two bedrooms. Downstairs are three more bedrooms and an open-plan kitchen and living room. Bi-fold doors lead to a terrace.

Karl Manning of Savills estate agents, which is selling the house, said: ‘It’s certainly a unique building. You look at the outside and you feel like it shouldn’t really work as a home.

‘But when you go inside, the curved back wall, which has been converted in the style of how it would have looked originally, is really quite impressive. It’s kept its original shape, structure and footprint, too.’

The three conversion­s are seven miles from the former RAF Great Dunmow site. From 1943 to 1948, it was one of the bases used by American B-24 and B-17 bombers to take off for strategic raids across Germany and France.

Mr Manning added: ‘Because of the size of these three huts, they were converted about two or three years ago. The other two huts are also currently lived in.’

 ??  ?? Grand design: The hut sits in two acres; inset, the open-plan living room
Familiar: Nissen huts were still in use in the 1960s, above
Grand design: The hut sits in two acres; inset, the open-plan living room Familiar: Nissen huts were still in use in the 1960s, above
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