BESIDE THE SEA A stunning Thirties retreat has been reconfigured to suit its beautiful beachside location
Having been reconfigured by designer Sophie Ashby, this Sussex beachside retreat is lighter, more open and, most important, now feels connected to its seaside setting
It would be easy to miss Jamie Young’s house. It is a low, white slab Thirties cottage set modestly at the end of a meandering track. The interior too, won’t make you stop and stare. But that’s precisely the point of this seaside home which, thanks to a skilful overhaul by Sophie Ashby, of Studio Ashby, feels as calm as a schooner on a millpond-smooth sea; an inviting, maritime retreat of azure, indigo and cerulean blues where deep sofas beckon and light floods through wide windows.
Lured by the beachfront location, Jamie, who was ‘brought up on boats,’ bought the former gardener’s cottage in 1990. ‘Since then, I’ve extended it as funds allowed, in a piecemeal fashion. But the way we live has changed,’ says Jamie, who runs an investment fund. ‘This is a very sociable house and I wanted more open spaces, so it was time for a major reconfiguration.’ At which point Jamie turned to Sophie. The pair have collaborated before after he spotted her work in a London showhome, and they have formed an empathetic partnership. ‘Sophie quickly understood my style; we’re on the same wavelength,’ says Jamie.
Armed with tape measure and notebook, Sophie strode in and immediately spotted the property’s key flaw: ‘Instead of looking onto the gardens, the focal point of the living room was the fireplace,’ she says. That early discussion led to a raft of changes that have transformed the two-storey interior from a series of
smaller introverted rooms into a flowing space. The changes are most apparent downstairs where a bathroom was jettisoned to create the wide, welcoming hallway. Instead of solid walls, glazed screens have brought light to the living areas and new windows open on to the half-moon shaped lawn: ‘The house now feels connected to the outside,’ says Jamie.
Another part of Sophie’s brief was, she says, to make the Sussex house ‘more considered and inviting’. Now you can drift, Martini in hand, from living room to informal dining room where open shelving, bright with glass and ceramics, creates a vivid division between spaces. In the kitchen, where the cabinetry was updated in soft blues offset by a marble splashback, a sociably round table, studded with Jesmonite, is positioned for views of the garden. Even Jamie’s desk, once squirrelled away in a separate room, has joined the convivial throng in a mini office, framed by asymmetrical shelving, in a corner of the living room.
Re-jigging the floorplan also provided an excuse to reassess furniture and furnishings. ‘It was a chance to create a fresh, contemporary look mixed with antiques,’ says Sophie. Now a sprinkling of saleroom finds reside with bespoke pieces, like the Perspex console, a sandwich of Yves Klein blues, or a shapely coffee table; fluid designs that don’t detract from the lightness of the rooms. ‘This house has always been a refuge but I enjoy it even more now: I’ve fallen back in love with my home,’ says Jamie.