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Hidden depth

A disused grain store in rural Norfolk gets a new life as a family home

- PHOTOGRAPH­Y: NICK DEARDEN WRITER: CLARE DOWDY

A grain store turns spacious family home in Norfolk

London-based architectu­re practice 31/44 is used to getting the most out of tight, urban spaces. Its Red House, in East Dulwich in south London, picked up a RIBA London Award and a Manser Medal, and No.49, in Lewisham, won a RIBA National Award. ‘We’re used to doing very difficult sites that have a direct relationsh­ip with perhaps 30 neighbours,’ says 31/44 director Will Burges. So designing a house in the English countrysid­e was ‘slightly liberating’, he adds. ‘It was just about the preservati­on of the immediate environmen­t.’

Burges and his team were commission­ed by a London-based family to create a weekend retreat in a tiny Norfolk hamlet. Luke and Klara Hawes had spotted a disused grain store, sitting between other farm buildings and a listed parish church. The area was familiar to Luke as he had grown up nearby. Before starting the work, ‘we spent two summers in a camper van in the field, getting a feel for the land’, he says. The 450 sq m steel-framed barn, which had been built around 1990, had little historical interest or architectu­ral distinctio­n but local planners stipulated that its frame had to be retained. Early concept work was carried out by architect and family friend Michael Loates-taylor of Taylormade­space, then 31/44 handled the architectu­ral character and detailing of the final scheme. A priority for 31/44 was to define an appropriat­e language for a modern barn. ‘The materials are very»

basic choices,’ says Burges, citing the concrete, plywood and acoustic straw ceiling. ‘But the level of execution is finessed to make it feel more domestic.’ The planners also wanted the scheme to look like an agricultur­al building from the outside, so Burges wrapped it in corrugated metal walls with larch louvres above. The Haweses were after a capacious family living space and an indoor swimming pool, with other rooms on a more modest scale. From the quiet road, it’s intentiona­lly difficult to identify the house’s entrance. ‘We liked the idea that as you drove up to it, it was very mute and didn’t give away its domesticit­y,’ says Burges. 31/44 introduced a pale green metal-clad drum, reminiscen­t of a grain silo, at the front entrance. Within this drum, a helical staircase leads up to the first floor, where windows are hidden behind a veil of timber.

The hallway leads to the main living area: a vast, double-height, open-plan kitchen/ dining/living space. Swathes of glazing give views of the garden and pool. At first-floor height, concrete frames support boxes of natural birch ply, creating a house within»

a barn. The box at the rear contains the master bedroom, which has views over the garden and down to the pool and living space. The bedroom is linked by a glass bridge to the timber-framed structure, which houses a guest room and a bedroom for each of the couple’s two sons, all of which are plastered rather than ply.

This project balances the industrial with the domestic in both atmosphere and scale. To achieve that, the architects have opened up internal views. ‘Where you see pockets of the big space, it doesn’t feel too overwhelmi­ng, it feels more domestic,’ says Burges. As Luke and Klara are both designers (Luke is a director at industrial design firm Priestmang­oode and Klara runs her own design company), they were fastidious about the fixtures, fittings and detailing of their project, such as the colour of the ply (whitewash rather than yellow), the depth and thickness of the louvres, the screwheads (small, flush and discreet) and the colour of the pool. Klara specified lighting by the likes of Flos, Foscarini and Muuto.

The project’s landscapin­g was inspired by Klara’s passion for Mediterran­ean gardens and plants, as well as family trips to Greece and Spain, hence the olive and palm trees. She also wanted to replicate the link between indoor and outdoor spaces found in the homes of southern Europe. At the rear, 31/44 accommodat­ed this by ‘tweaking the walls back further, to get the garden furniture under the overhang’, says Burges.

Luke and Klara initially planned to use the house just as a retreat for weekends and holidays, but as the project neared completion in early 2020, they decided instead to relocate there full-time, just before the UK went into its first lockdown.*

 ??  ?? Above, the house is wrapped in corrugated metal and larch louvres, echoing its previous incarnatio­n as an agricultur­al building Opposite, the capacious family living area offers far-reaching rural views
Above, the house is wrapped in corrugated metal and larch louvres, echoing its previous incarnatio­n as an agricultur­al building Opposite, the capacious family living area offers far-reaching rural views
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 ??  ?? Above, the indoor swimming pool, which is separated from the open-plan living space by a glazed wall
Above, the indoor swimming pool, which is separated from the open-plan living space by a glazed wall
 ??  ?? Left, a metal-clad drum, reminiscen­t of a grain silo, conceals a helical staircase that leads up to the first floor Below, the view from the pool through to the open-plan kitchen
Left, a metal-clad drum, reminiscen­t of a grain silo, conceals a helical staircase that leads up to the first floor Below, the view from the pool through to the open-plan kitchen

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