Within the community, the centuries-old building was very important. "It used to produce parchment paper and was rumored to have made paper for members of the royal family," Gamble notes. There was a movement for the structure to be landmarked, which would have made its demolition all the more controversial. While the architect saw an opportunity to create something extraordinary, he know it would make the process that much more difficult. "The greatest challenge was working within the confines of an existing structure," says Gamble. "The last thing we wanted to happen was for the new parts to overwhelm what was already there. In fact, we wanted it to be the opposite, as if the new parts were very much secondary, a bystander to the past."
The onetime 17th-century factory and cattle shed are now both connected to a 19th-century Victorian home where the client had lived. "In a way, we were the last piece in the jigsaw," Gamble explains, "as we converted and connected all of the buildings so that they could be used as a whole."
Within this whole, the architect also designed a new custom-built kitchen. Matching its exterior shell, the new kitchen followed the same ethos of old meets new. "The joinery design for the kitchen continued this underlying aesthetic of a contemporary intervention set within a historic context," says Gamble. "The intention is to juxtapose the irregular nature of the ruin while also complementing one another as a whole. The clean lines of the flat panel doors, for example, were designed to contrast the rugged, disorganized nature of the ruin walls."
This silently beautiful clash of new fitting into an old surrounding can best be seen in an old exposed beam set directly in the middle of the kitchen. Its unmissable presence plays with our sense of time, perhaps our sense of epoch, as if we are being transported back to when the space was used for making paper, or for cattle, a herd of them moving through the room with coats like satin.
In all great architecture, creativity is among the most important traits in a design. Yet this newly renovated home is nothing if not the embodiment of creativity. It's a space that embodies an ethos of architecture that starts from within.
"Factory" - Google News
April 25, 2020 at 03:57AM
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A Derelict 17th-Century British Factory Is Transformed Into an Avant-Garde Home - Architectural Digest
"Factory" - Google News
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