London structure studio TYPE has remodeled two derelict cottages in Dorset right into a rural retreat that celebrates their weathered stone and timber constructions.
Named Purbeck Cottage, the mission concerned combining two Nineteenth-century quarryman’s cottages in a small hamlet on Dorset’s Jurassic Coast right into a single 85-square-metre dwelling.
TYPE’s design targeted on adapting supplies and fittings already within the buildings or sourcing gadgets from reclamation yards, responding to each the positioning’s place in a Conservation Space and an Space of Excellent Pure Magnificence and the consumer’s philosophy of “radical reuse”.

“We needed to have a good time the craft and legacy of the unique Nineteenth-century quarryman’s cottages whereas utterly avoiding the substantial embodied carbon related to demolition and new development,” the studio informed Dezeen.
“The mission actually wears its round rules on its sleeve. We weren’t all for making an attempt to make re-purposed supplies really feel new or overly refined,” it continued.
“As an alternative, we needed to point out the lived lifetime of the constructing material, whether or not that was materials left in its authentic place, components taken from one a part of the constructing and reused elsewhere, or items reclaimed from utterly completely different buildings.”

Purbeck Cottage is centred round a double-height dwelling area at its jap finish, designed to open up the slender ground plan. Right here, a reclaimed staircase leads as much as a mezzanine with folding timber shutters that may function both a examine or a visitor room.
Strategically positioned openings have been launched to the southern facade to usher in much-needed mild, whereas to the north, the house is oriented to miss a big entrance backyard.

The place the 2 former cottages meet, their back-to-back stone-and-brick fireplaces have been retained, flanked by a wood door that connects the dwelling area to a eating space. There’s additionally a small service hatch alongside the kitchen’s reclaimed-wood counter tops.
A core of loos, utility areas and a boiler tank has been pushed to the western finish of the house, alongside one other reclaimed-wood staircase that leads as much as the principle bed room.

Purbeck Cottage’s inside areas are framed by the tough stone partitions of the unique cottages and complemented by the unique stone flooring. These have been beforehand lined by concrete and carpet and have jackhammer marks from earlier alterations left uncovered.

Elsewhere, ground joists that have been not structurally sound have been denailed, reduce down and fireproofed for reuse in studwork partitions.
Ending touches embody newly added classic sinks, early-Twentieth-century brassware, reclaimed radiators and a salvaged French range.

“Our materials decisions have been pushed by the purchasers’ need to keep away from something feeling model new or flashy, in favour of embracing the battered historical past, tough textures, and the story of the objects themselves,” mentioned the studio.
TYPE was based in 2013 by administrators Matt Cooper, Sam Nelson, Tom Powell and Ogi Ristic. Earlier initiatives by the studio embody the renovation of a studio flat on London’s Golden Lane Property with sliding screens and an extension at a house in Herne Hill made with a sturdy palette of uncooked concrete, burnt clay and pure wooden.
The pictures is by Lorenzo Zandri.
The publish TYPE rejects something "model new or flashy" in Purbeck Cottage renovation appeared first on Dezeen.











