Categories
- Architecture/Design (99)
- Community Right to Build (40)
- Development/Land-Use (38)
- Norfolk DNA (33)
- Tayler & Green (12)
- Uncategorized (13)
Tags
- affordable housing
- Building Design
- cars
- Community Right to Build
- consensus/support
- Critical Regionalism
- David Green
- design/architecture
- design quality
- development
- FANN-XI
- farmstead
- Forest Village
- Herbert Tayler
- history
- house-builders
- housing delivery
- land-use
- local distinctiveness
- Localism Bill
- local services
- Loddon
- materials
- modernism
- Neighbourhood Plan
- Norfolk
- normal
- NPPF
- opinion/responses
- pan-tiles
- pastiche
- planning
- policy
- roofs
- rural archetypes
- settlement pattern
- simplicity
- sustainability
- Tayler and Green
- terrace
- thatch
- value
- vernacular
- village
- wide-fronted house
-
Recent Posts
Archives
- August 2013 (1)
- July 2013 (1)
- June 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (1)
- December 2012 (2)
- November 2012 (12)
- October 2012 (3)
- September 2012 (1)
- May 2012 (1)
- April 2012 (6)
- March 2012 (3)
- February 2012 (6)
- January 2012 (7)
- December 2011 (5)
- November 2011 (5)
- October 2011 (7)
- September 2011 (9)
- August 2011 (2)
- July 2011 (7)
- June 2011 (6)
- May 2011 (3)
- April 2011 (4)
- March 2011 (9)
- February 2011 (11)
- January 2011 (7)
- December 2010 (8)
- November 2010 (11)
- October 2010 (12)
- September 2010 (13)
Tag Archives: materials
Time Out…
We took a half day out of the office at Lucas Hickman Smith last week, to go and look at and talk about buildings…and have lunch, of course! Tibby’s Triangle in Southwold, a Hopkins Homes development designed by Ash Sakula, … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged Ash Sakula, design/architecture, hedges, local distinctiveness, Manor Close Walberswick, materials, roofs, Tibby's Triangle, wide-fronted house
Comments Off on Time Out…
Thatch-fest #3
Thanks to Rob Morrison (@morrisonbrink) for pointing me at this contemporary thatched house by Moering Architects in Germany. And I think there’s another thatched project on their website here, which looks even frutier; I hope they get to build it.
Posted in Architecture/Design
Tagged contemporary, design/architecture, materials, roofs, thatch
Comments Off on Thatch-fest #3
Contemporary Vernacular?
Coming back to the issue of special and normal buildings (as I did in the last post), put me in mind of a house which I drive past occasionally on my way up to Holkham Hall, where Lucas Hickman Smith … Continue reading
Local Materials Faux Pas
While writing the recent posts on local building materials, I was thinking about an estate in Wymondham called Whispering Oaks. The development is set at the very northern tip of the town, over a mile from the town centre and … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged design/architecture, house-builders, local distinctiveness, materials, Matthew Rice, Norfolk, pastiche, vernacular
2 Comments
Norfolk’s ‘High-Road’ Buildings
As I explained in a previous post Stewart Brand in his excellent book ‘How Buildings Learn’ makes a distinction between ‘high road’ or special buildings and ‘low road’ or normal, everyday buildings. I also noted that the vast majority of … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged design/architecture, history, local distinctiveness, materials, Norfolk, vernacular
Comments Off on Norfolk’s ‘High-Road’ Buildings
More Norfolk ‘Stuff’
So the vast majority of Norfolk is covered in brick-built houses with pan-tiled roofs, with plenty of surviving older timber-framed buildings, typically rendered over and painted – but that’s not the end of the story, of course.
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged design/architecture, flint, history, house-builders, local distinctiveness, materials, Norfolk, pastiche, vernacular
2 Comments
Norfolk ‘Stuff’
Well, that’s enough policy-wonking for now. I said my ‘thatch-fest’ a couple of weeks ago could be a segue into some stuff on ‘stuff’– or ‘what we make buildings out of’. I took this picture (below) while I was researching … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged brick, design/architecture, flint, history, local distinctiveness, materials, Norfolk, pan-tiles, roofs, thatch, vernacular
Comments Off on Norfolk ‘Stuff’
Thatch-fest #2
My tweet-pals at HAT Projects have reminded me of Ushida Findlay’s thatched Pool House 2, near Aylesbury Vale. It’s too good to miss out.
Posted in Architecture/Design
Tagged design/architecture, materials, modernism, thatch, vernacular
Comments Off on Thatch-fest #2
Thatch-fest!
Writing about McCreanor Lavington’s Langerak reminded me of another Dutch project we came across a couple of weeks ago at Lucas Hickman Smith while researching ‘contemporary thatch’. Bureau B&B’s ‘Entreehuis’ was published on the excellent dezeen.com.
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged design/architecture, dutch, local distinctiveness, materials, modernism, roofs, thatch
Comments Off on Thatch-fest!
It’s in the countryside…but is it rural?
Rowan Moore in the Guardian is the latest to cover Living Architecture, a new holiday-home business that has commissioned five internationally acclaimed architects to design modern country houses. Their intention (a highly laudable one) is to enthuse people about modern … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design
Tagged design/architecture, Living Architecture, materials, modernism, vernacular
Comments Off on It’s in the countryside…but is it rural?