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Architects: Mole Architects
- Area: 214 m²
- Year: 2024
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Photographs:Nick Guttridge + MoleArchitects
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Manufacturers: Bauder, Horning Oak End Grain, ID Systems, Lignacite, Russwood, Schiedel, Sioox, Velfac, Vitral
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Building Contractor: Sandlings, Sandlings / Bob Page
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Quantity Surveyor: Gill Associates, Gill Associates / Connor Baker
Text description provided by the architects. Stone's Throw is an upgrade and extension to a single-story holiday house in Aldeburgh on the Suffolk coast, a stone's throw from the sea. The existing house was poorly arranged, with living space tucked into one end and the sunny end of the site dominated by a double garage. The new house now looks back to the sea from a new space towards the sea, from a dramatic room filled with light and views. The high ceiling is broken part way by a triangular rooflight and an angled column that separates the main dining and kitchen from the elevated living space beyond. Central to the space is a block of marble, its color, and pattern reminiscent of a Maggie Hambling painting of the sea, which sits on a floor of end grain woodblock. The old bungalow has been upgraded and transformed into a new light-filled house: a grand house on a modest scale.
Client Brief - The clients had owned the 1960s bungalow as a second home for many years and had explored the idea of a new house. However, much about the bungalow was fine, and their needs were not appreciably different in terms of accommodation. The decision to retain the bungalow and extend was accepted with a plan to re-arrange the house to make better use of the plot. The brief was to increase the living space of the house, to create an en-suite bathroom.
Concept/Solution - The kitchen and living room were at the southern end of the plot, missing out on sunlight and views of the garden due to the proximity to trees on the southern boundary, whilst the large (rarely used) garage was at the north end of the plot. The new extension replacing the garage projects into the garden, allowing the new living room to have a south-facing view of trees beyond the garden. A large east window faces the sea, with views of the sky. The extension deliberately elevates the scale of the house, creating a space that is modest but grand. A change in level creates a more intimate living area, and a triangular fireplace and roof light allow south light into the middle of the plan. The over-cladding of the existing house unifies the new extension to the existing house.
Sustainability - The existing house was upgraded with new double-glazed windows and doors and new loft insulation. The new extension was constructed from a timber frame. U-values for the extension exceeded Building regulation requirements by 30%.