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Willow House, Cambridge
Images:
Garden
elevation
Hall/dining
room interior
West
of the building, showing 1940s alterations
Designed by George Checkley, Willow
House is a Grade II* listed modernist house built in
1932 for Dr McCombie of Kings College. The house stands
in secluded and extensive grounds along Conduit Head
Road, which runs through a wooded conservation area
to the west of Cambridge City Centre. Conduit Head Road
harbours a number of notable Thirties modern houses,
including Hugh Hughes Salix/Brandon House built
for scientist Sir Mark Oliphant in 1934, and Justin
Blanco Whites Shawms of 1939. In 1933, Willow
House (then known as Thurso House) was profiled in both
the Architects Journal and the Architect &
Building News. It is also included in FRS Yorkes
contemporaneous and authoritative text The Modern House
in England.
With representatives from English
Heritage and Cambridge City Council, we met on site
in September with the new owner of Willow House and
his project architect, from Nottingham-based firm Letts
Wheeler, who conducted a walk-through presentation of
their refurbishment proposals.
In 1944 Willow House was divided into
two separate residences and a new staircase block and
single story sitting room extension were added to the
house, both of which project externally from the western
end of the building. Designed by Dorothy Cosens, these
alterations are justifiably not regarded as being of
equivalent architectural quality to the rest of the
house; timber rather than metal windows and doors were
used, the positioning and proportions of which do not
correlate with the design of openings in the main house.
As the current proposals will return the house to its
original use as a single residence, the Cosens staircase
becomes functionally incongruous and will be removed,
as will a rather crudely constructed concrete portal
from the same period, which is attached to the end of
the garden elevation. The single storey extension is
to be rebuilt and redesigned in sympathy with the style
and detailing of Checkleys approach, with steel
framed windows and doors.
For the earliest owners of Willow House, the plan ensured
separation of themselves from ancillary service rooms
and housekeeping staff. For residents of the house in
less socially stratified times, the same plan becomes
restrictive. An opening is to be formed in a ground
floor wall, uniting the kitchen and hall spaces. The
Society suggested the insertion of a jib door to more
subtly achieve this desired intercommunication. The
refurbishment programme also includes the formation
of a corridor on the ground floor by inserting a new
wall, glazed above cill level. A reinstatement of a
partition found in the original plan of the house, this
partially glazed wall will serve as a screen providing
privacy for the study, while articulating movement into
the redesigned single storey sitting room at the western
end.
The entrance (north) elevation of
Willow House, with vertical wooden framed first floor
windows, does not sufficiently do justice to the modernist
credentials of the rest of the building, and as is often
the case the architect has saved his best for the south
facing garden elevation (pictured). This façade
reflects both the structure of the house (a concrete
frame with brick infilling) and the double height nature
of the main hall space. The elevation is divided into
four bays each with horizontal strips of flush metal-framed
windows that span the distances between the vertical
members of the concrete frame.
Many of the original steel casement
windows corroded and with listed building consent were
replaced a few years ago with double-glazed Crittall
windows (steel with aluminium cills) that closely match
the original profiles. Protected by its position directly
underneath the balcony of the main bedroom, the halls
clerestory window is the best-preserved original window,
and it will be retained in situ as evidence of original
detailing. It is also hoped that original ventilation
air bricks (visible in the garden façade) will
be similarly preserved and perhaps restored to working
order.
With no form of vestibule other than
a small porch, immediately upon entering Willow House
one is placed at the heart of the interior plan: a split-level
hall/dining area. Reinforced concrete winder stairs
with a low solid balustrade curl up to the first floor,
from where the main hall can be monitored from a gallery.
This split-level hall/dining area is reminiscent of
multifunctional domestic spaces designed by English
Arts and Crafts architects such as Voysey and Baillie
Scott, whose reinterpretations of the traditional medieval
hall and gallery arrangement were a source of inspiration
for the likes of Adolf Loos, as well as perhaps Checkley.
The original jointless Magnesite
floor covering in the hall has been discoloured and
damaged beyond repair by damp and is to be replaced
with oak boarding to match the upper floors in the house
(magnesite on the stairs can be retained and restored).
Replaced by a wood-burning stove, the original hall
fireplace will be reconstructed to match the original
design as closely as possible. A number of flush gas
panel heaters in the house are to be retained, now disconnected
but part of a system considered experimental when the
house was built.
Like many modernist villas of this
period, cold bridging, condensation and water penetration
are problems that have inevitably derived from the relatively
new construction techniques and materials employed by
Checkley, compounded by inadequate maintenance to aspects
such as the render, windows, flat roof and copings.
The build currently has no insulation to the external
walls, which are without cavity. After much debate,
and contrary to the recommendations of the Society,
it has been decided that an insulating rendered panel
system is to be fixed to the exterior of the house.
To ensure that window reveals continue to be flush with
the facades, all windows will be moved forward to compensate
for the thickness of the insulating panel (about 3.5cm).
This approach represents a significant cost saving,
but the ideal solution would have been to strip all
existing render and re-apply afresh. The colour of the
exterior will be a creamy-buff tone, as was the original
self-coloured Snowcrete waterproof render.
Although some of the Societys
concerns have not been fully allayed, the refurbishment
of Willow House will certainly result in the building
returning to a state more closely resembling original.
The project illustrates the give-and-take nature of
trying to sensitively balance the needs and expectations
of modern life against the need to preserve our design
heritage.
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