Front Of Cottage, Herefordshire: The Traditional Cottage

Episode Information Herefordshire: The Cottage

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Date Published:
11/06/2008
Front Of House, Herefordshire: The Traditional Cottage

Merry's family have been Herefordshire builders for generations, so she knew that the county was rich in traditional building crafts. She and Ben decided to combine these with technology for a new house with a genuinely rural feel.

So in the spirit of this grand project, Merry's father drew up a design that followed the traditional cottage layout while incorporating modern comforts.

Wood Frame, Herefordshire: The Traditional Cottage

Budget And Build

The Cost

Cost of site 55,000
Budget for build £65,000
Final cost of build £75,000
Total cost of project £130,000



New And Traditional

Downstairs was a living/dining area and kitchen, with a large utility room to house appliances. Upstairs were three bedrooms and two bathrooms. The bedrooms were placed under sloping eaves with dormer windows, in true cottage style. But jugs and washstands were replaced by a modern bathroom and an en-suite shower room.

The construction would be a mixture of brand new building technology and traditional techniques. Time-honoured elements included the green oak frame, which would be left exposed inside, and a clay-tiled roof. The walls would rest on a plinth of hand-made bricks, and a large brick chimney would form a feature at one end. The walls themselves, however, would be made of SIPS: light but strong prefabricated panels that would be bolted on to the timber frame. Finally, these would be covered with utterly traditional and locally mixed lime render.

A Family Affair

The build was a family affair. The frame was made in Merry's father's workshop; her uncle helped manage the project; and her cousins offered their expertise on site. Once the footings had been dug, Ben took time off from work at the local council to help erect the frame. Meanwhile Merry, who worked as her father's design assistant, was planning how to achieve a mellow look.

Reclaimed tiles were used for the roof. All the external wood was to be oiled and left to silver in the weather. Merry and Ben asked for a rough finish to the lime render to help blur the edges of the new building. For their front-door knocker and interior door handles and window latches, they turned to a local blacksmith and commissioned bespoke black iron designs.

Living Room, Herefordshire: The Traditional Cottage

Up To The Limit

They had given themselves a tight, 16-week schedule, and had borrowed up to their limit to raise the £120,000 overall budget. Happily, the build went with barely a hitch, and they moved in just a few weeks late, having only slightly overspent.



Kevin McCloud thought the building looked rather stark from the outside - the lime render had come up a brighter yellow than expected and the bricks were very red. Inside, however, it was a convincing mix of the rustic and modern.

The Detail

  • Modest cottage proportions are given an unusual lift by key over-scale features: the wooden porch and brick chimney breast on the outside, and the huge limestone fireplace surround in the living room. The limestone deliberately echoes the lime render.
  • The simple beauties of wood are left to speak for themselves. Many floors are wood. The window sills are unstained oak. The green oak frame is a visible feature of every room, and at its most impressive in the main bedroom.
  • A heavy, simply jointed wooden table stands in the living room. Even the television perches on a wood offcut.
  • Black floor tiles make a strong statement in the hall and kitchen. Tiny imperfections in them add texture and catch the light.
  • Pale green-painted cupboards and black and stainless steel fittings add up to a modern rustic kitchen. A big utility room adjoins it: here a traditional white sink and a dishwasher continue the old/new theme.
  • Simplicity is carefully combined with comfort. The main bedroom is sparingly furnished, with a metal-framed bed on a wooden floor, but the en-suite shower room has luxurious fittings and glamorous black tiles.
  • Artisanship is celebrated in the wreath-like iron door knocker (above) and the elegant interior door handles.
  • Lighting is emphatically modern: angled spots on rails in the living room, halogen in the main bathroom.

How Green?

A green oak frame is a fairly environmentally friendly structure - not polluting to produce, and most commercial oak woods in the UK replant regularly, so nature isn't denuded.

The reclaimed brick adds to the house's green credentials, as does the lime render. And this building scores well on using local skills and locally sourced materials, thus cutting transport costs and helping support the local economy.

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Comments

  1. Hi I was just wondering if you could give me some info on where the internal cottage style doors in The Cottage Herefordshire were sorced. I would really appreciate some information Kindest Regards Jonathan Horkan
    Posted by jonathan horkan on 01/10/2008 14:12:20
    Offensive? Unsuitable? Report this comment

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