Carrier Company V Neck Smock: Functional, versatile workwear made in Norfolk, England from natural materials

Carrier Company V Neck Smock


For the artist, woodworker, fisherman, gardener—even sailor—the smock has been an essential over-garment to protect clothes from the elements. When Norfolk, England-based Tina Guillory, a skilled gardener (and whose daughter Sienna Guillory is the well-known English actress) and fervent environmentalist, wanted to create…

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The Great Eye by Hudson Architects and Ben Coode-Adams

The surrounding countryside is projected onto the ceiling of this reed-covered tower that Hudson Architects and artist Ben Coode-Adams have installed in a field in Norfolk, England.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

Entitled The Great Eye, the small, temporary structure functions as a camera obscura that visitors can climb up inside using a hidden staircase.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

Mirrors surround the wooden legs of the tower, so that it from afar it appears to be hovering in midair.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

The structure is one of over 30 site-specific projects completed for Cley 2012, a contemporary arts festival taking place in and around a quiet village on the east coast of England.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

Other projects on Dezeen from the Norfolk countryside include a barn extension with chunky chipboard walls and a mill-keeper’s house clad with charred timber.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

Photography is by Raven Cozens-Hardy.

Here’s some information from the festival organisers:


The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

This is The Great Eye – a new art installation by Hudson Architects.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

A camera obscura that appears to float in mid-air, it stands near the village of Cley in north Norfolk and forms part of the Cley 12 Aisle and Air exhibition project, which runs from 5 July to 5 August.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

The Great Eye evokes the memory of coastal buildings that have disappeared at Salthouse and Cley – whether undermined, eroded or demolished by the sea. It also reflects on church towers that appear so frequently in the Norfolk skyline.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

Seen from a distance the tower appears to be floating in mid-air, creating an ambiguous relationship with the ground that Hudson Architects intend to reflect the shifting nature of the north Norfolk coastal landscape over time.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

The tower is built from timber and is clad with local reeds, supported by timber supports behind a series of mirrors that reflect the sky.

The Great Eye by Hudson Architects

Concealed inside the tower is a camera obscura which reverses the viewer’s gaze. The Great Eye was built by artist and sculptor Ben Coode-Adams.

The post The Great Eye by Hudson Architects
and Ben Coode-Adams
appeared first on Dezeen.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Oriented strand board lines every wall, floor and ceiling inside this residential barn extension in Norfolk, England, by London studio Carl Turner Architects.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Black-stained timber clads the exterior of the gabled building, named Stealth Barn, and it sits perpendicular to a larger brick barn that the architects previously converted into a residence.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

The interior is divided into rooms that allow it function as a guest house, although the clients also use the barn as a meeting place or studio.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Carl Turner

The OSB surfaces are intended to be reminiscent of the straw bales that fill the barns of many farms nearby.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Carl Turner

Another project we’ve featured from the agricultural landscape of Norfolk is an extension to a mill-keeper’s house – see it here.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Photography is by Tim Crocker, apart from where otherwise stated.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Here’s some more text from Carl Turner Architects:


Stealth Barn- Carl Turner Architects

Stealth Barn is a project that sits next to and complements Ochre Barn, a large threshing barn converted by CTA to a home and studio.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

This addition was to provide a self-contained unit that could equally act as a guest house, studio or meeting place, depending on time of year and workloads: a retreat, but also a place of inspiration, enjoyment and a place of work and home without compromising the experience of either.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Jeremy Phillips

Sitting in the exposed expanse of the Cambridgeshire fens, it is a bold, simple form, reminiscent of the barn it accompanies.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Jeremy Phillips

Placed perpendicular to the existing barn, it stands to create and define a slightly more sheltered and casual garden which melts into the fens. This clear and simple move also hints at the memory of a former farm yard.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Jeremy Phillips

Stealth Barn pays respect to the form of the agricultural context but contrasts with the traditional barn. Stealth Barn is a sharp black mass – a shadow of the adjacent barn or a silhouette on the horizon.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

It is a robust exteriorwrapped with a restricted palette, devoid of fussy detail, and formed to withstand its exposed position.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

On the interior, this toughness is inverted through the inclusion of a warmer OSB; it wraps fully around the space to form angles reminiscent of the adjacent barns divided with straw bales.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Above: photograph is by Carl Turner

It also creates an immersive interior landscape with spaces simply disected in a semi open-plan manner to create compartments.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Each room has aspects overlooking the fields which, although open, are very much seen through and out of this interior, providing a sense of protection and warmth.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

The arrangement of the main spaces into simple pockets is key to facilitating the barn’s multifunctional use – for it to become both a bedroom and a meeting room, a dining room and a studio space. It can be all of these things equally without ever feeling overly domestic or of business.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Stealth Barn is a project instigated and overseen by Carl Turner Architects.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

We have acted as developer Architects and, in turn, the project has allowed the office scope to experiment, learn and test ideas.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

It was completed at the end of August 2011.

Stealth Barn by Carl Turner Architects

Hunsett Mill by Acme

Hunsett Mill by Acme

This extension to a mill-keeper’s house on the Norfolk Broads by London studio Acme has been awarded the RIBA Manser Medal 2010 for the best new house in the UK.

Hunsett Mill by Acme

Called Hunsett Mill, the project involved extending the existing mill house by adding several volumes with pitched roofs uncurling from behind the original structure.

Hunsett Mill by Acme

These volumes are hidden behind the original brick building from specific viewpoints.

Hunsett Mill by Acme

The new part of the building is clad in black charred timber.

Hunsett Mill by Acme

Photographs are by Cristobal Palma.

Hunsett Mill by Acme

The following information is from the RIBA:


Hunsett Mill is a very specific response to a very specific space: an arcadian setting on the Norfolk Broads. The windmill and its out-buildings appear on jigsaws, postcards and chocolate boxes as a famous view from narrow boats. The new building is conceived as a shadow sitting within the site lines of the retained cottage so that the new building is invisible from that specific viewpoint.

The new building is clad in black, charred timber so that it is truly a shadow, with flush glazing that add to the sense of insubstantiality. The overall impact is very arresting – more akin to the response to a piece of art than to a piece of rural, domestic architecture.

The judges enjoyed the constant inventiveness of Acme’s approach seeking new materials, using intriguing structural forms to create interesting forms, values and visual effects. The building is used as a weekend/holiday home by a number of families based in London and Hertfordshire. This allows the interiors to continue the inventiveness and drama of the exterior forms without too many domestic constraints.

The roof forms are particularly enjoyable, creating a series of linked gables that are asymmetric but rhythmic. Internally the structural timber slab is open to the rooms but further changes of angle are added to create a series of interesting spaces, with the first floor walkway to the bedrooms particularly special. The whole is consistently detailed and well crafted with interesting use of off-site construction.

Overall the restoration of the cottage and the new building, which are linked internally, is an exciting and intellectually stimulating response to the unique rural setting. A cultured client has given free reign to the innovation of his chosen architects Acme and engineers Adams Kara Taylor.

Hunsett Mill proves that good architecture can be delivered on a budget and that it can be achieved in the most restrictive of situations. The resulting project balances value and quality and is one that many people could aspire to.

Hunsett Mill on the Norfolk Broads by Acme architects has scooped the Royal Institute of British Architects’ (RIBA) prestigious Manser Medal 2010 for the best new house or major extension in the UK in association with HSBC Private Bank. The presentation of the award took place at a ceremony at the RIBA last night, at which the winner received an increased prize of £10,000 and a new specially commissioned trophy designed by artist Petr Wiegl from presenter, designer, author and host Kevin McCloud.

Acme architects has won the award for its arresting extension to Hunsett Mill, a nineteenth century Grade 2 listed mill keepers house on the Norfolk Broads. Building a major extension that more than doubled the size of the original house on a uniquely picturesque site was challenging. Acme created an extension in the form of a shadow of the original house, which the judges describe as “more akin to a piece of art than a piece of rural, domestic architecture.”

Speaking about the winning building Ruth Reed, President of the RIBA said:

“Hunsett Mill, like a lot of really good architecture, results from one simple, strong idea. Instead of creating either a pastiche of the Victorian red-brick cottage, or a self-effacing glass box, the architects’ truly inventive solution was to create a kind of triple-shadow of the original, in black charred timber, crossed by the shadow of the neighbouring windmill’s arms.

“A private house commission gives the architect an opportunity to get inside the ambitions of the client and produce a shared personal statement. It is a building type in which every detail matters and in which they matter to client and architect in equal measure. Houses like Hunsett Mill do not get built without the extraordinary faith in and commitment to the architects by their clients. The RIBA is grateful to HSBC Private Bank for its strong support of this award.”

Declan Sheehan, Chief Executive Officer of HSBC Private Bank, said:

“Private homebuilding and redevelopment is becoming increasingly popular with owners expecting more from their homes. Developing your own property means that particular expectations and potentially more difficult requirements can be met, as Hunsett Mill brilliantly demonstrates. As a bank that offers unrivalled property expertise for private clients, we are delighted to support an award that recognises superb design and innovation.”

The five other shortlisted houses were:

  • Bateman’s Row, London by Theis and Khan
  • Furzey Hall Farm, Gloucestershire by Waugh Thisleton Architects
  • Leaf House, London by James Gorst Architects
  • Martello Tower Y, Suffolk by Piercy Conner Architects with Billings Jackson Industrial Design
  • Zero Carbon House, Birmingham by John Christophers

Previous winners of the RIBA Manser Medal include Pitman Tozer Architects for The Gap House (2009), Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners for Oxley Woods (2008) and Alison Brooks Architects for the Salt House (2007).

Judges for this year’s award were: past RIBA President Michael Manser CBE; HSBC Private Bank’s property expert Peter Mackie, Managing Director of its Property Vision subsidiary; architects Luke Tozer from Pitman Tozer and Deborah Saunt from DSDHA; and the RIBA’s Head of Awards, Tony Chapman.

Architect: Acme
Client: Confidential
Contractor: Willow Builders
Structural Engineer: AKT
Services Engineer: Hoare Lea
Gross internal area: 215 sq m


See also:

.

Extension to a house
in Tasmania
Extension to a house
in Australia
Extension to a house in
Los Angeles