Woodpeckers
“Woodpeckers” is a replacement house on a rural site on the edge of the New Forest National Park, completed in January 2016.
The design for the house, which is used by the family mainly as holiday home, was constrained by planning issues that to some extent dictated the built footprint and its position on the site. Very tight size restrictions forced the design to push windows to the outside of the envelope, not allowing any overhangs which would be included in an area calculation, therefore reducing the actual built area. However, within the allowable area there was provision for the inclusion of a conservatory, and one challenge was how to successfully integrate this with architecture devoid of the normal connotations of a lean-to structure.
The very simple building is also driven by economics of construction. The superstructure consists of a timber frame that was erected onsite. Spans as well as the width of the house are decided by the performance restrictions of standard timber truss components. Fenestration is generated by floor-to-ceiling gaps in the timber façade.
The house sits on a platform that creates a terrace to the South and the East. This platform connects with a masonry chimney breast that provides an internal fireplace and a concrete hearth with integrated seating. The platform, being raised slightly off the ground, allows a level connection between inside and outside terraces as well as raises the house off the ground, which in the winter months can be quite wet.
The building is finished in larch cladding that will weather to a silver grey colour.
- Ström Architects team − Magnus Ström
- Location − New Forest, UK
- Structural Engineer − Barton Engineers
- Cost Consultant − APS Associates
- Photographs − Luke Hayes
- Contractor − Rice Projects