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A derelict woollen mill in a Yorkshire village may not say 'modernist' to everyone.
But Chris and Gill - who, fortunately, run their own specialist joinery business -
saw it as the perfect opportunity to create a visionary home. They liked the
traditional brick of the building and opted to keep the exterior virtually untouched.
Inside, they would strip everything out and make a home of fluid spaces, based
around an open-plan ground floor, an atrium and a galleried upper floor.
They began with restoration, repairing the exterior walls with traditional bricks
and re-cycling the original slates on the new roof. Then came the radical stage
of their design - a giant custom-made steel framework fixed inside the building's
shell. Like a great 3D noughts-and-crosses grid, it gave structural support and
defined the internal spaces. The building would grow around this.
High-tech but not stark
On the ground floor, the single vast living area was given a suggestion of
divisions by the upright columns of the framework. Above, the central area - the
atrium - was left open to the glass-paned roof, and bedrooms were built around
the edge of the building, giving on to a galleried landing.
The architecture is modern and high-tech, but not stark. There are curved shapes
and irregular spaces. High up in the atrium, a tubular shower unit juts from
the wall like some weather-sculpted rock formation. The free-standing sink unit
in the kitchen billows like a boat.
Industrial and organic
Materials are a deliberate mixture of industrial and organic. Natural wood floors
give a warm feel, while the steel frame is left exposed as a design feature. The
kitchen mixes wood, chrome and polished black granite along with a Zip HydroTap.
And Chris and Gill built comfort into their plans: they installed underfloor
heating and the many windows are double-glazed, conserving heat in winter.
Glass panes in the roof, also double glazed, provide a constant play of natural
light, which pours into the atrium and picks out the details of the interior.
Of all the high tech appliances in their home Chris and Gill say that they could
never do without their Zip HydroTap, it really has changed their lives.
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