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Which era of house do people like best? | Which era of house do people like best? |
(35 minutes later) | |
As another British property price boom gathers steam, many are searching for their dream "period property". But why do people favour certain architectural eras? | As another British property price boom gathers steam, many are searching for their dream "period property". But why do people favour certain architectural eras? |
Ask a Briton to describe their ideal home, and the chances are their reply will include the adjective "period". | Ask a Briton to describe their ideal home, and the chances are their reply will include the adjective "period". |
Depending on who you ask, however, the period in question might vary wildly. | Depending on who you ask, however, the period in question might vary wildly. |
It might be Georgian, with its neo-classical stylings and clean, symmetrical lines. Or it could be Victorian - all about cornicing, bay windows and patterned brickwork. | It might be Georgian, with its neo-classical stylings and clean, symmetrical lines. Or it could be Victorian - all about cornicing, bay windows and patterned brickwork. |
Others might prefer the light airiness of the Edwardians or the stark geometry of the modernist era. | Others might prefer the light airiness of the Edwardians or the stark geometry of the modernist era. |
But in a property-obsessed nation, where it sometimes feels as though estate agents' lingo permeates every discussion, plenty of people have a favoured architectural era - whether or not owning such an edifice will ever be within their financial grasp. | But in a property-obsessed nation, where it sometimes feels as though estate agents' lingo permeates every discussion, plenty of people have a favoured architectural era - whether or not owning such an edifice will ever be within their financial grasp. |
For some, it's a deeply emotional attachment. | For some, it's a deeply emotional attachment. |
"It's all about what resonates with you and makes you think of home," says architectural historian Ellen Leslie. "If you're in any way interested in buildings, you're going to have a preference." | "It's all about what resonates with you and makes you think of home," says architectural historian Ellen Leslie. "If you're in any way interested in buildings, you're going to have a preference." |
According to estate agents, the Georgian era is widely regarded as the UK's preferred period. | According to estate agents, the Georgian era is widely regarded as the UK's preferred period. |
"Georgian often comes out on top - there's something about the grandeur of great Georgian cities that means it's always popular," says Lucian Cook, director of residential research at Savills. | "Georgian often comes out on top - there's something about the grandeur of great Georgian cities that means it's always popular," says Lucian Cook, director of residential research at Savills. |
For this reason, he adds, many places with large stocks of such buildings, like Edinburgh, Bath and Brighton, tend to attract London-style prices. | For this reason, he adds, many places with large stocks of such buildings, like Edinburgh, Bath and Brighton, tend to attract London-style prices. |
But for most Britons, however, this preference is entirely aspirational - owning a Regency townhouse or a Robert Adam country pile is something only to be contemplated in their wildest fantasies. | But for most Britons, however, this preference is entirely aspirational - owning a Regency townhouse or a Robert Adam country pile is something only to be contemplated in their wildest fantasies. |
It's harder to find similar properties in places like Glasgow and Manchester, whose architecture reflects the fact that they boomed during the reign of Queen Victoria. | It's harder to find similar properties in places like Glasgow and Manchester, whose architecture reflects the fact that they boomed during the reign of Queen Victoria. |
For many British urban areas, "period property" translates for most people as a Victorian dwelling. | For many British urban areas, "period property" translates for most people as a Victorian dwelling. |
The era saw countless rows of terraced homes built to cope with massive movements of population to towns and cities, and helped shape the country's perception of what a home looks like. | The era saw countless rows of terraced homes built to cope with massive movements of population to towns and cities, and helped shape the country's perception of what a home looks like. |
"There's much more of it and people become used to that three or four-bedroom family house," says Cook. | "There's much more of it and people become used to that three or four-bedroom family house," says Cook. |
However, it's not long since the style was far less favoured. Just as 20th Century architecture is now reviled by many like Prince Charles as "monstrous carbuncles", Victorian design was once widely considered ugly and unfashionable. | However, it's not long since the style was far less favoured. Just as 20th Century architecture is now reviled by many like Prince Charles as "monstrous carbuncles", Victorian design was once widely considered ugly and unfashionable. |
"After World War II, people wanted modernism," says Leslie. Victoriana was synonymous with slums, soot and the kind of "dark satanic mills" described by William Blake. | "After World War II, people wanted modernism," says Leslie. Victoriana was synonymous with slums, soot and the kind of "dark satanic mills" described by William Blake. |
Decrepit late 19th Century terraces were bulldozed to make way for new, clean properties with indoor sanitation. In those homes that survived, fittings like fireplaces and tiles were chucked out - to the bitter regret of latter-day vendors for whom the words "original period features" are like manna. | Decrepit late 19th Century terraces were bulldozed to make way for new, clean properties with indoor sanitation. In those homes that survived, fittings like fireplaces and tiles were chucked out - to the bitter regret of latter-day vendors for whom the words "original period features" are like manna. |
But fashions change. In 1958, the poet Sir John Betjeman and the architecture guru Nikolaus Pevsner set up the Victorian Society to save the glories of the age from destruction. Thanks in no small part to their efforts, the period's aesthetic charm is once again widely appreciated. | But fashions change. In 1958, the poet Sir John Betjeman and the architecture guru Nikolaus Pevsner set up the Victorian Society to save the glories of the age from destruction. Thanks in no small part to their efforts, the period's aesthetic charm is once again widely appreciated. |
It isn't the only era whose reputation has been resuscitated. | It isn't the only era whose reputation has been resuscitated. |
At the time of their construction, the inter-war suburban "Metroland" homes that housed commuters and their families were loathed by the cultural elite as vulgar and shabby. | At the time of their construction, the inter-war suburban "Metroland" homes that housed commuters and their families were loathed by the cultural elite as vulgar and shabby. |
In his 1939 novel Coming Up For Air, George Orwell described a street of these properties as "a prison with cells in a row. A line of semi-detached torture chambers". | In his 1939 novel Coming Up For Air, George Orwell described a street of these properties as "a prison with cells in a row. A line of semi-detached torture chambers". |
Recently, however, they have undergone a reappraisal. Groups such as the Royal Institute of British Architects have hailed the influence of the Art Deco and Arts and Crafts movement on homes from this period. | Recently, however, they have undergone a reappraisal. Groups such as the Royal Institute of British Architects have hailed the influence of the Art Deco and Arts and Crafts movement on homes from this period. |
More importantly, ordinary families have come to value their spaciousness and convenience, says Cook. "They used to be very unfashionable, but now people appreciate them," he adds. | More importantly, ordinary families have come to value their spaciousness and convenience, says Cook. "They used to be very unfashionable, but now people appreciate them," he adds. |
And admirers of post-war modernism - whose detractors, chief among them the heir to the throne, have long associated it with grim tower blocks and urban decay - are staging a fight-back, too, proclaiming the aesthetic virtues of post-war optimism and communal living. | And admirers of post-war modernism - whose detractors, chief among them the heir to the throne, have long associated it with grim tower blocks and urban decay - are staging a fight-back, too, proclaiming the aesthetic virtues of post-war optimism and communal living. |
Many of the bold, idealistic structures of Le Corbusier and Erno Goldfinger are now listed. Flats in Goldfinger's Trellick Tower in west London - once a byword for crime and inner-city blight - have sold for up to £480,000. | Many of the bold, idealistic structures of Le Corbusier and Erno Goldfinger are now listed. Flats in Goldfinger's Trellick Tower in west London - once a byword for crime and inner-city blight - have sold for up to £480,000. |
Just as enthusiasts for Victoriana rallied to preserve the era's buildings, the Twentieth Century Society was formed in 1979 to "safeguard the heritage of architecture and design in Britain from 1914 onwards". Estate agencies like The Modern House specialise in selling modernist - or, to adopt a recent euphemism, "architect-designed" - homes. | Just as enthusiasts for Victoriana rallied to preserve the era's buildings, the Twentieth Century Society was formed in 1979 to "safeguard the heritage of architecture and design in Britain from 1914 onwards". Estate agencies like The Modern House specialise in selling modernist - or, to adopt a recent euphemism, "architect-designed" - homes. |
Those with an affection for concrete at least have plenty of affordable options on former local authority-run estates the length and breadth of the UK. | Those with an affection for concrete at least have plenty of affordable options on former local authority-run estates the length and breadth of the UK. |
Others on a median salary, who prefer more traditional styles, have fewer realistic options - unless they are prepared to resort to new-build pastiches that borrow design features from earlier eras. | Others on a median salary, who prefer more traditional styles, have fewer realistic options - unless they are prepared to resort to new-build pastiches that borrow design features from earlier eras. |
Famously, the Prince of Wales backed the construction from 1994 of Poundbury, a neo-Georgian development on the edge of Dorchester, Dorset. | Famously, the Prince of Wales backed the construction from 1994 of Poundbury, a neo-Georgian development on the edge of Dorchester, Dorset. |
The experiment sought to recreate architectural principles from a bygone age, but it has been derided by some within the design establishment. | The experiment sought to recreate architectural principles from a bygone age, but it has been derided by some within the design establishment. |
According to Harriet Harris, senior lecturer in architecture at Oxford Brookes University, it's unlikely such estates will ever win the kind of affection generated by their Georgian precursors. | According to Harriet Harris, senior lecturer in architecture at Oxford Brookes University, it's unlikely such estates will ever win the kind of affection generated by their Georgian precursors. |
"Most serious architects do think these pastiches do negate real design because they are not innovative," she says. | "Most serious architects do think these pastiches do negate real design because they are not innovative," she says. |
But that's not to say the public will necessarily agree. According to Cook, such pastiches have no trouble selling. | But that's not to say the public will necessarily agree. According to Cook, such pastiches have no trouble selling. |
Phrases like "mock Tudor" are sneered at by design critics but remain popular with buyers. So too are "Barratt-style homes" - synonymous with the 1980s Channel 4 soap opera Brookside. | Phrases like "mock Tudor" are sneered at by design critics but remain popular with buyers. So too are "Barratt-style homes" - synonymous with the 1980s Channel 4 soap opera Brookside. |
Still, many buyers continue to seek out the authenticity a vintage home offers. As long as they do, the search for a period home will remain a common aspiration in a property-obsessed nation. | Still, many buyers continue to seek out the authenticity a vintage home offers. As long as they do, the search for a period home will remain a common aspiration in a property-obsessed nation. |
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