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The Salt House: Alison
Brooks Architects
Photographer: Cristobal Palma

The Salt House is a rare example of a contemporary UK sea-side house.
Constructed as a weekend retreat and future home to retire for the owners,
Salt House carries forward the Modernist tradition of the experimental
beach house as a vehicle to explore new architectural possibilities-
site specific yet containing the potential for wider application. Extensively
published in this country and abroad, The Guardians Architecture
critic Jonathan Glancey described The Salt House as one of the best
new houses in Britain today. In 2006 the house won the Grand Designs
Award for the Best New Build House of the Year.

Client Brief - A Family story
The client for Salt house is a couple whose parents live in the house
next door, and the client spent all her summers there as a child. It is
a new house with a long history! This project benefited from a quite specific
client brief in terms of functionality 3 beds/baths + guest suite,
3500sqft, no swing doors, a £450K budget - but complete openness
in terms of form and materials. The client was interested in the atrium
house typology, and in particular a strong visual connection from 1st
floor to ground floor due to the special needs of one of the clients two
children. The project had the added demand of fulfilling the requirements
of new building in a high-risk flood plain. We embraced these challenges,
aiming to design a house sympathetic to its context - yet responding in
a fully contemporary manner to the opportunities of a family ready for
modern sea-side living.
Oyster Cottages and Wind
The two storey Salt House is located at the end of a terrace of 19thC
timber-boarded oyster fishermens houses fronting a communal garden
sheltered by a sea wall. Department of the Environment floodproofing measures
required lifting the house above the level of its neighbours; this higher
elevation means the house forms a bookend to the terrace,
balanced by the inn at the terraces opposite end.
The form and geometry of the house re-interprets the local vernacular
of hipped roof, bay windowed cottages. The facade bends so
that the entire north and south facing facades effectively become bay
windows, maximising sea views to the north and passive solar gain
from the south. The manipulation of the facades in turn deflects the geometry
of the hipped roof to create an irregular, crystalline form. The three
dimensional facade acts as an instrument for engaging with the communal
garden, the land and seascape, while expressing the dynamic forces of
the extreme North Sea weather.
Framing the south facing entrance courtyard, the traditional single storey
outrigger typical of the lane entrances to the oyster cottages,
naturally became a family room/guest wing. The house has neither a front
nor a back per se. Both facades are highly glazed, permeable screens allowing
cross ventilation and views through the house. Window and balcony openings
travel freely across the facades expressing lightness and movement. The
exterior walls and decks are clad in Ipe, a durable hardwood from sustainable
forests that gives the house a silvery weathered shine. The roof is finished
in synthetic slates, matching neighbouring roofs while enabling precision
cutting around gutters, eaves and rooflights. Maldon Council was surprised
and pleased with The Salt House proposals, exhibiting the project in a
local exhibition of exemplary new architecture in Essex, and inviting
the scheme to be submitted for local awards.

Inside, interconnected spaces are wrapped by wall and ceiling
planes. The ground floor of the building is conceived as a continuous
landscape that steps up from the entrance courtyard to the south facing
timber deck. Huge sliding doors lead to the slate floored central atrium,
folded staircase and a sunken living area with a fireplace
wall that extends outside to the deck, garden and beach.
Upstairs, a second living space and study is bathed in light from the
central atrium rooflight, with elevated views of the Blackwater Estuary
to the west and St Lawrence harbour to the east. The space is framed by
a series of folded element the timber balustrades of the mezzanine
fold downward to create the staircase, while the facetted walls of the
1st floor bedrooms are extensions of the trapezoidal rooflight geometry.
Flood-proof Housing Design
From the very earliest stages, Maldon Councils planning department
was supportive of the scheme but required a full Flood Risk Assessment
which was produced as part of the Planning submission. The design integrates
extensive wet-proofing and dry-proofing measures, the most important of
which was elevating the concrete slab on mini-piles. Not only do the mini-piles
allow below ground water to flow past, reducing hydrostatic pressure on
the foundations, they reduce site spoil to zero and, in the eventuality
of long-term water level changes, the house can be jacked up to a higher
level. Given this context Salt House is a prototype for flood-proof residential
construction.
Construction System
The house is based on the structural principle of an elevated slab as
the base for a steel portal frame. This allows two stories of column free
interior space, corner windows, and a huge central rooflight opening,
which doubles as a ring beam. Timber framing between steel elements is
sheathed with marine ply to stiffen the entire frame. The owner describes
Salt House as a ship ready for the worst the North Sea can throw
at it! A local builders craftsmanship, open-minded clients,
and an attempt to sensitively transform a familiar local typology roots
Salt House in time, place and family history.

Salt House Essex - Project Team
Architects: Alison Brooks, Angel Martin Cojo, Juan Francisco Rodriguez
Structural Engineer: Price & Myers (David Akera, Paul Grimes, Keith
McSweeney, Tom Williams), 30 Newman Street, London W1P 3PE, Tel: 02076315128
Main Contractor:E.O.Jones + Sons (Glyn Jones, David Jones), 69 Mountview
Crescent, Essex CM0 7NS,
Tel: 01621778166
Awards
2007 RIBA Manser Medal
2007 RIBA National Award
2006 Grand Design Awards, Best New Build House
RSPB Environment & Education Centre, Rainham Marshes
Essex building
: RIBA National Award 2007
The Salt House info from Alison Brooks Architects
Modern Architects

English Houses
Essex buildings
Modern House
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the The Salt House page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Photographer: Cristobal Palma +44 (0)7881 940968 http://cristobalpalma.com
The Salt House - page : adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt
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