Project posted by Andrea Maugeri

Offley Green Farm

Year
2023
Style
Farmhouse
Diagram of window's opening system. The sliding doors open completly to creat an in/out space between the living room and the external terrace
Diagram of window's opening system. The sliding doors open completly to creat an in/out space between the living room and the external terrace
Concept design of the volume in relation with the context
Concept design of the volume in relation with the context
Existing Site plan
Existing Site plan
Existing Ground Floor
Existing Ground Floor
Existing First Floor
Existing First Floor
Existing Elevations
Existing Elevations
Exiting elevations
Exiting elevations
Proposed site plan
Proposed site plan
Proposed Ground Floor
Proposed Ground Floor
Proposed First Floor
Proposed First Floor
Proposed roof Plan
Proposed roof Plan
Proposed elevations
Proposed elevations
Proposed elevation
Proposed elevation
Existing Roof plan
Existing Roof plan
Rear elevation
Rear elevation
Rear elevation
Rear elevation
Terrace view
Terrace view
Gable end  - Side Elevation
Gable end - Side Elevation
Front Elevation
Front Elevation

24 more photos

Credits

Photographer

From Andrea Maugeri

Offley Green Farmhouse is Grade 2 listed; the original house dates back to around the mid to late 17th century and has undergone some 20th-century alterations and extensions. It features a steep-pitched hipped roof that is thatched with dormers. The windows are timber frame casement and sliding sash. The house is rendered with red brick chimneys and red brick at ground level below the internal ground floor level.
Immersed in the bucolic English countryside, the project aims to establish a new relationship between modern architecture and traditional British cottage houses by replacing a derelict existing shed made of metal and wood that sat next to the house.

The volume has been transformed and modeled to harmonize with the views towards the south of the surrounding countryside and the usage of the rear garden.

The barn shape, the use of timber cladding, and the zinc roof recall the existing volume, reimagined into a contemporary version of itself.

A frame, extruded from one of the end side gables, has become a track for a large sliding window, allowing the doors to open completely and creating an inside-out space.

On the other side, a full-height glazed link connects the historic farmhouse to the new modern extension.

The elevations reflect the use of the garden, which is open to the rear side used by the family, and enclosed at the front to provide more privacy from the entrance gate.