Something old, something new
Country Life UK|January 12, 2022
Unusual architectural features are having a revival, finds Lucy Denton, from medieval moats to ice houses
Lucy Denton
Something old, something new

SHELL-ENCRUSTED follies, minstrels’ galleries, observatories and private Victorian art galleries: these days, architects may be more likely to add a cinema room, sauna or living roof, but British country houses are still appreciated for their quirks, generated by fashion, the peculiarities of whimsy, by historic divisions of household labour and even dodgy ‘cures’ for ailments.

In the late 18th century at Wentworth Woodhouse in South Yorkshire, for example —the pile built on the grandest scale that was sold via Savills for £7 million in 2016—there were rooms devoted to keeping candles, for prayers, for visiting sculptors and one for Mr Harper, the family barber. However, not all relics of an earlier age, whether ballrooms or ice houses, suit the modern taste and they could come with important conservation commitments.

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