ARTICLES
Protecting the past for the future: building a new approach to restoration
"Buildings are architectural logbooks of human endeavour."
However, financial pressures often mean perfectly good buildings are destroyed. There is no VAT to pay on new builds so it’s often cheaper to knock them down and start again. If this happens, what do you build in its place? Something that looks like it’s been there a long time, or something completely original? Past styles can provide inspiration, but why fake it when you can create something authentic and prototypical, or have the opportunity to juxtapose old and new?
So that leads us to a new way of thinking – the Chatsworth Effect – using old possessions alongside new, rather than just being reverent to a certain period. As long as there is balance, harmony and quality of workmanship on both sides, new contrasting styles can be fashioned. Every decision becomes an act of design, from taking wallpaper off to keeping old paintwork.
With so many exciting developments in technology, news ways of designing, the emergence of fresh viewpoints, solid environmental arguments and pressure from a housing shortfall do we need to build new houses, or can we repurpose the old? In the 1960s, mews buildings became de rigueur. In the 1980s, it was warehouses. What will it be tomorrow? Retail spaces?
----
With special thanks to leading advocates Jonathan Tuckey, Rahib Hage and Edward Bulmer for their views and insights during a panel discussion at Focus/18: Past, present, future: Reimagination and renewal
http://www.jonathantuckey.com/
https://www.edwardbulmerinteriordesign.co.uk/