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Latitude: 52.0591 / 52°3'32"N
Longitude: 0.7323 / 0°43'56"E
OS Eastings: 587413
OS Northings: 243607
OS Grid: TL874436
Mapcode National: GBR QH4.ZXX
Mapcode Global: VHKF3.NH0T
Plus Code: 9F423P5J+MW
Entry Name: Long Wall
Listing Date: 28 February 1997
Grade: II
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1257881
English Heritage Legacy ID: 463319
ID on this website: 101257881
Location: Newman's Green, Babergh, Suffolk, CO10
County: Suffolk
District: Babergh
Civil Parish: Long Melford
Traditional County: Suffolk
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Suffolk
Church of England Parish: Long Melford Holy Trinity
Church of England Diocese: St.Edmundsbury and Ipswich
Tagged with: House
TL 84 SE LONG MELFORD NEWMAN'S GREEN
922/8/10019 Long Wall
- II
House. 1963 by Philip Dowson, with Peter Foggo as associate, for S V Williams. Restored 1995-96 with some alterations by Hugh Pilkington. Brick and timber construction. Flat roof, with single projecting brick stack. Single storey pavilion with roof area approxiamately square on plan, with largely open plan interior. A white-painted brick spine wall passes through house and extends from either end, separating arrival area from the main house and garden; roof oversailing wall with deep lapped boarded fascia. Seven bay entrance front serving entrance area with opaque glazing in timber frames. Seven bay garden front all glazed with alternate windows full-height sliding timber frames. Paired timber beams extend from mullions to support cantilever. Mullions form roof supports on cast concrete pads, on brick base wall which extends to form boundary of terrace to the left. Glazing continues to side elevations, with large sliding glazed door to terrace. Long built-in bench on the integral external terrace.
Interior: Fireplace in spine wall at back of living area. Other screens of unpainted timber continue the idiom of the house. Free-standing cooker unit and hood, built-in countertop and shelf below windows.
A distinguished and much published weekend house of simple elegance. It is noted for its Miesian plan, which is regionalised and rationalised through the brick and timber construction. Dawson acknowledged a debt to the Barcelona Pavilion and to the language of Greek architecture, yet the oversailing roof is also reminiscent of the work of Frank Lloyd Wright. Dowson intended the house to represent "simplicity in a meadow" and this he achieved supremely. The very rural setting is an important element to which the design responds. Pilkington's restoration and alterations have been sympathetic to these fundamentals.
Sources
Sherban Cantacuzino, Modern Houses of the World, 1964
Penelope Whiting, New Houses, 1964
Country Life, 25 February 1965, pp 432-3
Listing NGR: TL8741343607
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