Unchanged for the most part since 1968, the coach house that Barbara and Stephen Brooks now call home was a series of small dark rooms when the couple first set eyes on it. Or when Barbara saw it, since she viewed, offered, and arranged a bridging loan to buy it before Stephen had even stepped inside.
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The one-acre garden was hidden from the house by some old outbuildings, and the interior layout was badly arranged. Most of the property’s original features had been removed, either when it was converted from a coach house in the 1930s or in later work in the '60s. The historic beams had been painted black, the windows were devoid of any character, and an unattractive pine parquet had been laid in the main living room.
THE STORY
Owners Barbara and Stephen Brooks live here with their three children, Polly, 22, Harriet, 20, and Edward, 16. Barbara is a garden designer and Stephen is deputy chief executive of Christie’s
Property A converted coach house near Guildford, Surrey,
in a Conservation Area and Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The timbered living room is the oldest part of the property, dating back to 1752, and there are later additions
What they did The couple tackled the plumbing, heating and rewiring and removing walls to open up the hall and kitchen. Then later extended the property to add a garden room, snug and a spacious breakfast room
As Stephen looked round for the first time he shook his head, ‘I just can’t see it.’ But Barbara was convinced it would make the perfect family home, and was so won over by the warm atmosphere of the house as she looked round again that Stephen said: ‘If you can see it, that’s all right – you’ll make it work.’
Luckily, she did. For although there was lots of work to do inside the house, there was so much to recommend it on the outside. Its setting, on the edge of a picture-perfect Surrey village green, its tennis court, swimming pool and walled garden, with endless scope for Barbara to create planting schemes for every season.
Before she could even think about picking up a trowel, however, Barbara wanted to inject some life, light and character back into the house. The Brooks stayed in their existing home for a couple of months, then moved into a cottage in the village as the builders knocked through walls to enlarge the hall and some of the main rooms.
The house began to shine as builder Mark Slade sandblasted all the beams and replaced the parquet with wide oak boards. ‘That was a horrible job, as the pine flooring had been there since 1968, fixed to the ground with bitumen as sticky as black treacle,’ recalls Barbara. The heating, plumbing and wiring were updated, and the house was redecorated.
With architect Ian Adam Smith, a specialist in country homes, Barbara came up with plans to build a breakfast room extension and garden room in a second phase of work. To do this the outbuildings were knocked down.
‘At last we could see the garden from the house,’ says Barbara, ‘and it made such a difference. We couldn’t get planning permission to convert the outbuildings, but we were allowed to demolish them and extend right up to where they had been.’
Before she could even think about picking up a trowel, however, Barbara wanted to inject some life, light and character back into the house. The Brooks stayed in their existing home for a couple of months, then moved into a cottage in the village as the builders knocked through walls to enlarge the hall and some of the main rooms.
The house began to shine as builder Mark Slade sandblasted all the beams and replaced the parquet with wide oak boards. ‘That was a horrible job, as the pine flooring had been there since 1968, fixed to the ground with bitumen as sticky as black treacle,’ recalls Barbara. The heating, plumbing and wiring were updated, and the house was redecorated.
With architect Ian Adam Smith, a specialist in country homes, Barbara came up with plans to build a breakfast room extension and garden room in a second phase of work. To do this the outbuildings were knocked down. ‘At last we could see the garden from the house,’ says Barbara, ‘and it made such a difference. We couldn’t get planning permission to convert the outbuildings, but we were allowed to demolish them and extend right up to where they had been.’
Barbara had a clear vision of exactly how each room could be improved, and amazingly the huge project came in almost on time - just three weeks late – and pretty much on budget. ‘You only go over budget if you change your mind about what you want to do,’ says Barbara, ‘and I didn’t change my mind. I went over the plans very carefully – every socket, every light fitting. Mark made a variation notice for anything he needed to alter so there were no nasty surprises and we worked really well together.’
One of Barbara’s main requirements was to make the coach house look more attractive from the outside. ‘I wanted to add period-style windows and exterior details in keeping with its Georgian beginnings as the coach house for the manor next door.’
For the interior finishes Barbara decided she would benefit from a bit of extra help. ‘If I’d done it on my own I might have chosen the same paint colour for every room, but Joa Studholme from Farrow & Ball came up with a paint scheme for the whole house, which worked brilliantly.’ Joa’s colour choices created a sense of harmony and flow from room to room, and when the second phase of building work was completed in 2013, she came back to advise on options for the garden room, breakfast room and new kitchen.
By this time Barbara was completely absorbed in designing and replanting the garden, having completed a garden design course at The English Gardening School in 2012. ‘It was a career-changing experience,’ she says. ‘I enrolled on the course specifically with our garden in mind, but it became such a passion that I decided to set up a garden design business.’ This left little time for sourcing furnishings – cue Abi Birch of Hudson Homes & Interiors.
Using Barbara’s precise instructions, Abi found exactly the right pieces for the new rooms. ‘I would say to her, “for the living room I want country house hotel look, floral curtains with a bit of red, three different sofas, a club fender, a glass coffee table,” and she would pull it together for a cohesive look,’ says Barbara. Abi even had the garden room sofas specially made in a smaller size so they didn’t get in the way of the glass doors.
After all this work on her home and her garden, where is Barbara at her happiest? ‘Definitely inside the house,’ she says. ‘I love my garden, but it’s very needy. There’s always weeding, pruning, and tidying to do. But now the house is finished, apart from keeping it clean, there’s nothing pressing to do and I completely relax inside. As a garden designer I can create a garden like this anywhere, but the house is special, and I knew it would be right from the start.
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