Natural Welsh slates have been used in the refurbishment of a historic house.
A historic seaside villa is enjoying a new lease of life as a Landmark Trust holiday let, thanks in part to Welsh Slate, part of the Lagan group.
Some 150m2 of Welsh Slate’s natural Cwt Y Bugail County-grade roof slates in various sizes have been used on the stables and Grade II* listed main house at Belmont House in the Conservation Area of Lyme Regis in Dorset.
Belmont was home in the 1970s to the author John Fowles, who completed The French Lieutenant’s Woman from his writing room on the first floor of the house, and whose widow sold it to the building preservation charity.
Before that, in the late 18th/early 19th Century, it was the home of Eleanor Coade, the businesswoman who perfected the manufacture of Lithodipyra or Coade artificial stone for Neoclassical statues, architectural decorations and garden ornaments.
Her company produced stoneware for St George’s Chapel in Windsor, The Royal Pavilion in Brighton, the Royal Naval College in Greenwich and Buckingham Palace. Given Belmont House by an uncle in 1784, it became a 3D catalogue for Coade.
The £1.8 million restoration of the 18th Century property complete with observation tower into a holiday let for up to eight people has taken two years, with the 45˚ pitch re-roof of the main house and stables carried out by Rowsell Roofing through the winter, requiring the scaffolding to be fully sheeted.
The design of the roof with the natural Welsh slates, which are guaranteed for 100 years, was straightforward, with a parapet gutter to the front, valley gutter in the centre and drain to guttering at the rear.
Landmark Trust surveyor and Belmont project manager Carole Paton said: “Welsh Slate was specified as it was the original material so it needed to be in keeping with the building but it was also specified for its quality and longevity.”
She added: “We favour natural products which are in tune with historic buildings. It was part of our desire to produce a high-quality job that will perform for 100 years plus.”
ENDS
Some 150m2 of Welsh Slate’s natural Cwt Y Bugail County-grade roof slates in various sizes have been used on the stables and Grade II* listed main house at Belmont House in the Conservation Area of Lyme Regis in Dorset.
Belmont was home in the 1970s to the author John Fowles, who completed The French Lieutenant’s Woman from his writing room on the first floor of the house, and whose widow sold it to the building preservation charity.
Before that, in the late 18th/early 19th Century, it was the home of Eleanor Coade, the businesswoman who perfected the manufacture of Lithodipyra or Coade artificial stone for Neoclassical statues, architectural decorations and garden ornaments.
Her company produced stoneware for St George’s Chapel in Windsor, The Royal Pavilion in Brighton, the Royal Naval College in Greenwich and Buckingham Palace. Given Belmont House by an uncle in 1784, it became a 3D catalogue for Coade.
The £1.8 million restoration of the 18th Century property complete with observation tower into a holiday let for up to eight people has taken two years, with the 45˚ pitch re-roof of the main house and stables carried out by Rowsell Roofing through the winter, requiring the scaffolding to be fully sheeted.
The design of the roof with the natural Welsh slates, which are guaranteed for 100 years, was straightforward, with a parapet gutter to the front, valley gutter in the centre and drain to guttering at the rear.
Landmark Trust surveyor and Belmont project manager Carole Paton said: “Welsh Slate was specified as it was the original material so it needed to be in keeping with the building but it was also specified for its quality and longevity.”
She added: “We favour natural products which are in tune with historic buildings. It was part of our desire to produce a high-quality job that will perform for 100 years plus.”
ENDS
Photo : The Landmark Trust
Notes to Editors:
- The Landmark Trust is a charity founded in 1965 that rescues historically-important and at-risk buildings and sensitively restores them into self-catering holiday accommodation, making them available to be enjoyed and experienced by all. The rental income pays for the buildings’ upkeep but Landmark relies on grants and voluntary sources of income to rescue further buildings at risk. Full details of Landmark’s 197 buildings are available on the website at http://www.landmarktrust.org.uk . Enquiries and bookings can also be made on 01628 825 925.
- Belmont is a fine surviving example of an eighteenth-century maritime villa, now available for self-catering holidays. It sleeps up to eight people at prices from £660 (less than £21 per person per night). For more information see: http://www.landmarktrust.org.uk/search-and-book/properties/belmont-25015
- For media enquiries about Landmark please contact Amy Taylor on ataylor@landmarktrust.org.uk or 01628 512 159