How Salvesen Graham brought an unusual Georgian house back to life
Being given carte blanche is something of a golden ticket for interior designers when it comes to taking on new projects–particularly when dealing with historic houses where so much of the building needs to be carefully preserved. However, in the case of the Clock House, Salvesen Graham were given something more akin to a carte rouge. Imagine this: you are told Jackie Onassis, style maven du jour, is coming to stay at your house. How do you react? Perhaps you buy some fresh new bedding, flowers, or you ensure the pantry is fully stocked. Or perhaps, as in the case of the Clock House’s previous owner, you decide there is only one thing for it: the red (fitted) carpet must be rolled out in every room.
Such was the state of the house, with wall to wall tomato-hued carpet in every room, when Nicole Salvesen and Mary Graham came to it in the spring of 2020. It was a house very much unloved and unlived in before the current custodians moved in half a decade ago. Formerly owned by a Swedish business magnate who used it as a holiday house, the building needed repairs and structural overhaul beyond the decorative brief the design team had been given. “Part of the process is to educate a client about what the house needs and deserves,” and why it’s “worth that investment,” the pair say. How to teach that lesson best? Earn their trust.
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That opportunity came knocking rather swiftly when the pandemic swept the globe just a week later. Mary, Nicole and their clients pulled together, leaning on Zoom meetings and WhatsApp group chats to connect and move forward with the project. “It made us this really tight-knit team." Buoyed by the open lines of communication and a long history of successful projects, the pair encouraged the owners to push their boundaries little by little.
Calling on Rupert Cunningham, the architectural designer and director of Ben Pentreath’s studio, they assessed how the family lived and interacted with the space, eventually beginning the project by moving the staircase and redirecting “the flow of the house.” Bedrooms became landings, dingy rooms became double height entrance halls and the “cold and draughty” gym became a grand dining room. Perhaps most radically of all, a room that contained nothing but a raised jacuzzi became a charming twin bedroom. “That was what was quite fun,” says Nicole. “The house really needed help,” adding that they needed to make sure the “bones of the house were absolutely right.”
Of course, when renovating a house like this one, it’s always important to “ensure the spirit of the renovation is sympathetic to its history without making a pastiche.” When it is suggested this mandate is inspired by Mary’s background at English Heritage, she counters: “It’s not about being so themed that every item in the house has to be within a ten year radius of the period… but anything feels better if it’s authentic.”
You might think that coronavirus, or moving a staircase, would be the largest possible problem to overcome in a project like this one, but there was a rarer issue for the team to negotiate. “There was sort of a funny thing,” laughs Mary, “although we didn't know about it until well into the project… the client was actually totally colour blind!” They continue, talking over one another in a playful way, “we were specifying green all over the place–it's pretty much our favourite colour." “Then it transpired close to the end of the project that he sees green as a funny colour which really doesn't look nice to him." It is quite a testament to the trust Mary and Nicole had inspired in the clients - that they were making all the right decisions - and also an explanation for how the client managed to live with those red fitted carpets for quite so many years.
A few months on from finishing the main house, Mary and Nicole returned to see how the interiors and house were functioning for the family. “It was actually pretty tidy, because there’s storage for everything, everything has its place and it’s comfortable,” says Nicole. Mary adds that “it’s a real pleasure to go back, to see that our work has enhanced the family's way of living and made things easier for them." Isn't that the most crucial thing of all?
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