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The Ryde VII

Hatfield, Hertfordshire

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Architect: Phippen, Randall & Parkes

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“An astonishing vision of mid-century aesthetics, lovingly preserved amidst private and communal gardens”

This thoughtfully preserved four-bedroom mid-terrace house forms part of the renowned Grade II-listed Cockaigne Housing Group, a 1960s development in Hatfield, Hertfordshire. The fluid open-plan living spaces are configured across a single-storey; the house retains an abundance of original features, including floor-to-ceiling glazing, pine-clad interiors and sliding plywood partitions. There is off-street parking, a garage, gardens to the front and rear and an internal courtyard. The house is a 10-minute walk from Hatfield Station, from which services run to London.

History

Considered by English Heritage as “the leading English manifestation of the courtyard home”, The Ryde is deemed to be one of the finest post-war housing schemes in Britain. The Cockaigne Housing Group was originally the idea of Michael Baily, a journalist at The Times, who was inspired by communal housing projects created in Scandinavia. In 1962 he placed an advert in The Times seeking support for his project and the response allowed him to put his plan into action. Later that year, Baily met the architects Peter Randall and David Parkes, both of whom had worked on an "adaptable house" that had gained a lot of attention at the Ideal Home Exhibition in London and were perfect for this project. However, Baily's efforts to find suitable land in London proved fruitless; instead, he persuaded the Hatfield Development Corporation to give over almost three acres of land on a long-term lease.

The Ryde was Randall and Parkes' first commission, enabling them to establish PRP Architects with Peter Phippen. The practice was hugely influenced by the brave new world spirit of the Festival of Britain and by contemporary research carried out by The Ministry of Housing and the Local Government Research and Development Group where Randall and Parkes had worked. The practice was set apart by its philosophy of designing for and with the individuals and the communities who would occupy the houses. Fundamentally they saw themselves as functionalists, at the zeitgeist of mid-century architectural thinking. They too looked to Scandinavia for inspiration, particularly towards Denmark.

With The Ryde, Baily commented, they sought “to work out afresh the needs of a family of today.” There was a desire to balance holistically communal aspects of the scheme whilst maintaining the privacy of each house. The scheme was conceived as a long, low terrace of single-storey houses. The focus, however, was on each individual dwelling and taken as a whole the community is without grand formal expression. Each house has its own street frontage of two staggered bays that stretch inwards towards a hidden communal garden. The wider of the bays, approximately 3.6m in width, contains the principle living areas whilst the subsidiary bay of bedrooms and bathrooms is approximately 2.4 – 2.6m in width. Numerous variations were generated from these fundamentals, giving one to four bedrooms and one or more internal courtyards that brought light and air into the centre of the deep plans.

This unique development of courtyard houses received widespread recognition and made way for similar PRP Architects schemes at Shrublands and Forestfield. Its historical significance was recognised in 2006 with a Grade II listing. It remains an iconic project of its day.

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