“Architect Eric Lyons believed landscape was not just the treatment of space left between buildings, but the arrangement of buildings to create spaces” - Historic England
This cleverly designed Span house lies on the award-winning Westfield Estate in Ashtead, which is one of the best-preserved of all of the Span estates. The three-bedroom house was designed by the architect Eric Lyons and built by the renowned modernist development company Span in the late 1960s. It is a Type K2C house, which has a separate study that can also be used as a fourth bedroom. Original features have been carefully retained, with sensitive updates added. The house has a private, south-facing rear garden, as well as the use of five and a half acres of beautifully maintained gardens and a tennis court on the estate.
History
Westfield is one of 30 housing estates built across the UK between 1948 and 1984 by the development company Span, for whom Eric Lyons was the chief architect. Widely praised when built, and still much-loved today for their well-designed houses and intelligent and attractive landscaping, Span estates are a rare triumph of modern British mass housing. In his book The Spirit of Span Housing, James Strike writes that: "Span housing was the inspiration of two young men, who, during the 1930s, met as architectural students at the Regent Street Polytechnic. Eric Lyons and Geoffrey Townsend both had a keen interest in modern architecture […] They believed that there was a market for well-designed houses in carefully designed landscapes for the sort of people who recognised good design when they saw it – and they were right."
In an article published in The Guardian in May 2007, the architecture critic Tom Dyckhoff wrote of Span houses: “From the 40s to 80s, architect Eric Lyons and developer Geoffrey Townsend built estates to 'span the gap' between jerry-built suburbia and architect-designed pads. Sharp, modern designs with space, light and well-planned interiors, plus lavishly landscaped communal gardens designed to foster a sense of community.”
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