10 Dorchester Drive Explained

10 Dorchester Drive
Building Type:House
Architectural Style:Modernist, art deco
Location:Herne Hill
Address:10 Dorchester Drive
Location Town:London
Location Country:England
Start Date:1935
Floor Count:2
Architect:Leslie H. Kemp and Frederick E. Tasker

10 Dorchester Drive is a 1935 art deco style house in Herne Hill, south London, England, designed by Kemp and Tasker, with the builders Messrs Morrell of Bromley. In February 2022, an emergency Building Preservation Notice was put in place, as the building was threatened with imminent demolition. In June the same year it was Grade II listed.

Background

In 1934, Leslie H. Kemp and Frederick E. Tasker won the Ideal House Competition, to design a home for the Daily Mail Ideal Home Exhibition.[1] [2] Their design used the moderne branch of the art deco style that was then in vogue. A mock-up "show home" was constructed for the 1935 exhibition, at Olympia, London, in a display called "Village of Tomorrow".

One feature of the design was that the two downstairs reception rooms could be combined with the hallway, to feature as a ballroom.[3] [4]

The house

The five-bedroom house on Dorchester Drive, constructed in 1935–1936 by the speculative builders and twin brothers Cyril and Stanley Morrell (born 1908), is one of only three examples of the design built. The building was constructed with its plan at an angle to the street, rather than the more usual parallel alignment. It retains several of its original features, including the bathroom fittings, iron staircase, Crittall windows and a roof terrace.

Legal protection

The house was placed on the market in September 2021,[5] having been owned by one family for 60 years. Once it was sold, noting the attractiveness of its site to property developers and consequently the likely threat of its demolition, The Twentieth Century Society, the Herne Hill Society, and several individuals campaigned for its preservation. On 24 February 2022, Lambeth Council issued a Building Preservation Notice, preventing alteration or demolition, on pain of criminal prosecution. The order would have remained in effect for six months,[6] but in June 2022, the house was Grade II listed, giving it permanent protection.[7]

Residents

The house was the home of psychologist Hans Eysenck from 1960 until his death in 1997, and remained occupied by his widow Sybil until she died in 2020.

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rare South London Art Deco house saved from demolition – The Twentieth Century Society . . 26 February 2022.
  2. Web site: 10 Dorchester Drive . Modernist London . 26 February 2022 .
  3. Web site: 5 bedroom property for sale in Dorchester Drive, London, SE24 – £1,750,000 . Hamptons . 26 February 2022 .
  4. When is a house unique? . Marsh . Laurence . Herne Hill . Winter 2021 . 152 . Herne Hill Society .
  5. News: Chao-Fong . Leonie . Perfectly preserved Art Deco house that hasn't changed since the 1930s up for sale . . 24 September 2022.
  6. Web site: Historic England Advice on Building Preservation Notices and the Pilot Scheme on Indemnification by Historic England against Compensation . 26 February 2022 . November 2021.
  7. News: Beavis . Lauren . Smith . Steven . A peek inside 1930s Art Deco home that is one of just two left . 13 June 2022 . Wales Online . 13 June 2022 .