Gun Hill, The Farmhouse

P.Joseph
P.Joseph

Gun Hill is a late 17th-century farm secluded among the marshlands of the North Norfolk Coast. The Dutch gables of its Queen Anne farmhouse reflecting the area’s ties to continental Europe via shipping routes in the 1600s.

P. Joseph conceived a renovation and extension which would understand and enhance the farmhouse’s historic identity, creating a modern country retreat anchored by a deep sense of place and vernacular materiality. The project recovers the farm’s connection with the surrounding landscape, fostering an immersive relationship with the vast skies and wild beauty of the setting.

P.Joseph
P.Joseph
P.Joseph

The walled garden was used as an organising boundary for a new, low-lying extension that disappears in the distant views of the Norfolk landscape. The extension, which links to a restored cartshed and substantially increases the footprint of the property, was built using traditional building techniques and local materials, including bespoke bricks by Bulmer Brick & Tile to match the 17th-century originals, grounding the architecture in its setting and establishing visual and spatial cohesion between old and new.

P.Joseph
P.Joseph
P.Joseph
P.Joseph
P.Joseph

Bulmer Brick & Tile in Suffolk has produced hand-made bricks on the same site since around 1450, using London clay dug on-site and a coal-fired down-draught kiln—making it one of the last surviving medieval-style brickyards in England.

We start backwards. We look at an old house and its history. We work out why the bricks were made the way they were and how they were made, what techniques were used at that time.

Peter Minter, The Bulmer Brick and Tile Company

P.Joseph

A site image showing the construction of the new, single storey brick extensions.

P.Joseph
P.Joseph
P.Joseph
P.Joseph

The restoration of the 18th-century panelling in the farmhouse was guided by the sketches of former Spitalfields Trust Director Tim Whittaker

P.Joseph

Gun Hill, The Farmhouse

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Gun Hill, The Farmhouse

Gun Hill is a late 17th-century farm secluded among the marshlands of the North Norfolk Coast. The Dutch gables of its Queen Anne farmhouse reflecting the area’s ties to continental Europe via shipping routes in the 1600s.

P. Joseph conceived a renovation and extension which would understand and enhance the farmhouse’s historic identity, creating a modern country retreat anchored by a deep sense of place and vernacular materiality. The project recovers the farm’s connection with the surrounding landscape, fostering an immersive relationship with the vast skies and wild beauty of the setting.

Working in consultation with Tim Whittaker of the Spitalfields Trust, P. Joseph re-established the original proportions and detailing in the farmhouse, and the walled garden was used as an organising boundary for a new, low-lying extension that disappears in the distant views of the Norfolk landscape. The extension, which links to a restored cart house and substantially increases the footprint of the property, was built using traditional building techniques and local materials, including bespoke bricks by Bulmer Brick & Tile to match the 17th-century originals, grounding the architecture in its setting and establishing visual and spatial cohesion between old and new.