The semi-detached house – the icon of middle-class aspiration, the pinnacle of liberalism yet at the same time compromised individuality, the ‘semi’ as it is colloquially termed is, for many Brighouse homeowners, the highpoint of modern domestic bliss.
Britain’s
gift to architecture is the humble ‘Semi-Detached House’. This type of property
has been exported around the world with - the ‘Doppel Haus’ in Germany,
the ‘Duplex’ in the USA, Canada and Australia.
For
those young, hip and trendy people living in your converted warehouses with
strobe lighting and exposed brickwork, it might surprise you the semi is the
dream home of an immense number of Brighouse people. In fact, it is the most
common dwelling type in the British Isles, with 8,060,657 semi-detached homes occupied
by Brits alone (representing 31.68% of all occupied property) compared to
23.81% detached, 25.49% terraced and 19.02% flats.
In Brighouse
alone, there are 5,571 semi-detached houses meaning…
36.6% of properties in Brighouse are semi-detached.
So,
when did the semi-detached house first come into play? Many people think the
semi-detached boom started with mass swathes of the suburban mock Tudor bay-fronted
semis being built between the first and second world wars. The fact is actually
that rich landowners in the post Great Plague (1665+) years wished to house
their farm labourers as inexpensively as possible, yet making their grand estates
look as imposing as possible.
And that’s the point of a semi-detached house. Only half the
property is yours, yet you ‘feel’ like you own it all.
The
next phase of the semi-detached story, and a phase that really pushed home the point,
were many of the late Georgian houses built around the Kensington Gardens area
in West London. Many upper-middle class Georgians were wanting something more
than the classic Georgian terraced house yet couldn’t afford a large detached
home. Therefore, architects took the humble semi-detached house to the next
stage of its evolution by masquerading the building itself as one home by slipping
its two front doors down opposite sides of the building, making it look
like one home from the front, to complete the impression of total ownership.
By
Victorian times, semi-detached houses fell out fashion as the railways were
building many of them for their railway workers and they became associated with
the lower working classes, but speculative builders continued building
semi-detached homes for the new lower middle class, that is the reason why
ultimately the country is full of semi-detached homes today.
The semi-detached house was saved from the annals of history by the
Bedford Park development in Ealing (London). Referred to as the world's first
‘garden suburb’ and started in the 1870’s, the architect of Bedford Park used
influences of the Aesthetic Movement, the precursor to the Arts and Craft Movement
to make the buildings look more pleasing on the eye. The architect also took
reference from the style of properties from British history such as Queen Ann
to be seen in such features as a sweep of steps leading to a carved stone door,
rows of painted sash windows in boxes set flush with the brickwork and bright
coloured brickwork with limestone stone quoins emphasising the
building’s corner.
As
the car enabled people to commute to work from further away, people wanted to
get out of the big cities, thus giving rise to the interwar semi, with its mock Tudor
fronted, rosemary tiled roof, oak beamed, herringbone brickwork and the leaded
and stained glass windowpanes that we all recognise. It was
Bedford Park that gave the green light for architects up and down the country
to use old styles of building design to make their semi-detached houses look
the part.
And
now, in more modern times, the semi-detached house has gone from strength to
strength.
2,688 of Brighouse semi-detached houses have changed hands
since 1995, many upwards of 5 times (and a handful even more).
The
semi continues to appeal, both to big national builders and smaller Brighouse
developers, and most importantly to home buyers. The advantage of semi-detached
houses over town houses/terraced houses or apartments is they afford access to
their (typically bigger) gardens without having to pass through the house, and
they have natural sunlight on three sides of the property, are easily
extendable and quite often have a driveway.
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