“Reflecting on Corner Green in Blackheath some years after its completion, Eric Lyons judged it to 'have survived (or matured) as the best of all Span schemes'”
This three-bedroom house, built by development company Span in 1959, is located on the sought-after Cator Estate in Blackheath. It retains the essence of Eric Lyons' design, while having been elegantly remodelled inside with rigour and attention to detail by the current owner and Friend and Company architects who collaborated with renowned engineers Arup. A refined palette of wide Douglas fir boards by Dinesen, bare plaster and glass pays homage to the intentions of Span housing while bringing light and geometry to the centre of the house.
History
The development company Span built 30 housing estates between 1948 and 1984. In his book The Spirit of Span Housing, James Strike says: “Span housing was the inspiration of two young men, who, during the 1930s, met as architectural students at the Regent Street Polytechnic. Eric Lons 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.”
Span housing was the subject of an exhibition at the RIBA, and the accompanying book, entitled Eric Lyons & Span (ed Barbara Simms), gives a comprehensive survey of its history. “The work of the architect Eric Lyons,” it states, “is as well-loved now as it was vibrantly successful when first constructed. Built almost entirely for Span Developments, its mission was to provide an affordable environment ‘that gave people a lift’.”
Outlining the background to the Span Estate at Blackheath, it says: “Span’s attention had turned to the Cator Estate in Blackheath, a charming preserve of late 18th-century and early 19th-century terraces and villas[…] The area’s history was stoutly defended by the Blackheath Society, founded in 1937, and Blackheath Park – the core of the Cator Estate – was becoming admired for its ‘Regency character’. But many of the houses had been damaged beyond repair, and the long gardens and backland nurseries of Blackheath Park and the roads immediately to its north and south were ripe for speculative development.”
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