A Home with a History: close encounters with the
18th century in Spitalfields House
https://inigo.com/almanac/home-with-a-history-phillip-lucas-spitalfields-house
In a double-fronted house in Spitalfields, overlooked
by sparkling skyscrapers, lawyer Phillip Lucas has fulfilled his dream of
recreating an 18th-century house in painstaking detail. Were it not for the
radiators, you’d hardly know you weren’t jostling with the Georgians
“I love
drabs,” exclaims Phillip Lucas. He is standing in his house in east London,
surrounded by glinting foxed mirrors and giltwood frames. Elsewhere, paintings
of pink-pouted boys in scarlet frock coats vie for attention with burr-walnut
bureaus and giltwood torchères. The heart stops as often as the eye does in
this temple of beautiful, precious things, which makes this lawyer’s soft spot
for sludgy colours a tad surprising, until you take in the setting. This former
merchant’s house in Spitalfields has been restored – uncompromisingly,
exactingly – to its 18th-century origins, drabs and all.
Phillip has
spent a decade forensically restoring a building that, when he bought it, was
barely recognisable as having anything worth saving. Now everything is, if not
original to the house, then contemporary to it (save, of course, for the odd
light switch and radiator. We can forgive him the odd mod con).
Was it love
that got him here? Obsession? It was likely a bit of both, though it is
Phillip’s determination and his deep understanding of the period that has made
it possible. Without architects, he has somehow recreated an 18th-century house
so perfectly one can almost hear the stairs creaking under the feet of former
occupants. An incorrigible collector, he has amassed a wealth of coeval
treasures along the way, so plentiful it has rather outgrown his home. Much
will be going under the hammer at Dreweatts on 2 December; yet more is for sale
on the website Phillip has launched with antique dealer Sam Wadham,
straightforwardly called Spitalfields House. Showing Inigo around, he waxes
lyrical about the joys and pitfalls, the challenges and romance of engineering
this atavistic encounter with the past. “We all need a purpose,” he says. “And
I think this is probably as good a purpose as any other.”
“We moved
in in March 2010 and immediately started pulling up the carpets. I was in court
every day, then back here at night pulling up flooring in my suit, trying to
find out if there were 18th-century boards beneath. It wasn’t entirely
successful; there was a lot of plywood! But we did manage to salvage enough
boards to redo two full rooms. It took two more years to source enough
18th-century pine boards to match.
“All of the
panelling in here is original, apart from in the basement, which was originally
split into two – a wet kitchen and a dry kitchen. That part of the house had
apparently survived intact until about 1989, when a company moved in and ripped
it all out. They dug down about three feet, removed all the flagstones, built a
breezeblock partition, covered the walls in cement and installed a melamine
kitchen, two fire safes, eight loos and six urinals. That was our kitchen for
couple of years, as there was too much else to do in the house, but one
Christmas Day I’d had enough. I came down with a sledgehammer and set to it,
creating what can only be described as a mushroom cloud of dust. I wasn’t
particularly popular that Christmas, though I did get the number of loos down
to one.
“Most
people, when they buy a building, are interested in paint colours, or where
they’ll put their furniture. It wasn’t like that here. This house was a Gordian
knot on epic proportions; we couldn’t broach one issue without tackling three
or four others at the same time. We just had to dive in. I know people say you
must have a plan, and I suppose if it had been an architect managing the
project rather than a lawyer, we would have done. But the reality is that even
when you do have a plan, you just can’t legislate for every eventuality. This
goes against every bit of advice you’ll ever hear, but I believe that thinking
about things too deeply can be paralysing.
“There were
many unexpected moments in this project, but one particularly stands out. A
neighbour told me that they’d noticed a bulge on the front of the house. A
structural engineer came and found out that the only thing that was stopping
the façade from falling on to the street was a piece of timber lining the
shutters. We had to funnel all our resources into stopping that part of the
house collapsing. You just can’t prepare for that sort of thing, especially in
houses such as these, which truly have a mind of their own. At one point I
thought it had something of a malign spirit. It was like it didn’t want to be
restored. You’d light a fire in one room and another would start filling up
with smoke. You’d fix one leak, repaint the ceiling and a week later one would
spring from elsewhere. But after 10 years we’ve got there. I can finally start
thinking about paint colours.
“This house
is round the corner from Dennis Severs’; he was doing something similar a long
time before I was, but the effect is very different. He wanted to create
something theatrical, an 18th-century conversation piece. I want what I’m doing
to be authentic, not theatrical, but I accept that my idea of what is
authentically 18th-century is completely different to someone else’s. Nobody,
in truth, really knows what furniture they would have had in these houses –
though I admit it probably wasn’t a William Kent console. And so, when I say
authentic, what I mean is that I don’t want anything in here that is pretending
to be something else. I couldn’t put anything reproduction in here, save for
perhaps a missing bit of moulding.
“I’m not
trying to impart my personality on these rooms. I’m trying to get them back to
how they would have been as best I can. It takes time, though – it took us
longer to rebuild two chimney stacks than it took for a whole skyscraper to go
up behind the house. But it’s worth it, for the feeling you get being here.
When I moved into my first house on this street, I moved in with nothing more
than a card table and a chamber stick. I’ve never forgotten that evening,
walking up the dog-leg staircase through flickering shadows. It was never
better than that magical moment. That’s the feeling I’m trying to create.”
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