A pleasing Georgian house in the Chilterns made to work for modern family life
“Apparently lots of people fell in love with the front of this house when they viewed it,” says interior designer Jennifer Pelzig of her very charming 18th-century house in the Chilterns, “but they couldn't necessarily work out how to live here as a family in the modern world. But I love a challenge.” Moving out of London with her husband and young children, Jennifer had been looking for an abundance of space and a quick and easy renovation, and this house offered neither, but the charm of the exterior and the lovely village location were too hard to resist.
The house is classically Georgian and pleasingly symmetrical from the outside, but inside things were a little more confusing, with discrete spaces, especially on the ground floor, that weren’t going to work particularly well for family life. “What was very nice about the house,” says Jennifer, “is that the previous owners had been there for about 35 years, and it felt very loved – there was the sense of it already being a home. They had worked on the house with great care, but their renovations had been decades ago, and it’s just a different era now where people live in a different way.” Some of the features added in by the previous owners, such as the conservatory, felt particularly dated, and so Jennifer’s mission was to create an interior that felt more sensitive to the period and location, with simple but beautiful chimneypieces, shutters and mouldings.
Their principal structural renovations involved opening up the space between the kitchen and the conservatory, lending a sense of generosity to the former and making the latter into a more elegant room that functions as a playroom for the children during the day. “Inevitably small children want to be wherever you are,” Jennifer remarks. “It’s nice to imagine a lovely playroom on an upper floor where they will just go and play nicely, but it doesn't work like that – they're in and amongst what's going on. It was important to make the layout work for how we actually live.” That’s not to say, however, that the interior was to be given over to children’s needs entirely. At the front of the house the couple maintained an elegant sitting room and dining room, while even the playroom is well-equipped with an enormous antique cupboard into which Lego and Mr Potato Head can be stuffed at the end of the day. “It enables my husband and me to act like we’re just two grown-ups having a nice drink together,” she laughs.
The other major element of the renovation was transforming the long, low outhouse that sits just across a small terrace from the back of the playroom. Previously a garage and a few poky utility and storage spaces that were all closed off from one another, it is now light and sleek, with a spare room at one end, a tiny study area for Jennifer in the middle, a utility room and a gym. “We ummed and aahed about trying to fit the utility room into the main house, but actually I’ve really enjoyed having it in the annexe, because it means we're in and out of there every single day and the space feels alive and part of the house.”
Antiques, vintage pieces and reclaimed materials form a strong thread that runs through the house, lending their age and patina to the serene, organic backdrop that Jennifer has created. The pantry she has built into the kitchen has superbly distressed salvaged doors, while the utility room features a worktop from an old school laboratory as well as a reclaimed sink and taps. Remarkably, for a young family’s house where there is presumably plenty of stuff to contend with, there is very little built-in furniture. Jennifer pulled out bookshelves on either side of the fireplace in the sitting room and filled the spaces with an unusual cabinet and chest instead. Even upstairs in the three lovely bedrooms, Jennifer has chosen antique chests, wardrobes and shelves that are both practical and beautiful. “I love that they're all movable objects,” she explains. “You can actually change the way the house looks and feels from season to season and year to year as needs change. I don’t think a house can or should be static, where you say, ‘right that’s it, it’s done, finished, it won’t move.’ I’m about to start a reshuffle of the boys’ rooms as they’ve grown up a bit since I did them, and that’s easy to do when everything is freestanding.”
This ability to move things was quite a conscious choice. “We all have lots of sides to our personality,” says Jennifer, and it can sometimes be quite hard to decide which one you’re going to commit to in your house. I remember when we got married, and I went to choose my wedding dress and I thought how difficult it was to choose just one, because there were so many I liked, and so many different moods and versions of myself that I could have explored. Decorating your house is similar. It can be a bit overwhelming to think, ‘OK, I have to have this kitchen for the next 20 years.’ But if you go for antiques and bits you’ve picked up on your travels, you can always change them."