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F


or self-builders in the south west, it has become common to buy up a past-it mid-20th century cheaply- built bungalow with a priceless coastal view, and raze


it to the ground to create a modern glass and concrete ocean pad. Glass-enclosed, flat-roofed white modernist homes have become something of a Cornish vernacular in architectural terms.


But for those looking to stretch the skills of their architect – not to mention their own sanity – working with an existing building can offer much more of a challenge. All the


decisions to be made can make it an architectural adventure: which bits to keep and what bits to get rid of? Can a modernist twist work in a traditional setting? For the brave, the spoils can be ultimately more rewarding than a complete new build with a bespoke design incorporating all that is best across distinct eras.


Jason and Fiona Ellis undertook just such a challenge when they bought a 200-year-old and unloved cottage on Cornwall’s sought-after Roseland Peninsula. Homes here rarely come on the market – so the Ellis family snapped it


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