This week we have a grand Victorian townhouse on Fremont street in London: a peaceful, horseshoe-shaped one way street in Hackney. The nineteenth century design provides peace and privacy within an otherwise bustling area of fashionable East London. Decorative iron railings and border stone steps lead to a wooden paneled front door with elegant pilasters and cornice.
The entrance hall is typically Victorian with its vista of long wooden staircases and a neat sash window in the downstairs lavatory; there are reclaimed floorboards and the walls and woodwork have been painted with a range of soothing tones. Reproduction radiators in a Victorian style have been fitted throughout the house, along with antique finished light switches and power outlets set on period oak pattresses.
The ground floor has a double-bay living room with a built-in library and office at the rear, paneled in oak with ox-blood red leather floors. In the central bay of the living area is a red marble fireplace with a stone hearth and brass fender. To maintain the Victorian nature of the living suite, a wooden cabinet for a large screen TV has been built into the front bay. Also on the ground floor is a bathroom, fitted with bespoke cabinetry and decorated with a blue and white striped wallpaper.
The lower ground floor has a Plain English kitchen painted in a neutral palette with stone flooring, a gas AGA and an electric stove finished with a Moroccan tile backsplash, and underfloor heating; there is also a wine cellar off the kitchen. Adjoining the kitchen, in an open plan, is the dining room, with a unique metal wood burning stove and double-glazed doors leading to the back garden.
On the first floor, overlooking the street, is the spacious master bedroom, with an ornate fireplace and two large windows; adjoining is a whimsical en-suite bathroom papered in a romantic Anna French Blue Toile wallpaper. The room has cozy underfloor heating, a deep freestanding roll top bath with an elegant antique shower and circular rail. Joining the en-suite and the bedroom is a dressing room with fitted wardrobes.
At the rear of the first floor is the family bathroom, decorated in a muted green color palette with an original iron fireplace and a deep freestanding copper bath. On the landing outside the bath is another set of functional, fitted cupboards, adding to the plentiful storage in the house.
On the second floor are two bedrooms. The front bedroom is painted in a fresh white tone with a panel-boarded ceiling, a pair of sash windows and another iron fireplace with a tiled hearth. In the second bedroom William Morris’s ‘Garden Tulip’ print has been used to paper the entire room.
This city house is lucky enough to have a private garden with a little selection of mature trees and shrubs overhanging wooden decking and a set of steps. Victoria Park and London Fields are both a five-minute walk from the house. Weekend markets take place at Victoria Park and Broadway Market and some of London’s most exciting restaurants are within easy reach.
Charming, and with potential, and some very nice historic and contemporary features, but it doesn’t sing to me. And I can’t even say exactly why.
ReplyDeletePerhaps it's humming more of a dirge???
DeleteThat may be it. I find it depressing.
DeleteThose floors!
ReplyDeleteI know somebody who lives in a Victorian and I love his house. They're so quaint! I like how this one seems very economic in space but still has tons of light. I am not a wallpaper person, so I'd have to rethink that room, though...
XOXO
I loathe wallpaper, but if wallpaper an entire room, I think you have pizzazz!
Deletexoxo
Thanks, but no thanks.
ReplyDeleteI would enjoy staying there for a long weekend but wouldn't want to live there.
ReplyDeleteOh I could ... London ... old world charm ... a garden!!!
DeleteNo I absolutely adore and love this. First off I'm glad the house is shown with no furnishings. I think we all tend to look at the Furnishings and not the house. Now I can look at this and see the potential in it. And I actually like the size of it . I don't need a lot of space. That kitchen is amazing. This just has so much character that you don't see in new builds today. And I loved that the bathroom sink look like a table. I've always liked that. Plus it's in London what more do you want? If I moved in I would actually keep the same window treatments that's what they're showing to carry that Vibe through the house
ReplyDeleteI agree it's better to see the space and not how the space is furnished! I, too, could move in as is and love it.
DeleteToo dark and dreary.
ReplyDeleteA red front door, some colorful furnishings, some great art .... bing bang boom!
DeleteThat would cost a mint.
ReplyDeleteAnd I am a couple of Euros short of a mint!
DeleteThe exterior doesn't scream Victorian, but the inside does. The whole place is nice --- except the wallpaper in that bedroom would give me nightmares! Yeah, that would have to come off.
ReplyDeleteI love the interiors and actually, while I am no fan of wallpaper, love it all over the walls and ceilings!
Delete😲 Yikes! This one is an easy call for me! I am a born and raised androgynous American tomboy. The cramped "froo-froo" of Victorian England is only interesting to me in movies...and many times not even then!! Thanks for sharing though!! 🤭
ReplyDeleteI like the smaller, segregated rooms; have a dinner party and work your way from the front parlor to the back parlor to the dining room and finished with coffee and brandy in the garden!
Deletethe dog's mother
ReplyDeleteWonder why they didn't turn
the lights on?
xoxo :-)
Maybe to get that "victorian" feel???
Deletexoxo
Wallpaper on the ceiling: NO, NO, NO!
ReplyDeleteAnd I hate the bathtubs.
Hackney is a hip little neighborhood, but if I were investing £1.62m in property I think I'd want something more modern.
I love a wallpapered ceiling while I generally loathe wallpaper. I adore the tubs, filled with hothothot soapy, bubbly water!
DeleteOk---Love it---I see the potential---London may sound nice but the year round weather is dreadful---The first thing I would do is remove the drapery----Just because you put up Victorian drapes does not make it a Victorian home----I love the floor plan----The only potential issue is the second floor bedrooms with no bathroom----One would have to go down a flight of stairs to do so----Thank god I am not at the point that I have to wake up at night for a whiz----The horrid "Garden Tulip wallpaper with the fireplace and dinkey chandler will have to go----That cooper tub is against a plastered wall and what could go wrong----While we are at it, lets step back and think about that sink surround----They say unruly water is your worst nightmare in a home---Let's give that space a second look----And let's venture to the "Anna French Blue Toile" bathroom and ponder that tub----That's a high hurdle to overcome to bathe----I love an older home that is preserved and not stripped to the inch of it's life----Just bring it up to 2025 without loosing its character and time details----
ReplyDeleteAh, you're just nitpicking the tubs. I see a great soaking tub where I could soak for hours sipping a smooth red and readings a good book!
DeleteWhat a stunning renovation! I love how the Victorian charm has been so thoughtfully preserved while incorporating modern comforts like underfloor heating and the Moroccan tile backsplash.
ReplyDeleteThe ox-blood leather floors and red marble fireplace add such richness to the space. Each room feels carefully designed yet cohesive—especially the whimsical en-suite with that lovely Anna French wallpaper.
The garden and proximity to Victoria Park are real bonuses too. This is truly a dream home in East London!
I think you love the same things that I do. I love the kind of quirkiness to it, but with some modern touches.
DeleteCharmant pied-à-terre à Londres :)
ReplyDeleteAvec du travail, cela pourrait être un maison de rêve.
-Beau Mec à Deauville
Charming pied-à-terre in London :) With some work, this could be a dream home.
Delete-Handsome Guy in Deauville
Je suis d'accord. C'est très charmant.
I agree. It is very charming.
It's very English, and why should it not be, but I think I would prefer it to be more open but that's probably not possible..
ReplyDeleteI am so tired of all these wide open spaces where one room has ten to twelve different uses, so I like the separateness of it.
DeleteNot a big fan of that wallpaper but otherwise a very charming and historical home
ReplyDeleteAdam
NEKORANDOM.COM
I think I like wallpaper when it's everywhere ...
DeleteHmmm. Interesting, but it needs quite a bit of work. I agree with Deedles that it's dreary.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
I just think the photos were taken without lights on and that makes it seem dreary. I'd move in in a heartbeat!
DeleteI was curious about the "oxblood red leather floors" but didn't see any though I went through twice. I did notice a lot of flooring that needs sanding, staining and polishing, perhaps it has recently had the carpeting or other type covering removed? I love the dining table and chairs. HATE that blue floral room.
ReplyDeleteI love the old floors as they are; much more character.
DeleteAll that dark furniture and dark wood (not to mention that horrendous wallpaper) would do my head in. It may be a lovely location but the seeming lack of natural light would be a definite no for me!
ReplyDeleteI don't know why they took so many photos with the lights off. It's not a selling point!
DeleteA lot of stairs for me, only one room scared me, the dark flowers wallpapered room. Thanks to my grandmother, I qualify for a 5-year long stay visa in England.
ReplyDeleteGo!!! Take it!!! Buy the house and make it a B&B and I'll schedule my visit. I'll even sleep in the wallpapered room!
DeleteI think it's gorgeous, especially the old wide plank wooden floors, and would leave them as they are, distressed and endless stories of those who walked there before.
ReplyDeleteI might remove the ceiling wallpaper in the second upstairs bedroom but otherwise I don't mind it at all. Though I do agree, photos with the lights on would have been much better.
I agree about the floors; I love the age of them.
DeleteA very nice townhouse that needs some TLC in a great location.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately housing is so expensive in London and South England that some have bought less expensive homes in Northern France and commute back to England. 🇬🇧
I think I might enjoy the commute from France to England!!
Delete