Few, if any, agricultural conversions completed in the wilds of England possess the sensitivity and consideration of The Drift. Within the open countryside of Suffolk, this farmstead of forgotten industrial forms has undergone a loving program of innovation and adaptive reuse to create a home, more a retreat, of applaudable balance and vision. In recognition of this, The Drift has been deservedly announced as the winner of two regional RIBA East awards.
The Drift is the work and home of the architect Marcus Lee, famed for his many brilliant projects on challenging sites from London to the Isle of Mull, and Corinna Dean, an architectural educator, urbanist and artist, and author of two editions of Slacklands; bodies of work very much pertinent to the recognition of the site’s potential.
The project consists of four separate structures: a steel-framed grain-drying shed and silo, a concrete-framed Dutch barn and a 14th century Grade II listed barn. Their proximity to one another clearly presented an opportunity to the right eyes, offering the possibility of gentle unification.
Through an exercise in restraint and a mantra of low-intervention, permission under Class Q was achieved. Rather than creating something on the footprint that juxtaposes its surroundings, as is so often preferred, the conversion refreshingly retains its visual heritage. Only solar panels on the Grainshed would give away the game from above.