
This inventive three-bedroom house, positioned on the broad shingle expanse of Dungeness, encloses an original train carriage from the 1880s. Renovated to sit in harmony with its coastal position, the home has a neutral palette intended to create a seamless interaction with the surrounding landscape. A large south-facing garden unfolds at the rear, filled with a variety of flora and fauna (including sea cabbages) indigenous to Dungeness’s 468-acre nature reserve, which is designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).
Please note that we are unaware of any lenders providing mortgages on this type of house at the present time.
Setting the Scene
Dungeness is a resolutely unique landscape within England; its seemingly endless shingle-ridge shores have intrigued many over the centuries. The area was of military significance during the Napoleonic Wars and, later, served as a military training ground in the second world war. In 1987, artist and director Derek Jarman bought a former fisherman's hut, Prospect Cottage, in Dungeness, where he lived until his death in 1994. Now a popular visitors' site, the cottage is perhaps best known for Jarman's context-driven gardening: amid the shingle, he arranged driftwood sculptures and planted site-specific species.This home is one of 30 within the private estate at Dungeness that started life as traditional railway carriages. In the 1920s, the railway company enabled their workers to purchase rolling stock and drag them down onto the shingle beach, where many of the workers chose to remain. This building is oriented to the south, allowing the carriage's windows to frame a breathtaking vista across the shingle garden and out towards the beach. Occasionally, a sail can be spotted bobbing along the horizon.
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