John Soane’s First House Is For Sale

The first house that the British neoclassicist completed after his Grand Tour.

1 MIN READ

A bricklayer’s son, John Soane apprenticed with Henry Holland and George Dance the Younger before getting his big break: a £180 travel scholarship for a bridge design he exhibited at the Royal Academy. The trip to Italy served Soane well, exposing him to new architecture and potential clients. In 1783, the prime minister’s brother, architectural dilettante Lord Camelford, asked Soane to renovate a country house in Norfolk, Burnham Westgate Hall. The job gave Soane his first crack at the building type.

As currently configured, the house has 13 bedrooms and 12 baths, and it sits on a 38-acre property. The asking price: $10.1 million.


About the Author

Ned Cramer

Ned Cramer served as editor-in-chief of ARCHITECT from the publication’s founding in 2006 until 2020, and as vice president, editorial, at Hanley Wood.

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