Nashdom, also known as Nashdom Abbey, is a former country house and former Anglican Benedictine abbey in Burnham, Buckinghamshire, England. Designed in Neo-Georgian style by architect Edwin Lutyens, it is a Grade II* listed building. It was converted into apartments in 1997. The gardens are Grade II listed in the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.
The Princess wanted an additional residence, for royal guests and house parties.Amery and Richardson (1981), pp. 121–2. Lutyens visited the site in July 1905, thinking it beautiful but a very difficult one for the Princess's ideal house,Brown (1982), p. 168. which he thought would cost £20,000. Her initial budget was only £6,000, and they finally agreed on a design costing £15,000.Brown (1982), p. 159. Sources differ on the house's completion date, ranging from 1908, to 1911.
The Prince died, aged 68, in June 1915. Thereafter, the Princess lived in Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France, where she died in August 1919, aged 69. In her will, she left Nashdom for the use of the Dolgorouki family, under the stewardship of Serge Alexandrovitch Dolgorouki, aided by her executor, Herbert Brisbane Ewart.
The northwest, entrance front had an urban appearance, built tight against the road.
Massive and austerely neoclassical, it had at its centre a Doric order colonnade giving into the entrance porch, directly beyond which was, not the main entrance door, but access via a wrought iron gate into a semicircular courtyard. Instead, the main door was inside the porch on the left, giving access to the entrance hall. A door in the porch on the right gave access to the domestic service quarters.Pevsner, Williamson and Brandwood (1994), pp. 210–1.
The entrance hall contained two staircases. The main one, straight ahead from the door and wide, led up to the Big Room, the main room for entertaining. A second staircase, at right angles to the first and wide, led towards the suite of rooms on the garden front, via a grand landing. The landing had a wind dial on the wall, showing the wind direction superimposed on a local map. It was connected to a weathervane on the roof.
The southeast, garden front was much less severe than the entrance front, and has been called one of the most unusual of any Georgian house. Lutyens made extensive use of green-shuttered , spaced exceptionally close together. Along the garden front, starting from the eastern end, were a loggia, the Big Room, a circular drawing room fronted by a broad bow window, a glass-domed hall known as the Winter Garden, a dining room fronted by another bow window, and a smoking room. The bow windows continued up the facade, and the circular drawing room was surmounted by a circular bedroom. There was a semicircular dip in the centre of the facade, probably in order to let light into the glass dome.
The composer and musicologist Anselm Hughes was Nashdom's director of music, 1922–45, and prior, 1936–45. He died at Nashdom in 1974.Humphries and Evans (1997), p. 173. Another member of the community, Bernard Clements, became a broadcaster and the vicar of All Saints, Margaret Street, London.Rees (2000), pp. 28–30.
In September 2010 the remaining four monks moved again, into the Principal's House of Sarum College, in the cathedral close of Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire. In June 2011, they gained planning permission to build an extension to the house, including an oratory.
From the main lawn, a central path, originally an avenue lined with , leads southwards into mixed woodland, underplanted with . The small abbey cemetery is among the trees.
A number of Lutyens-designed features are Grade II listed buildings, including the rose garden wall, a stable, a gatehouse, and an alcove at the northern end of the former chestnut avenue.
Architecture
Abbey
Origins
Life
Daughter priory
Relocation
Apartment complex
Gardens
Notes
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