Insulation Specialist Helps Preserve Historic Hoppers’ Hut

14 March 2024

Insulation Specialist Helps Preserve Historic Hoppers' Hut|Insulation Specialist Helps Preserve Historic Hoppers' Hut|Insulation Specialist Helps Preserve Historic Hoppers' Hut

A KENT building firm has been helping to preserve some of England’s architectural and agricultural heritage, while ensuring the new occupants enjoy a cosier experience than its original residents, with help from insulation specialist Actis.

Brian Taylor and colleagues from Tonbridge-based TW Projects are rebuilding and extending a historic hoppers’ hut in East Peckham to create a 150 sq m single storey home which offers the rustic charm of 19th century rural living without the privations endured by the hop pickers who lived there.

To create this ideal balance between history and thermal comfort, TW Projects used products from the Actis Hybrid range which enabled them to achieve a U-value of 0.14 in the walls and 0.15 in the roof.

Brian and his team installed two layers of honeycomb 105mm insulation Actis Hybris in the roof. They used insulating breather membrane Actis Boost R Hybrid, 140mm Hybris and 50mm of PIR in the walls of the timber frame extension and the stud walls created within the original structure.

Building work being carried out on hoppers' hut

Historic Hoppers’ Hut

Hoppers’ huts were built as temporary accommodation for hop pickers on Kent farms in the 19th and 20th centuries. Many seasonal workers moved in for the harvest from the capital, with reports of around a quarter of a million Londoners travelling to Kent for the season by the early 20th century.

Huts averaged around 80 sq ft, with some as ‘large’ as 200 sq ft.

While early hoppers’ huts were made of timber, latterly clad with corrugated iron, they began to be made with bricks after the 1850 abolition of the brick tax.

Exterior, single skin walls were 9 inches thick, but by the 1930s and 1940s some were built of 18 inches by 9 inches breeze blocks or pre-cast concrete.

The limewashed huts generally had an earth floor, and were lit by candles or paraffin lamps. Water would be via a standpipe and hop pickers shared a toilet block with an earth closet and a communal cookhouse.

This is a far cry from the experience of the new residents of the revamped piece of agricultural heritage who will enjoy their own private bathroom and a kitchen with all mod cons.

>> Read more about Actis in the news

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