When the Ministry of Works opened up the design competition, some 1,400 designs were submitted. Reviewed by the
Building Research Station, many were rejected from the conceptual stage, such as the
British Powerboat Company's proposal for the
Jicwood all laminated plywood design; while others were only dismissed after the prototype stage, such as the steel framed
Riley. However, a few were approved after testing for construction.
Portal (Temporary Housing Programme prototype design) The first prototype to be unveiled was the motor industry contribution, a steel panelled experimental temporary bungalow called the Portal after the minister of works,
Lord Portal. With a floor area of , and an estimated cost of £600 constructed, and £675 fully furnished. It included a prefabricated slot-in kitchen and bathroom capsule, that included a pre-installed
refrigerator. The proposed rent was 10
shillings (50p) a week for a life of ten years.
Airey s in
Seacroft,
Leeds Developed by
Leeds based construction magnate
Sir Edwin Airey, it was easily recognisable by its precast concrete columns and walls of precast
shiplap concrete panels. Due to its variation of design, available with a flat or pitched roof, and with variations for rural or urban sites; it became one of the most prolific of the permanent designs.
AIROH (THP) The AIROH (Aircraft Industries Research Organisation on Housing) house was a , ten tonne all-
aluminium bungalow assembled from four sections, each to be delivered to the site on a lorry, fully furnished right down to the curtains. The proposed rate of production of complete houses was to be one every twelve minutes. This was possible because the completely equipped and furnished AIROH could be assembled from only 2,000 components, while the aircraft it would replace on the production line required 20,000. The parents of future
Labour Party leader
Neil Kinnock were allocated an AIROH, on which he commented:
Arcon (THP) Developed and constructed by
Taylor Woodrow, the Arcon was an asbestos-clad variant of the Portal, with the same prefabricated kitchen and bathroom capsule. It had a longer life, but also came with a higher cost of construction. The two bedrooms were approximately the same fairly generous size with picture windows which included an opening window. The kitchen was fitted with steel cupboards, drawers and an integral sink unit. A side door entered directly into the kitchen. A gas
copper, gas oven and hob, and a fitted-in gas fridge were incorporated into the inbuilt steel kitchen units. A drop-down wall-fitted table adjacent to a built-in larder was opposite the built-in units. The lounge had an open
coal fire, the heat from which heated a back boiler, thus giving "free" hot water. The bathroom had a full-size bath and fitted steel cupboards. There was a separate toilet. The lounge and both bedrooms had steel built-in cupboards and drawers. Arcons were so well fitted (in
Debden,
Loughton,
Essex) that the only furniture necessary were beds, kitchen chairs, lounge seating and floor coverings.
Chain-link fencing, a gate and a coal shed built with corrugated steel from
Anderson shelters and brick front and rear walls was also provided. Gardens were of sufficient size to grow vegetables, and many early residents quickly erected a chicken run.
BISF with modified (left) and original (right) cladding The BISF (
British Iron and Steel Federation) house is a permanent steel-frame house designed by architect
Sir Frederick Gibberd and constructed nationwide from 1946. The main structure is of steel columns with a central spine to support the first floor beams. It has distinctive upper
cladding made of steel, which makes a design feature out of the joining of the two prefabricated halves.
Cornish Unit ,
South Yorkshire. Designed by A Er v.senthil and R Tonkin for the Central Cornwall Concrete & Artificial Stone Co., they are also known as Cornish Type and Selleck Nicholls & Williams houses. The houses came in type-1 and type-2 designs, incorporating variations of a bungalow, two storey semi-detached and terraced layout with a medium pitched
Mansard hipped roof. The first floor is PRC clad over a single-storey concrete frame, while the type-1 house has the Mansard roof over timber trusses. Internal walls are made of PC wall block or brick. So successful was the design, 30,000 Cornish Unit houses were eventually constructed. However the roofs and wall insulation incorporated
asbestos, while the wooden frame-based construction means that as the concrete decays the two parts tend to separate, resulting in large amounts of internal cracking. The major defects are: • Horizontal and vertical cracking of PRC columns • High rates of carbonation and significant levels of chloride in PRC columns • Cracking of first floor ring beams
Hawksley A W Hawksley Ltd of
Hucclecote were formed in 1940 by the Hawker Siddeley group owners of the
Gloster Aircraft Company to build the
Albemarle aircraft designed by
Armstrong Whitworth. Post-Second World War, its parent company
Hawker Siddeley kept it open to supply prefab houses and bungalows to the MoW. After their MoW work finished, they continued exporting their buildings to
Australia,
New Zealand and
Uruguay into the 1960s. Their designs included: • BL8: an aluminium-clad timber-framed bungalow. As of 2014, the buildings are still maintained and occupied. The company later developed an aluminium house for the Margaret MacMillan Memorial Fund, for use in tropical overseas relief missions.
Howard Another designed by Sir Frederick Gibberd, the steel-framed design was privately promoted by John Howard & Company. A more industrial aesthetic design, and more adventurous in its use of innovative technologies. Asbestos cement cladding panels are clearly expressed with metal flashings over a base course of foamed slag concrete panels, with windows and doors fitting within the module set up by the cladding. Unlike the BISF, this house proudly displays its lightweight prefab nature, but there are also technical advances that set the Howard House apart, for example the precast concrete perimeter plinth that supports a suspended steel ground floor. Only 1,500 Howard Houses were built.
Laing Easi-Form Designed by
Laing and Co., as they are poured in-situ into moulds type designs developed from 1919 onwards, they do not suffer the problems of many steel framed buildings. The rare Mk1 version had thick solid no-fines clinker concrete walls, built in the period 1919 to 1928. The more common Mk2 version from 1925 to 1945 had cast in situ cavity walls, thick inner and outer leaves with cavity, usually finished externally with stone dashed render coat. Post-1945, the Mk3 version, which makes up the majority of houses, was modified to specification, and hence had cast in situ concrete walls, inner and outer leaves of thickness separated by a cavity, and reinforcement in both skins located in four horizontal bands above and below window openings.
Lecaplan Designed by J C Tilley and manufactured by
W. & C. French Limited Lecaplan came in two types, Type A were 2-storey terraced houses. Characterised with shallow pitch gable roof covered with concrete tiles. They have external walls of concrete panels throughout, or front and rear walls infilled with timber shiplap boarding. Type B were a later variant of similar profile but with an added entrance porch and exclusively concrete walling throughout. Of each type some 1600 were constructed between 1966 and 1971.
Mowlem Like the Laing Easi-Form, a cast in situ concrete form of construction, first used in 1952 but mainly in the period 1962 to 1981. With a solid
cavity wall, the poured concrete substitutes for the inner blockwork walls of traditional housing. Solid wall types thick cast in lightweight concrete, rendered externally. Cavity wall types have an inner leaf of at least 100-125mm thick concrete. The design was produced in
Scotland by the Orlit Company, resulting in most houses being located in Scotland and
Ulster. On-site construction was based on a foundation which supported storey-high precast concrete columns at fixed intervals, supporting concrete beams fixed to the columns, resulting in a virtually monolithic frame. Faced externally with large concrete slabs, and internally with interlocking foamslag blocks. Internal partitions are constructed of
breeze blocks finished in plaster, as is the foamslag internal cladding. The floors are constructed of precast concrete flooring units, with timber flooring on timber runners. Due to both the speed of construction and the quality of production, over time the PRC deteriorates, particularly at construction joints and junctions between components, with a gradual reduction in structural effectiveness. This resulted in the Orlit being designated as defective under the Housing Defects Act 1984, and hence a majority of mortgage lenders will not give any form of mortgage on them.
Phoenix (THP) Phoenix prefabs in
Wake Green Road,
Birmingham The Phoenix, designed by Laing and built by themselves as well as partners
McAlpine and
Henry Boot, Phoenix prefabs cost £1,200 each constructed onsite, while the specially insulated version designed for use on the
Isle of Lewis in the
Hebrides cost £2,000. both are difficult to obtain a mortgage on today. The Reema Hollow Panel is listed universally as defective after a Government-sponsored investigation and the subsequent Housing Defects Act 1984, while the Reema Conclad is often mis-recognised as a Hollow Panel.
Swedish ,
Kent Between September 1945 and March 1946, Sweden exported 5,000 prefabricated houses to the UK and 2,100 to France. The design was adapted by the MoW from a standard Swedish kit, with the all-timber houses arriving in flat sections, and then stored at the docks for allocation. In England and Wales this was often in small numbers to rural areas in support of farm workers. The first of these houses were built at
Abbots Langley,
Hertfordshire, in January 1946. There are two basic designs: semi-detached houses with a single storey utility extension and semi-detached dormer bungalows. A pair of the bungalows at
Auckley near Doncaster (Grid Ref: SE651012) have been listed by Historic England (their ref: 1392257). In Scotland a slightly different style of house (without the single-storey utility extension) was erected in large estates in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Inverness and elsewhere.
Tarran (THP) The Tarran was designed by building firm of
Tarran Industries Ltd. of
Hull. A wooden frame designed bungalow,
Tarran variants Uni-Seco (THP) in Lewisham in 2013 Produced by the London-based Selection Engineering Company Ltd, the three versions of the Uni-Seco were largely erected in London and the
southeast. A two-bedroom flat-roofed bungalow, it had a resin-bonded
plywood timber frame with asbestos wall sections, it was based on a military wartime office design. With dimensions of by , In 1943, Uni-Seco had appointed the Czechoslovak émigré George Fejer as an industrial designer, who on a part-time basis helped out with their kitchen design. Fejer later worked with Arthur Webb and George Nunn at
Hygena to create the UK style of
fitted kitchen, based on the principles of the
Frankfurt kitchen. Approximately 29,000 Uni-Seco units were constructed. The Excalibur Estate in
Catford,
Lewisham, is the UK's largest residual estate of prefabs, presently consisting of 187 Uni-Seco bungalows,
Unity Structures (THP) Unity Structures were a construction company based in
Rickmansworth. Using common storey-level precast reinforced concrete panels, they produced various updated versions of their bungalow and twin-storey house variations. Using metal bracing within the cavity and metal joists connected at column joints, the PRC columns act as
mullions. Copper straps tie the inner panel to outer PRC panel on earlier variants, while later the copper strap fixed to column holding just outer PRC cladding panels. Although the design incorporates significant steelwork resulting in fair current structural condition, the concrete used in casting is decaying, and resultantly leaks
chlorides. This results in internal staining through panel joints, and corrosion of the metal reinforcing and straps. A Unity Structures bungalow originally located in
Amersham is preserved at the
Chiltern Open Air Museum.
Wimpey no-fines George Wimpey & Co., being a house builder, focused on both design but also speed and ease of construction. Their method used "no-fines" concrete, the composition of which used no-fine
aggregates. Using huge reusable
moulds, they were held in place as the concrete for the entire outer structure was poured in one operation. The ground floor was also concrete, while the first floor was made of wooden floorboards. Interior walls were a mixture of conventional
brick and blockwork construction. Wimpey's design was particularly successful, resulting in many thousands built, and still occupied today.
Other types • Hamish prefabs (types 1 and 2) • Duplex Sheath prefab • Bricket Wood Special prefab • Blackburn Orlit prefab • Glasgow foam slag (building material) ==Residual housing stock today==