Braystones beach chalets, Cumbria

Last month we visited Braystones on the Cumbrian coast, within sight of the mountains of the Lake District and near to the Sellafield nuclear reprocessing site. There have been huts on the beach here since before the First World War and two or three dozen remain. Locally they are referred to as “beach bungalows” but they are clearly part of the tradition of wooden huts and chalets we see across this island.

Beach bungalows at Braystones

I found out about these huts from this striking photo on Flickr taken by Gordon Edgar (which he has kindly allowed me to reproduce here.) You can see the beach bungalows in the foreground on the shore, a train on the single-line coastal railway, some of the Tarnside caravan park behind, then the industrial buildings of Sellafield, and then finally the high ground that eventually becomes the mountains of the Lake District.

Behind the huts is Braystones railway station, and there is another cluster of them a bit further along the coast at Nethertown.

This whole area is called Lowside Quarter and PastPresented has an excellent archive of historical photos and documents about the beach bungalows.

DSC_0032

While we were photographing the huts, we got talking to Jack, the owner of The Lobster Pot and Summerville semi-detached huts. You can rent Summerville during the summer and it’s very nicely fitted out and comfortable. Definitely a bungalow rather than an unfurnished hut now! Jack has lived here for decades and in the short time we were there he told us lots of stories about living on the beach, including being able to take his boat out to catch fish and lobsters whenever he felt like it. He also has a collection of photographs of the huts in the past, some of which you can see in the Henson Collection on PastPresented.

There first picture in this blog might give the impression the beach bungalows are rather precarious and might be swept away, but sand and pebbles are banked up to create a breakwater and they are well above the high water mark. Behind the breakwater is a roadway that was good enough for Royal Mail to make deliveries while we were there.

DSC_0069

Even so, there was one ruined hut at the end that was in the process of being destroyed by the elements. The front wall had come off and the foundations were being eroded, leaving some of the wall posts hanging from the remains of the roof and gently swaying in the sea breeze.

Braystones is definitely the harshest hutting environment I’ve visited, but if you compare my pictures with the historical photos on PastPresented you can see much of the original structures have survived.

There are other styles of hut elsewhere on the Cumbrian coast. One community I’ve yet to visit has been blogged about by Alen McFadzean: the Black Huts on dunes further south near Barrow in Furness.

[googlemaps https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!1m14!1m12!1m3!1d3734.5737804104206!2d-3.541690824967107!3d54.43947567692705!2m3!1f0!2f0!3f0!3m2!1i1024!2i768!4f13.1!5e1!3m2!1sen!2suk!4v1432853040805&w=600&h=450]

Update: in 2016, Paul Merton visited Braystones for Channel 4. Naturally, he talked to Jack at the Lobster Pot.

Braystones, United Kingdom

5 Replies to “Braystones beach chalets, Cumbria”

  1. Hi Iain, thanks for the link to my blog. Another hutting community that might interest you, if you are not already aware of it, is the Fishermen’s Huts at South Gare, Redcar, which I am told started life as an army camp and is still thriving in the shadows of Redcar blast-furnace. It’s an interesting place. Here are a couple of links to pieces I’ve written about it. Please feel free to use pictures on your blog if you so wish.
    http://becausetheyrethere.com/2013/03/22/i-must-go-down-to-south-gare-again/
    http://becausetheyrethere.com/2014/10/14/south-gare-in-the-eye-of-the-beholder/
    regards, Alen McFadzean

    1. Oh thanks for that!

      This is the best thing about blogging: people tell you more about whatever it is you’re interested in 🙂

  2. I found’ Braystones ‘ on my dad’s Army Passbook recently . He was in charge of transport at the base during Ww2 and one of the huts was home to my family . My next visit was to Sellafield with friends from my grammar school in Sunderland in the late ’50’s.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *